Half Of Citi's Adjusted Net Income Comes From Loan Loss Reserves; Home Equity Loan Losses Surge | ZeroHedge
The bottom line on Citigroup's just released results: the firm reported an adjusted adjusted Net
Income number of $3.268 billion ($1.06 EPS), which was "better" than
the expected $0.97 (just like JPM's bottom line was better and the
initial spike higher in the stock price promptly reverted into the red
once people read the footnote text). How did Citi get to this number? It
started with an unadjusted $964 million of Net LOSS and
then added back a tax provision, CVA losses (as its spread tightened in
the quarter), the loss for the sale of MSSB ($4.7 billion pre tax), and
miraculously got to $3.3 billion. The MSSB and CVA/DVA adjustment also
miraculously increased total revenues from $13.951 billion to $19.411
billion, making a sequential unadjusted 25% drop in Revenues equal to a
3% increase. But even if one were to assume that the bank's $3.3 billion
uber-adjusted Net Income number is meaningful in any way, it is
certainly notable that $1.509 million of this, or nearly 50% came from
the tried and true gimmick: Loan Loss Reserves, which boosted
EPS by the same percentage, even as the firm saw its Net Credit Losses
soar by 11% from Q2, to $3.979 billion. This was a bigger LLR than in Q2 ($984MM) and Q3 2011 ($1,422MM). Same old goosing gimmicks, different day.
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