Citigroup’s stock could double in value over the next three years as profits surge, expenses moderate, and the “most significant” reorganization in five decades improves management accountability, Wells Fargo analysts wrote in a note on Friday.
The third-largest U.S. lender is the brokerage’s “dominant pick” among large-cap banks under almost any scenario, barring a recession. The analysts raised their price target to $110 from $95, while maintaining an “overweight” rating.
Citi’s shares rose as much as 1.6% to $71.09.
The vote of confidence marks a notable win for Citi CEO Jane Fraser, who has been looking to improve the bank’s profitability since taking the helm in 2021.
Wells Fargo’s Mike Mayo, known for his blunt critique of the banking industry’s missteps, praised Fraser’s sweeping overhaul in 2024 to cut costs and simplify the bank’s sprawling businesses.
“Investors seem to underappreciate… the improved management accountability after transition from 50 years of a global matrix structure to 5 lines of business,” the Citi bull said.
Analysts had described 2024 as a transitional year for the bank and said the reshuffle represents an inflection point that will increase efficiency.
Separately, KBW analysts led by David Konrad also raised their price target on Citi to $85 from $82, calling it one of their “top ideas” for 2025.
Increased capital markets activity and Citi’s discounted valuation compared to peers could present a compelling opportunity, it said.
Citi trades at a price-to-book ratio, a common benchmark for valuing stocks, of 0.69, according to data from LSEG. This compares with JPMorgan Chase’s 2.08 and Bank of America’s 1.25.
A ratio below one typically indicates an undervalued stock.
The bank is expected to report results in mid-January, with all eyes on executive commentary on growing key businesses in 2025.
“The significance of Citi inflecting from multi-year value destruction to value creation is in our view one of the greatest drivers for sustainable stock price outperformance,” said Mayo.
Source : Reuters
Frontier innovation may start at home, but new technologies tend to spread across borders through…
Do banks fail because of runs or because they become insolvent? Answering this question is…
The US college wage premium nearly doubled between 1980 and 2010, rising fastest in dense…
Europe’s rising external surplus now rivals China’s, reflecting weak investment and growing surpluses, pointing to…
The 2025 Sevilla Commitment renews the push for domestic revenue mobilisation, with the EU needing…
This essay analyses the causes of, and remedies for, external imbalances, and what countries should…