Citigroup gave investors the first look at how Wall Street banks fared during the violent market swings at the end of 2018 – and it's grim.
Revenue from fixed-income trading, the lender’s largest securities business, plunged 21 per cent in the fourth quarter to the lowest in seven years after wild markets kept clients on the sidelines.
Combined revenue from stock and bond underwriting dropped more than analysts estimated. And the company missed a full-year profitability target by an even wider margin than it signalled just five weeks ago.
“A volatile fourth quarter impacted some of our market-sensitive businesses, particularly fixed income,” chief executive Michael Corbat said Monday in a statement disclosing results. The firm will focus on improving profitability this year, he said.
Bank shareholders have been in the dark for weeks, eager to learn whether traders and dealmakers were able to navigate global market swings including the biggest monthly drop in the SandP 500 Index since 2009.
Analysts including Barclays’ Jason Goldberg had cautioned clients that Citigroup’s most recent guidance came in early December, before the storm worsened.
Citigroup fell 1.7 per cent in early trading in New York. The shares climbed 8.9 per cent this month before Monday, after a 30 per cent plunge in 2018.
Bright spots included a 47 per cent jump in revenue from advising on mergers and acquisitions, which reached $463 million.
The bank’s treasury and trade solutions business, which helps corporations move money around the world, boosted revenue 7 per cent to $2.4 billion – surpassing the firm’s fixed-income traders for the first time.
They only generated $1.94 billion – falling below $2 billion for the first time since the final quarter of 2011. It was their worst performance under Corbat.
Just three months ago, things were looking brighter for the fixed-income division, which handles bonds, commodities and currencies.
In mid-October the bank disclosed that the business had snapped five straight quarters of declining revenue. When news of the turnaround broke, it helped send the stock up as much as 4.2 per cent that day.
But by early December, chief financial officer John Gerspach said the momentum was fading, particularly in Group of 10 rates trading. On Monday, the bank also blamed widening credit spreads.
Revenue from Citigroup’s sprawling credit-card unit, the largest in the world, increased 1 per cent to almost $5.1 billion during the quarter. Investors have grown increasingly worried about the business as rising interest rates have tempered consumers’ demand for such loans. Citigroup has been curtailing its promotional offers while encouraging existing customers to maintain balances on their cards.
The lender said it still believes it can achieve a return on tangible common equity of 12 per cent in 2019, up from 10.9 per cent last year.
The bank’s efficiency ratio, a measure of how much it costs to produce a dollar of revenue, dropped to 57.4 per cent last year, 86 basis points better than the prior year.
The company had been aiming to shave 100 basis points from that measure last year, but Gerspach said in December the move might be closer to a 90 basis-point decline.
JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo are set to report quarterly results Tuesday, with Bank of America, Goldman Sachs Group and Morgan Stanley due later in the week. – Bloomberg