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Citigroup targets 11-13% profitability as CEO Fraser drives overhaul

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 6:45 AM

By Tatiana Bautzer, Utkarsh Shetti and Saeed Azhar

NEW YORK, May 7 (Reuters) – Citigroup is expecting a key profit metric to range between 11% and 13% for 2027 and 2028, the bank ​said on Thursday, as CEO Jane Fraser spearheads a ‌company-wide overhaul to drive growth.

The new targets compare with Citi’s goal of achieving an adjusted return on tangible common equity of between 10% and 11% for the year and its 2025 return of 8.8%. The metric is an important industry figure ‌that ​measures profitability on tangible assets.

“This is a bank ⁠built both to grow ⁠and perform consistently, and that’s what underpins the path to our target returns,” Fraser said at the bank’s investor day, where it is set to lay out medium-term goals for its businesses.

The bank also ​unveiled a multi-year $30 billion share buyback plan, expected to begin in the second quarter of this year.

For 2029 and 2031, Citi said ⁠it was expecting a return in the ⁠range of 14% to 15%.

“The key target, ROTCE, was ​underwhelming in the near term but the $30 billion repurchase authorization was a ​clear positive,” RBC analysts said in a note.

Shares of the ‌bank were down 1.3% in premarket trading.

FOCUS ON FRASER’S TURNAROUND PLAN

Six years into her tenure, Fraser is heading her second investor day to present the results of a massive reorganization that shrank Citi by selling ⁠retail businesses worldwide, eliminating management layers and increasing risk and controls.

Since she took over in March 2021, Citi shares have risen more than 80%. They ⁠are up more than ‌9% so far this year, compared with a 7.5% ⁠rise in the S&P 500 index.

The bank beat ​Wall Street ‌expectations for first-quarter profit last month, raking in ​strong revenue ⁠from its trading business and also benefiting from robust dealmaking that lifted investment banking fees.

It posted an ROTCE of 13.1% in the quarter and reported its highest quarterly revenue in a decade at $24.6 billion.

(Reporting by Tatiana Bautzer in New York and Utkarsh Shetti in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur ​and Anil D’Silva)