New York, May 2, 2026, 17:04 EDT
Fitch Ratings shifted its outlook on Citigroup Inc. to positive on Friday, while keeping the bank’s long- and short-term issuer ratings steady at A and F1. That’s a nod to CEO Jane Fraser’s restructuring efforts, which Fitch said are showing results. It’s not a ratings upgrade—more a hint at where Citi’s ratings could head if momentum continues.
Timing is key here. Citi’s investor day lands Thursday, May 7, with CEO Fraser, CFO Gonzalo Luchetti, and leaders from Services, Markets, Banking, Wealth, and U.S. Consumer Cards all slated to present. This time, investors want to see real proof of sustainable earnings—not just another round of updates on the company’s ongoing clean-up.
Citi is looking at stronger results compared with last year. First-quarter net income landed at $5.8 billion, or $3.06 per share, on $24.6 billion in revenue. Return on tangible common equity—a metric stripping out goodwill and other intangibles—came in at 13.1%.
In an April filing, Fraser said Citi was “very much on track” to reach its 10% to 11% RoTCE goal this year, adding that next week’s investor day would outline what’s next for the bank. According to her, 90% of Citi’s transformation efforts have already hit or are close to their target state.
The move has come and gone. Citigroup closed out Friday at $127.44, slipping 0.4% for the day and leaving the bank with a $237.4 billion market cap. JPMorgan Chase remains far out in front at around $864.8 billion. Bank of America, meanwhile, holds roughly $406.1 billion, and Wells Fargo’s market value landed near $251.9 billion.
Capital return figures heavily in the discussion. Citi reported $7.4 billion handed back to common shareholders last quarter, with $6.3 billion of that coming from share buybacks. The bank’s preliminary CET1 ratio landed at 12.7%.
The clean-up process is ongoing. On April 29, Citi disclosed the sale of 22.6% of its Banamex equity to institutional buyers and family offices, with the last 1.4% from this batch slated to close in the coming months. Factoring in Fernando Chico Pardo’s 25% acquisition, Citi says its total Banamex stake sold hits 49%.
All eyes are on Citi’s next return target and just how high management can push it. Truist’s John McDonald bumped his Citi price target up to $147 from $139, sticking with his Buy call. In a note before investor day, he flagged the new RoTCE target as the main thing to watch—he’s thinking Citi could lay out a roadmap with a 12%–13% target for 2027-28, then aim for the mid-teens after that.
Tech isn’t just an expense anymore—it’s in the sales script. Citi is bringing out Arc, its new internal AI system that lets employees create and run agents within a closed environment. Over in wealth management, the team is eyeing a U.S. launch for Citi Sky, an AI tool for Citigold clients that leverages Google Cloud and Google DeepMind.
Joe Bonanno, Citi’s head of wealth intelligence, told Banking Dive Sky can chat with clients and pick up certain tasks, which “allows us to go faster, but also dip into that wallet share.” The bank is chasing stronger results in wealth, a segment where first-quarter revenue climbed 11%, reaching $3.1 billion. Banking Dive
The situation remains murky. After Citi’s first-quarter earnings, Reuters reported that Fraser noted transformation efforts are done, but now require validation inside the bank, then a regulatory check—which comes on the regulators’ timetable. Luchetti pointed to robust M&A pipelines, though he flagged the risk: a drawn-out Middle East conflict might weigh on deal activity in the second half.
So, next week’s investor day suddenly matters more. The Fitch outlook revision hands Citi and Fraser a visible signpost—now she’s got to prove those Q1 numbers, asset divestitures, and tech investments can produce consistent returns, all while keeping risk in check.