Citi earnings cast spotlight on consumer lending amid economic headwinds

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Concerns over an economic slowdown may weigh on banks in this week’s wave of second-quarter earnings reports, but Citigroup (C) — the first big bank to report — is showing that consumer lending could be the key to growth amid tightening financial conditions.

Thanks in part to a strong credit card portfolio, Citi reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.83 on revenue of $18.8 billion. Citi also benefited from a $350 million gain on its investment in Tradeweb, an electronic trading platform that went public earlier this year and also counts JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley among its shareholders.

Citi’s earnings numbers topped the street’s expectations of $1.80 for adjusted earnings per share on $18.5 billion of revenue, according to Bloomberg estimates. Cost-cutting was also a big theme for the company, as it reduced operating expenses by 1% due to efficiency initiatives.

But amid an inverting yield curve and slowing global growth, Citi reported a 9% year-over-year drop in equity revenues and a 4% drop in fixed income revenues (when controlling for the Tradeweb gain).

“There remains uncertainty with respect to the economic market and rate environment, but I think we’ve shown that our franchise can manage through these by focusing on the things that we can control,” Citi CEO Michael Corbat said on an earnings call Monday morning.

The street is wondering if other banks reporting this week will rely on other pillars — like strong consumer spending — to support earnings growth amid that uncertainty.

“Today’s results were good enough, they were satisfactory, they were fine, they were acceptable, they were okay,” Wells Fargo analyst Mike Mayo told Yahoo Finance’s On the Move.

Mayo said he expects macro factors to weigh on the other big banks scheduled to report this week, in the form of downward revisions in earnings forecasts.

Strong consumer

Citi’s earnings were supported by growth in its branded credit cards, where revenues from its North American businesses increased by 7% year-over-year to $2.2 billion.

Citi CEO Mark Mason said consumer businesses had “solid momentum,” showing no signs of wear-and-tear from worries over the U.S. economy. The company said customers who signed on to Citi credit cards due to promotions have been steadily transitioning to average interest-earning balances, which would provide more revenue growth for the rest of the year.

Mason said that pipeline will be a “meaningful contributor” through 2020, particularly in North America.

Economists have been pleased by U.S. consumer data in the face of global uncertainty. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told Congress July 10 that the “most reliable drivers” of economic momentum are consumer spending and business investment. Describing business investment as slow, Powell said consumer spending is looking good.