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Jane Fraser is nearly four years into her effort to transform Citi. Here's what you need to know about how it's going.

A woman with glasses speaks
Jane Fraser has been Citi's CEO since March 2021.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

  • Jane Fraser is on a mission to bring Citigroup back to its former glory.
  • Her strategy spans layoffs, hiring new leaders, and a multibillion-dollar firmwide initiative.
  • Fraser still has a long way to go on several fronts.

When Jane Fraser took over Citi in March 2021, she inherited a bank saddled with regulatory problems and outdated technology that lagged behind its other household-name peers.

This year's market headwinds have been kind to Citi's stock price, which is up 33% year to date, but Fraser's overhaul has a long way to go. Banker R. Christopher Whalen wrote this week of the numerous drags on Citi's performance, including high-interest expenses, large funding costs, and undersized non-interest income.

"It is a big positive that the market following for Citi has improved, yet the financial performance remains a struggle," wrote Whalen. "Citi management clearly want to grow into new areas, but our basic question is where can Fraser realistically take the bank?"

It's not for lack of trying. Fraser has brought in several new executives to right the ship, including JPMorgan's Vis Raghavan, PwC's Tim Ryan, and Merrill Wealth Management's Andy Sieg. In September 2023, Sieg joined Citi to fix its ailing wealth business. Should he succeed – and should Fraser falter – he has a chance of becoming Citi's next CEO. Sieg has made many changes to the leadership ranks with four of his original 14 direct reports departing and a total of at least 33 senior executives leaving within his first year.

Citi has added to its leadership ranks, promoting 344 managing directors in early December, its largest class under Fraser. However, these promotions come at a tense time for employees. The bank has kicked off its grueling annual review process that rates employees from best to worst. These rankings influence who gets promoted and who loses their bonusβ€” or worse. There is greater stress over the process than usual as the bank has laid off 7,000 employees this year and plans to cut 20,000 jobs by 2026.

Perhaps Fraser's biggest challenge is satisfying regulators who have rebuked the bank. In July, two regulators fined Citi $135.6 million for failing to make enough progress in fixing its data-management issues. The bank had agreed in 2020 to work on this problem and others, including poor risk controls, after paying $400 million in fines to the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The OCC said in July that the bank had made "meaningful progress overall" but that the agency wanted to ensure Citi allocated enough resources to address the "persistent weaknesses" regarding data.

These new fines are despite Citi dedicating billions of dollars to a firmwide initiative to overhaul the bank's technology. To run this "Transformation" project, Fraser picked Citi consumer-bank veteran Anand Selva, naming him as COO in March 2023. Eight current and former employees told Business Insider that they were surprised by his appointment given that he had never held a leadership role in technology or compliance.

Since the July fines, Fraser has tapped Ryan, the bank's new tech head, to lead the data effort alongside Selva. Still, she has been dogged by questions regarding the Transformation's progress or lack thereof.

That said, Citi might get some breathing room under Donald Trump's second presidential term. Trump has signaled he would cut down on oversight. In a speech at the Economic Club of New York in September, he pledged that if reelected, he would eliminate 10 rules for each new rule.

In a research note, Mike Mayo, a Wells Fargo analyst, called Trump's win a "regulatory game changer." He told BI that Citi was still in "regulatory purgatory" but that the bank would likely face less scrutiny for its data-quality issues.

If so, it would go a long way toward Fraser's legacy.

Latest News

Inside Citi's Transformation

Citi Wealth's New Era

Read the original article on Business Insider

Citi promoted its largest class of managing directors under Jane Fraser. Check out the 344 names here.

A woman with glasses speaks
CEO Jane Fraser

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

  • Citigroup announced 344 new managing directors on Thursday, its largest class under CEO Jane Fraser.
  • It boosted the number of new MDs in technology, a unit core to Fraser's transformation efforts.
  • Here's the list of names the bank tapped to help steer the firm through its next phase.

Citigroup on Thursday named 344 employees to the bank's highest rank outside the C-suite, the most since Jane Fraser became CEO in 2021. The promotions wereΒ driven in part by its investments in technology amid a larger transformation effort.

Managing director promotions are an annual tradition across Wall Street and help to showcase the next generation of industry leaders. Citi's MD promotions come as Fraser continues a yearslong effort to modernize and simplify the bank, including by thinning out its management ranks. Earlier this year, the banks said it would cut 20,000 jobs, roughly 10% of headcount, over the next five years.

Citi's overhaul β€” known as the "Transformation" β€” includes efforts to upgrade the bank's risk controls and tech following a series of missteps that landed the firm in hot water with regulators, including an accidental payment of nearly $900 million to creditors of the beauty brand Revlon in 2020.

This year's MD class includes more leaders from its markets and technology groups, as well as the chief operating office, a Citi spokesperson told BI. The number of promotions in the services and banking units remained flat, the spokesperson said, adding that there was a slight decrease in US personal banking and legacy franchises, or businesses that the company is in the process of winding down.

Markets saw the largest number of promotions at 69, followed by 48 in its banking group (encompassing investment, commercial, and corporate banking), and 42 in wealth. Technology has 27 new MDs.

Citi officials, including Fraser and Viswas Raghavan, Citi's new head of banking who joined in February from JPMorgan, praised the new class for their "relentless" pursuit of performance in a Thursday memo, a copy of which was obtained by Business Insider.

"Our new MDs have been instrumental in ensuring we continue making progress on our Transformation and with our regulators," said the memo authored by members of Citi's executive management team. "They continue to build our credibility with key stakeholders and are relentless about driving stronger business performance."

The MDs were also honored Thursday morning with "roll call" gatherings within their respective business units β€” an annual tradition within some divisions that was expanded across the bank last year.

Here's the full list of new managing directors at Citigroup and some key demographic stats:

Banking (48 names)

  • Aditya Agarwal
  • Salomon Amkie
  • Vicente Alejandro Arevalo Barrabes
  • Lorenzo Beacco
  • Chad Bergert
  • Mike Berry
  • Seok Hoon Chia
  • KC Clark
  • Blazej Dankowski
  • Lucy Devlin
  • Colm Donnelly
  • Osama Naji El-Ali
  • Casper Elnegaard
  • Ben Exner
  • Gustavo Fontes
  • Andre Funari
  • Mario Garcia
  • Ricardo Garza
  • Cecile Guilleminot
  • Ferdinand Haindl
  • Melissa Haw
  • German Heberling
  • Elia Hermida
  • William Herrmann
  • Eric Himmelberger
  • Crystal Jin
  • Gabe Juarez
  • Abhishek Kaila
  • Dai Kitatani
  • Abhinav Lamba
  • Billy Liu
  • Param M
  • Ula Malczewska
  • Siena Malik
  • Simon Marrison
  • Gino Mbetse
  • Andrew Miller-Jones
  • Kevin O'Sullivan
  • David Oji
  • Mihail Polyakov
  • Prateek Rastogi
  • Partha Rathore
  • Linlin Sun
  • Alex Syhanath
  • Atsushi Tauchi
  • Saffet Tinaztepe
  • Yeung Tsai
  • Sunny Wang

Citibank, N.A. (2 names)

  • Rajan Brotia
  • Barry J White

Client (18 names)

  • Fatima Boolani
  • Ian Booth
  • Laura Chia Yi Chen
  • Andrew Gardiner
  • Neary Guenin
  • Shishir Prasad
  • Kenny Pun
  • Tyler Radke
  • Jennifer Sariano
  • Jamie Searle
  • Chirag Shah
  • Viral Shah
  • Jack Shang
  • Noorie Singh
  • Albert Sutton
  • Judy Yip
  • Xiangrong Yu
  • Cedric Zunino

Chief Operating Office (20 names)

  • Abhishek Agarwal
  • Rob Brodie
  • Sean Burnham
  • Geoffrey Capes
  • Erika Federico
  • Kimberlie Hardial-Choo
  • Stuart Hill
  • Kyle Hughes
  • Ketan Khokhani
  • Swati Kulkarni
  • James McGuigan
  • Adrian Murphy
  • Juan Francisco Orrego
  • Tim Palmer
  • Chris Skarzinski
  • Carolina Spalding
  • Pamela St John
  • Subha V
  • Chris Winter
  • Adam Wood

Enterprise Services and Public Affairs (3 names)

Graham Buck

  • Anmol Chowdhry
  • Davida Heller
  • Finance (17 names)
  • Bilal Akhtar
  • Peter Battin
  • Yun-ni Chen
  • Peter Demoise
  • Marcos Diaz
  • Kimberly Egert
  • Michael Fillius
  • Janak Ghosh
  • Kevin Hong
  • Matt Jonason
  • Dimba Kier
  • Bertrand Louvard
  • Cynthia Ng
  • Sandeep Pati
  • Rebecca Reeb
  • Teresa Salvato
  • Yun Wang

Global Legal Affairs & Compliance (22 names)

  • Alberto Arenas, CSIS
  • Kimberly Barnes, ICRM
  • Michael Caravella, Legal
  • Shirley Carter, Legal
  • Sam Cory, ICRM
  • Mark Eliades, Legal
  • April Fredlund, Legal
  • Steven Krause, ICRM
  • Dora Kreymborg, Legal
  • Angie Lockley, CSIS
  • Dana Lukens, Legal
  • Matthew MacIntyre, CSIS
  • Piotr Matuszewski, ICRM
  • Rosie McAnlis, Legal
  • Geardine McCann, Legal
  • CiarΓ‘n Murphy, ICRM
  • Paul Patton, Legal
  • Deborah Resch, Legal
  • Jose Riera, CSIS
  • Mark Steuer, ICRM
  • Laura Toustau, ICRM
  • Rosalie Yee, Legal

Human Resources (3 names)

  • Shari Funk
  • Shay Gonen
  • Laura Zablah

Internal Audit (9 names)

  • Neha Bhardwaj
  • Callie Boyd
  • Josh Goldsmith
  • Gordon Hua
  • Sophia Jingo
  • Patrick Kielty
  • Neil Kothare
  • James Kouame
  • Cindy Santoro

International (4 names)

  • Fahad Aldeweesh
  • Maria Paula Carvajal
  • Jonathan Nix
  • Kubilay Ozturk
  • Legacy Franchises (6 names)
  • Bill Burns
  • Enrique Granillo
  • Jesus Jauregui
  • Gonzalo Palafox
  • Erick Ramirez
  • Jean Rocha Rodrigues
  • Markets (69 names)
  • Laurence Assip
  • Robert Beatson
  • Paul Berry
  • Matthew Boyer
  • Suninder Singh Chauhan
  • Amish Chotai
  • David Collis
  • Ashish Kumar Daga
  • Marc Damoiseaux
  • Connor Dwyer
  • Chuck Edmunds
  • Richard Fairhall
  • Carlos Ferrari
  • Michael Fershtman
  • Imelda Frayre
  • Andre Grossi
  • Roshni Gudka
  • Aditya Gupta
  • Natalia Gutierrez de la Peza
  • Kentaro Hayashi
  • Peter Nicholas Hext
  • Sandy Hou
  • Rocky Huang
  • Rob Hughes
  • Funmi Ibidunni
  • Howard Ilderton
  • Johan Kabla
  • Neha Kapur
  • Yana Keresteliev
  • Subir Kumar
  • Christopher Kuo
  • Eirini Lerikou
  • Ronan Liston
  • Jorge Lonegro
  • Steffen Lunde
  • Roberto Massacci
  • Maura McFadden
  • Egor Miroshnikov
  • Jim Monahan
  • Chen Ni
  • Fonzarelli Ong
  • Warren Parker
  • Vijay Parthasarathy
  • Mihaela Penes
  • Galvin Phua
  • Jason Pillai
  • Luke Pollock
  • Jonathan Radke
  • Rohit Rajgaria
  • Richard Rosin
  • Camila Rossetti
  • David Rufino
  • Colin Ryan
  • Manish Saraf
  • Angele Seriki
  • Bollie Shiflett
  • Marie Sho
  • Esben Shoen
  • Siris Singh
  • Iqbal Sohal
  • Kumar Subramanian
  • Andrew Sufka
  • Aruna Tatavarty
  • Davy Tsang
  • Miro Vucetic
  • Rishi Watts
  • Marcus Weickel
  • Henry Wong
  • Jeff Wu

Office of the CEO (1 name)

  • Sigrid Nubla

Risk (16 names)

  • Mikael Amar
  • Gabby Banwait
  • Om Barlinge
  • Anindya Basu
  • Bridget Griffin
  • Nayantara Gupta
  • Matthew Haigh
  • Chuck Hou
  • Ibo Longjam
  • Shivi Punia
  • Liza Ramsammy
  • Navrup Rana
  • Ravi Surana
  • Logan Tamres
  • Rodrigo Vargas
  • Thomas Wood

Services (32 names)

  • Saurabh Arora
  • Kfeir Barkai
  • Leandra Catton
  • Amit Choudhary
  • Chris Cook
  • Yoanna Darwin
  • Jane Dulson
  • Carol Ferretti
  • James Flugstad
  • Elena Gomez
  • Mandeep Heer
  • Jonathan Jordan
  • Ronan Kealy
  • Lenny Leone
  • Simon McConnell
  • Ross McEwan
  • Mary Messer
  • Olivia Morgan
  • Sergei Oganov
  • Patrick O'Neill
  • Nikhil Patankar
  • Sonal Patel
  • Leandro Quintal
  • Rob Ranson
  • Andy Ren
  • Kirstin Renner
  • Sean Ruby
  • Yvonne Swainston
  • Tomas Videla
  • Heidi Willox
  • Elias Xilas
  • Melissa Ongleo Yambao

Technology (27 names)

  • Catherine Ablott
  • Mohamed Alsaloom
  • Shante Avery
  • Kashif Awan
  • Nidhruv Bahree
  • Mark Ballard
  • Andre Batista
  • Kathryn Beard
  • Rachel Carpenter
  • Noby George Cheruvathoor
  • Gonzalo Cordova
  • Nigel Deverteuil
  • Ryan Evans
  • Jeffrey Hazel
  • Adam Hess
  • John Shannon Hogue
  • Hong Jiang
  • Dave Jones
  • Hitesh Kshatriya
  • Greg Lurie
  • Rajesh M K
  • Deepak Nabera
  • Steven Readett
  • Jon Rosen
  • Michael Todisco
  • Nishanth Vontela
  • Rajesh Wadhwa

U.S. Personal Banking (5 names)

  • Jeff Chwast
  • Timothy R Dougherty
  • Tracy Goldman
  • Sri K Lakamsani
  • Supriya Ramamurthy

Wealth (42 names)

  • Yogi Abhyankar
  • Emile Abinader
  • Rob Anderson
  • Zeshan Azam
  • Nicola Baker
  • Christopher Barron
  • Stewart Boag
  • Olga Bogdanova
  • Greg Byrne
  • Winnie Choi
  • Mendy Chung
  • Juan Francisco Clemenza
  • Sheethal Dalpathraj
  • David C Darshan
  • Beth Emswiler
  • Matthew Ferrari-Wells
  • Jenny Fung
  • Carlos Garcia-Crespo
  • Brad Goldberg
  • Hollie Griego
  • Danny Jones
  • Eric Kraus
  • Mark Chung Hei Lee
  • Lena Siew Geok Lim
  • Jason Liu
  • Andrew Louw
  • Alinne Majarian Fash
  • Vlod Makar
  • Alex Marks
  • Kishore Indroo Motwani
  • Luis Negrete
  • Diego Parlaghy
  • Claudia Penido
  • Juan Guillermo Ramirez
  • Gaston Rodriguez
  • Jason Rosen
  • Einat Sadka
  • Masa Sekulic
  • Kathy Stith
  • Narayan Swamy
  • Diego Szuldman
  • Frederic Viaud

Here are some key stats about the group:

  • 29% are women.
  • 24% joined through Citi through an early-career program.
  • 56% are multilingual and 30% have worked in two or more countries.
  • The new MDs have a median of 20 years of experience in financial services.
  • They are from 29 countries and comprise 35 nationalities.
  • North America represents the largest number of new MDs, 174 or 50.6%. The United Kingdom is second with 68, or 19.8%, followed by Japan, Asian North & Australia at 35 (10.2%), Asia South: 28 (8.1%), Latin America: 19 (5.5%), Europe: 15 (4.4%), Middle East & Africa: 5 (1.5%).
  • Among the 174 promotes who are based in the US, 44.8% are racially or ethnically diverse. While some identify with more than one racial or ethnic group, here's a breakdown:

    • 25.9% Asian (45)
    • 6.3% Black (11)
    • 12.6% Hispanic/Latino (22)
Read the original article on Business Insider

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