Key facts
- Citigroup shares fell 5.3% after the bank forecast higher expenses.
- The bank beat analyst estimates for second-quarter net income, which rose 45%.
- Management decided to accelerate $5 billion in planned investments to increase market share.
- Additional spending is expected for employee layoffs.
- Analysts revised their earnings-per-share estimates for Citigroup for 2026 and 2027.
Citigroup's shares declined 5.3% on Tuesday after the bank's management projected increased expenses for the latter half of the year, a move that surprised investors. Despite beating second-quarter earnings expectations with a 45% rise in net income, the forward-looking guidance overshadowed the positive results.
Analysts revised their financial estimates for the bank in response. Bank of America analyst Ebrahim Poonawala described the situation as a "culprit was a combination of high expectations and muddled messaging on the second half outlook during the earnings call." He raised his efficiency ratio estimate for Citigroup to 60.3% from 59.6% and increased the 2026 earnings-per-share estimate to $11.09 from $10.79.
Citigroup's CEO Jane Fraser and CFO Gonzalo Luchetti informed analysts that the bank would accelerate approximately $5 billion in planned investments aimed at increasing market share, particularly in areas like credit cards. They also indicated that spending for employee layoffs would exceed the initial $800 million prediction. Fraser emphasized these investments are for "offense" and not restructuring.
Wells Fargo analyst Mike Mayo viewed these moves as "offensive moves to better gain share and compete in a more competitive environment." He anticipates the bank will surpass its 2026 profitability target of 11%. Oppenheimer analyst Chris Kotowski noted that the higher expense outlook limited his ability to raise estimates significantly.
Jefferies analyst David Chiaverini lowered earnings-per-share estimates for 2026 and 2027 to $10.65 to $12.60 from $10.95 to $12.75 but maintained a buy rating. KBW's Chris McGratty suggested the expense guidance was used as an excuse for profit-taking, raising his EPS estimate by 1% to $11.15 for the full year.
Citigroup has declined to comment on these analyst reports.
