Citigroup's third-straight quarterly loss totals $2.5b
NEW YORK - Citigroup has become the latest big bank to quell Wall Street's worries about a financial sector implosion, posting a $2.5 billion second-quarter loss that was smaller than expected.
Citi helped lift other financial stocks, having joined JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. in convincing investors that the prognosis for the sector, while gloomy, may not be as dire as the market feared.
But it's hard to get too enthusi-
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astic about clearing a low bar.
"I don't think anyone's breathing too easily right now," said Prakash Shimpi, who works in the risk-management practice at Towers Perrin. Determining the dollar value of certain assets backed by debt is still a tricky process, he said, even a year after the crisis began.
Citigroup, the nation's largest banking company by assets, lost the equivalent of 54 cents per share in the April-June period. In the same period last year, the bank earned $6.23 billion, or $1.24 per share.
The shortfall was tamer than the 66-cent-per-share loss that analysts, on average, were expecting, according to Thomson Financial.
Citigroup's securities and banking division wrote down the value of its assets by $7.2 billion, before taxes, and an asset revaluation cost its consumer-lending business $745 million. Those write-downs totaling about $8 billion are significantly lower than write-downs taken in the first quarter and in last year's fourth quarter.
However, credit costs jumped to $7.2 billion as more consumers defaulted on their loans - implying that while losses in the credit markets are decelerating, losses from actual defaults in Citigroup's mortgages, home-equity loans, auto loans, and credit card lines are mounting. The $7.2 billion in credit costs included $4.4 billion in credit losses and a $2.5 billion charge to bulk up reserves for future loan losses.
Citigroup, like other banks, is bracing for mortgages and credit cards to bring more hefty losses. Default rates continued to rise on these loans, and chief financial officer Gary Crittenden said credit card loss rates could soon rise to their highest levels ever.
"I think we have two to four quarters left," Crittenden said, referring to rising credit card losses. "Because of the mix of our business, it's possible the peak will be higher than it was in the past." He said Citigroup's credit card exposure now includes more risky, but higher-yielding, cardholders than in previous downturns.
Citigroup has failed to turn a profit for three straight quarters, losing a cumulative $17.4 billion during that period after writing down its assets by about $46 billion. Its shares have tumbled 65 percent over the past year, and recently hit their lowest point since the day Citicorp and Travelers combined in October 1998.![]()


