Citigroup pulls out of
consumer banking in 11 countries, profit jumps.
New York/Bangalore: Citigroup Inc. said it is pulling out of consumer banking
in 11 markets, including Japan and Egypt, as the US bank with the biggest
international business looks to cut persistently high costs. The third-largest
US bank, built with a series of acquisitions spanning back to the 1980s, has
been trying to slim down since the financial crisis to be as profitable as
rivals. It has shed hundreds of billions of dollars of bad assets.
The latest
exits were the result of studies the bank began in early 2012 to figure out
which countries were not profitable enough for retail banking. Getting results
took a long time, partly because the bank did not have standardized accounting
systems across all countries to compare the units’ profitability, sources
familiar with the matter told Reuters in 2013. A spokesman for Citigroup said
that the sources’ comments were false, and the bank has long had systems in
place to consistently measure profitability across businesses and geography.
The deliberate pace at which chief executive officer Michael Corbat is fixing
its business underscores how hard it is to fix a business as sprawling as
Citigroup, which operates in more than 100 countries. Corbat told analysts that
in shedding the poorly performing businesses the company is also taking a
valuable step toward reducing complexity. Chief financial officer John
Gerspach, speaking earlier to reporters, said the bank first identified
sub-standard businesses about a year-and-a-half ago, and tried to fix them
before deciding to they had to go. “Better late than never,” said stock analyst
Mike Mayo of CLSA. Citigroup separately announced the results of a probe that
also illustrates how hard it is to manage the bank: it found a new $15 million
fraud at its Mexican unit, Banamex, which has been roiled by a series of
mishaps.
The bank is showing some signs of progress in streamlining itself. On
Tuesday, it posted stronger-than-expected third-quarter adjusted net income of
$3.67 billion, or $1.15 per share, from $3.26 billion, or $1.02 per share, a
year earlier. Profit was boosted by better results from its portfolio of
troubled assets left over from the financial crisis and its shares rose 3.1% on
Tuesday to $51.47. Adjusted results exclude a tax benefit from last year and
accounting adjustments linked to changes in the value of the company’s debt.
Analysts had expected earnings of $1.12 per share, according to Thomson
Reuters. Focusing on expenses But the bank still has work to do. Expenses at
Citicorp, which houses the bank’s main businesses, rose 11%, while revenue rose
8%.
The increase in expenses came from money set aside to cover expected legal
liabilities. The bank has been trying to rein in its expenses for about a
decade. At a meeting with 300 Citigroup executives in February, CEO Corbat
stressed the need to focus on expenses and efficiency this year. Shedding
retail businesses in 11 markets may help—sripping out these units would have
reduced operating expenses by $1.34 billion over the last year, while reducing
net income by only $34 million. The bank said it will exit Costa Rica, Czech Republic,
Egypt, El Salvador, Guam, Guatemala, Hungary, Japan, Nicaragua, Panama and
Peru, as well as the consumer finance business in Korea.
It will continue to
serve institutional clients in these markets. In December 2012, Citigroup said
it was withdrawing from consumer banking in five other countries. After these
latest exits, the bank will serve consumers in about 24 countries.
RANJAY KUMAR,
RANJAY KUMAR,
PGDM 2ND YEAR,
SOURCE- MINT
COMMENT=MY VIEW IT IS A
GOOD FOR CITYBANK AND GOOD PERFORMANCE OF C.E.O OF CITYBANK.
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