Citigroup provided more evidence that the nation's big banks may have turned a corner, reporting a surprise first-quarter profit Monday as trading revenue offset losses from failed loans.
Citigroup [C 4.86
Citigroup earned 15 cents per share on revenue of $25.4 billion. That easily beating analysts expectations of a slight loss, according to Thomson Reuters.
The bank's stock was down about 1 percent in pre-opening trading. It joined other financial stocks that extended a pullback in response to news that the government was charging Goldman Sachs Group Inc. with civil fraud for mortgage-related transactions.
Citigroup said its total reserves to cover losses from bad loans fell 22 percent, or $2.4 billion, during the quarter to its lowest level in two years. The company reported improvement across nearly all its loan portfolios.
The company reported $8 billion in securities and banking operations, which includes its trading business. That was up $4.7 billion in the fourth quarter.
Citigroup's stock has been rising lately following the government's announcement last month that it would start selling the 27 percent stake in the bank it acquired as part of its bailout of the bank during the credit crisis.
"All of us at Citi recognize that we would not be where we are without the assistance of American taxpayers," Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit said after reporting the bank's surprise profit.
Citi shares briefly gained 2 percent in premarket trading but then slipped as aftershocks continued from charges the Securities Exchange Commission levied against Goldman Sachs on Friday.
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