By Julie Steinberg And Angela Chen
Citizens Financial Group Inc. said its profit climbed 26% in the
first quarter as its revenue and average total loans increased.
Earnings beat Wall Street estimates, while revenue was in line.
Shares were up 1.3% in early afternoon trading.
The bank posted earnings of $209 million, up from $166 million
in the prior-year period. On a per-share basis, earnings rose to 38
cents from 30 cents. Excluding restructuring costs and other items,
earnings were 39 cents a share.
Revenue at the Providence, R.I.-based lender, which sold shares
to the public in an initial offering last year, rose 1.5% to $1.18
billion.
Analysts had expected 34 cents a share in earnings and $1.18
billion in revenue, according to Thomson Reuters.
"It was a solid start to the year," Chief Executive Bruce Van
Saun said on a call with analysts on Wednesday.
Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC has been steadily reducing its
stake in Citizens and now retains a 40.8% stake, Citizens said on
Wednesday. The U.K. lender in March sold 135 million shares as it
looked to push its ownership below 50%. RBS plans to divest its
entire stake by the end of 2016.
Mr. Van Saun in an interview said the bank will undertake a $250
million buyback in early July that will drop RBS's stake to
39.6%.
As part of Citizens' unyoking from RBS and its continuing
transformation, the lender has been building out its capital and
global markets offerings. Capital markets fees increased 22% to $22
million, while foreign exchange and trade finance fees grew 4.5% to
$23 million.
The bank last year added a sales and trading platform, and later
this year will unveil a global markets platform that will allow it
to offer products to clients such as foreign-exchange options, Mr.
Van Saun said in the interview. The bank had previously relied on
RBS's platforms, he said.
"We don't want to get into investment banking in a material
way," but Citizens is "building up our capabilities around capital
markets products you offer to chief financial officers and
treasurers," Mr. Van Saun said.
"We now have an ability not only to lead syndications on loans,
we can also do sales and trading of those loans," he added.
Average loans increased by $7.8 billion because of commercial
loan growth and an increase in residential mortgage, auto and
student loans. These were offset by a decrease in home-equity loans
outstanding.
Net interest margin, an important measure of lending
profitability, fell to 2.77% from 2.89% a year earlier. Executives
said the measure is likely to be down slightly next quarter. Mr.
Van Saun said it has been a "challenge" to keep net interest margin
"broadly flat" in the current low-interest rate environment.
Regional banks for several quarters have been grappling with low
interest rates that have dented net interest margin and other
profitability metrics.
Write to Julie Steinberg at julie.steinberg@wsj.com and Angela
Chen at angela.chen@dowjones.com
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