Companies:
10,652
total market cap:
$140.855 T
Sign In
๐บ๐ธ
EN
English
$ USD
โฌ
EUR
๐ช๐บ
โน
INR
๐ฎ๐ณ
ยฃ
GBP
๐ฌ๐ง
$
CAD
๐จ๐ฆ
$
AUD
๐ฆ๐บ
$
NZD
๐ณ๐ฟ
$
HKD
๐ญ๐ฐ
$
SGD
๐ธ๐ฌ
Global ranking
Ranking by countries
America
๐บ๐ธ United States
๐จ๐ฆ Canada
๐ฒ๐ฝ Mexico
๐ง๐ท Brazil
๐จ๐ฑ Chile
Europe
๐ช๐บ European Union
๐ฉ๐ช Germany
๐ฌ๐ง United Kingdom
๐ซ๐ท France
๐ช๐ธ Spain
๐ณ๐ฑ Netherlands
๐ธ๐ช Sweden
๐ฎ๐น Italy
๐จ๐ญ Switzerland
๐ต๐ฑ Poland
๐ซ๐ฎ Finland
Asia
๐จ๐ณ China
๐ฏ๐ต Japan
๐ฐ๐ท South Korea
๐ญ๐ฐ Hong Kong
๐ธ๐ฌ Singapore
๐ฎ๐ฉ Indonesia
๐ฎ๐ณ India
๐ฒ๐พ Malaysia
๐น๐ผ Taiwan
๐น๐ญ Thailand
๐ป๐ณ Vietnam
Others
๐ฆ๐บ Australia
๐ณ๐ฟ New Zealand
๐ฎ๐ฑ Israel
๐ธ๐ฆ Saudi Arabia
๐น๐ท Turkey
๐ท๐บ Russia
๐ฟ๐ฆ South Africa
>> All Countries
Ranking by categories
๐ All assets by Market Cap
๐ Automakers
โ๏ธ Airlines
๐ซ Airports
โ๏ธ Aircraft manufacturers
๐ฆ Banks
๐จ Hotels
๐ Pharmaceuticals
๐ E-Commerce
โ๏ธ Healthcare
๐ฆ Courier services
๐ฐ Media/Press
๐ท Alcoholic beverages
๐ฅค Beverages
๐ Clothing
โ๏ธ Mining
๐ Railways
๐ฆ Insurance
๐ Real estate
โ Ports
๐ผ Professional services
๐ด Food
๐ Restaurant chains
โ๐ป Software
๐ Semiconductors
๐ฌ Tobacco
๐ณ Financial services
๐ข Oil&Gas
๐ Electricity
๐งช Chemicals
๐ฐ Investment
๐ก Telecommunication
๐๏ธ Retail
๐ฅ๏ธ Internet
๐ Construction
๐ฎ Video Game
๐ป Tech
๐ฆพ AI
>> All Categories
ETFs
๐ All ETFs
๐๏ธ Bond ETFs
๏ผ Dividend ETFs
โฟ Bitcoin ETFs
โข Ethereum ETFs
๐ช Crypto Currency ETFs
๐ฅ Gold ETFs & ETCs
๐ฅ Silver ETFs & ETCs
๐ข๏ธ Oil ETFs & ETCs
๐ฝ Commodities ETFs & ETNs
๐ Emerging Markets ETFs
๐ Small-Cap ETFs
๐ Low volatility ETFs
๐ Inverse/Bear ETFs
โฌ๏ธ Leveraged ETFs
๐ Global/World ETFs
๐บ๐ธ USA ETFs
๐บ๐ธ S&P 500 ETFs
๐บ๐ธ Dow Jones ETFs
๐ช๐บ Europe ETFs
๐จ๐ณ China ETFs
๐ฏ๐ต Japan ETFs
๐ฎ๐ณ India ETFs
๐ฌ๐ง UK ETFs
๐ฉ๐ช Germany ETFs
๐ซ๐ท France ETFs
โ๏ธ Mining ETFs
โ๏ธ Gold Mining ETFs
โ๏ธ Silver Mining ETFs
๐งฌ Biotech ETFs
๐ฉโ๐ป Tech ETFs
๐ Real Estate ETFs
โ๏ธ Healthcare ETFs
โก Energy ETFs
๐ Renewable Energy ETFs
๐ก๏ธ Insurance ETFs
๐ฐ Water ETFs
๐ด Food & Beverage ETFs
๐ฑ Socially Responsible ETFs
๐ฃ๏ธ Infrastructure ETFs
๐ก Innovation ETFs
๐ Semiconductors ETFs
๐ Aerospace & Defense ETFs
๐ Cybersecurity ETFs
๐ฆพ Artificial Intelligence ETFs
Watchlist
Account
Citigroup
C
#77
Rank
$219.52 B
Marketcap
๐บ๐ธ
United States
Country
$122.69
Share price
6.00%
Change (1 day)
54.19%
Change (1 year)
๐ฆ Banks
๐ณ Financial services
Categories
Market cap
Revenue
Earnings
Price history
P/E ratio
P/S ratio
More
Price history
P/E ratio
P/S ratio
P/B ratio
Operating margin
EPS
Stock Splits
Dividends
Dividend yield
Shares outstanding
Fails to deliver
Cost to borrow
Total assets
Total liabilities
Total debt
Cash on Hand
Net Assets
Annual Reports (10-K)
Citigroup
Quarterly Reports (10-Q)
Financial Year FY2025 Q3
Citigroup - 10-Q quarterly report FY2025 Q3
Text size:
Small
Medium
Large
0000831001
FALSE
12/31
2025
Q3
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
0.04
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2025#LongTermDebt
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2025#LongTermDebt
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2025#PropertyPlantAndEquipmentAndFinanceLeaseRightOfUseAssetAfterAccumulatedDepreciationAndAmortization
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2025#PropertyPlantAndEquipmentAndFinanceLeaseRightOfUseAssetAfterAccumulatedDepreciationAndAmortization
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2025#OtherLiabilities
http://fasb.org/us-gaap/2025#OtherLiabilities
xbrli:shares
iso4217:USD
iso4217:USD
xbrli:shares
c:business
xbrli:pure
c:segment
c:group
c:category
c:trust
c:agency
c:decimal
c:year
0000831001
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
2025-09-30
0000831001
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PreferredStockMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockIncludingAdditionalPaidInCapitalMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RetainedEarningsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TreasuryStockCommonMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommonShareholdersEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommonShareholdersEquityMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ParentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ParentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NoncontrollingInterestMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
2024-09-30
0000831001
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
2024-04-01
2024-06-30
0000831001
2024-01-01
2024-03-31
0000831001
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:ConsumerBankingBusinessesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:PolandConsumerBankingBusinessMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:PolandConsumerBankingBusinessMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:PolandConsumerBankingBusinessMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:PolandConsumerBankingBusinessMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:PolandConsumerBankingBusinessMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:PolandConsumerBankingBusinessMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:BanamexMember
2025-09-24
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MaterialReconcilingItemsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MaterialReconcilingItemsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MaterialReconcilingItemsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MaterialReconcilingItemsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:MexicoAndAsiaExitMarketsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:MexicoAndAsiaExitMarketsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsDisposedOfBySaleMember
c:PolandConsumerBankingBusinessMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:MexicoAndAsiaExitMarketsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DiscontinuedOperationsHeldforsaleMember
c:MexicoAndAsiaExitMarketsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentBankingMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentBankingMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentBankingMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentBankingMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:BrokerageCommissionsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:BrokerageCommissionsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:BrokerageCommissionsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:BrokerageCommissionsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeInterchangeFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeInterchangeFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeInterchangeFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeInterchangeFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeCardRelatedLoanFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeCardRelatedLoanFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeCardRelatedLoanFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeCardRelatedLoanFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeCardRewardsAndPartnerPaymentsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeCardRewardsAndPartnerPaymentsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeCardRewardsAndPartnerPaymentsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditAndBankCardIncomeCardRewardsAndPartnerPaymentsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositRelatedFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositRelatedFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositRelatedFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositRelatedFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TransactionalServiceFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TransactionalServiceFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TransactionalServiceFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TransactionalServiceFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CorporateFinanceMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CorporateFinanceMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CorporateFinanceMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CorporateFinanceMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InsuranceDistributionRevenueMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InsuranceDistributionRevenueMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InsuranceDistributionRevenueMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InsuranceDistributionRevenueMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InsurancePremiumsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InsurancePremiumsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InsurancePremiumsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InsurancePremiumsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanServicingMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanServicingMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanServicingMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanServicingMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherProductsAndServicesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherProductsAndServicesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherProductsAndServicesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherProductsAndServicesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommissionsAndFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommissionsAndFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommissionsAndFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommissionsAndFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CustodyFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CustodyFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CustodyFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CustodyFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:FiduciaryFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:FiduciaryFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:FiduciaryFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:FiduciaryFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:GuaranteeFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:GuaranteeFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:GuaranteeFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:GuaranteeFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:AdministrationAndOtherFiduciaryFeesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:AdministrationAndOtherFiduciaryFeesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:AdministrationAndOtherFiduciaryFeesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:AdministrationAndOtherFiduciaryFeesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityAndOtherContractsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityAndOtherContractsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityAndOtherContractsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityAndOtherContractsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:VisaMember
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:OtherPostretirementBenefitPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:OtherPostretirementBenefitPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:OtherPostretirementBenefitPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:OtherPostretirementBenefitPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:OtherPostretirementBenefitPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:OtherPostretirementBenefitPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:OtherPostretirementBenefitPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:OtherPostretirementBenefitPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignPlanMember
us-gaap:PensionPlansDefinedBenefitMember
2024-10-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2022-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2022-12-31
0000831001
2022-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2023-01-01
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2023-01-01
2023-12-31
0000831001
2023-01-01
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2025-03-31
0000831001
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EmployeeSeveranceMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherRestructuringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MaturityOvernightAndOnDemandMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MaturityUpTo30DaysMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:Maturity31to90DaysMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MaturityOver90DaysMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MaturityOvernightAndOnDemandMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MaturityUpTo30DaysMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:Maturity31to90DaysMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MaturityOver90DaysMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:NonMarketableSecuritiesMeasuredUsingMeasurementAlternativeMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableSecuritiesMeasuredUsingMeasurementAlternativeMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasurySecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasurySecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:DebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CorporateDebtAssetBackedAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ForeignResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasurySecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ForeignResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasurySecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CorporateDebtAssetBackedAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:InstallmentAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:InstallmentAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:InstallmentAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:InstallmentAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:GovernmentAndOfficialInstitutionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:GovernmentAndOfficialInstitutionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LoansToFinancialInstitutionsMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LoansToFinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LoansToFinancialInstitutionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LoansToFinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LoansToFinancialInstitutionsMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LoansToFinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LoansToFinancialInstitutionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LoansToFinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LeaseFinancingMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeAccrualMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeAccrualMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeAccrualMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeAccrualMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeNonaccrualMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeNonaccrualMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeNonaccrualMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeNonaccrualMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeAccrualMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeAccrualMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeAccrualMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeAccrualMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeNonaccrualMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeNonaccrualMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeNonaccrualMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeNonaccrualMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:CommercialAndIndustrialMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:MortgagesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:OtherLoansMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancialInstitutionsMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetNotPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetPastDueMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:FinancingReceivables30to89DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:GovernmentGuaranteedCollateralMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:InternalInvestmentGradeMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:InternalInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:InternalInvestmentGradeMember
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:InternalInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:FICOScoreClassifiablyManagedAndDelinquencyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:FICOScoreClassifiablyManagedAndDelinquencyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityTermLoansMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityTermLoansMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityTermLoansMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityTermLoansMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityTermLoansMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityTermLoansMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreLessThan660Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScore660To739Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreGreaterThan740Member
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:FICOScoreNotAvailableMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:InternalInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:CA
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:CA
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:CA
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:CA
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityTermLoansMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:RevolvingLoansConvertedToTermLoansMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityTermLoansMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:RevolvingLoansConvertedToTermLoansMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:LTVNotAvailableMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:LTVNotAvailableMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LTVNotAvailableMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:DebtToValueRatioTotalDebtMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:LTVNotAvailableMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPreResetMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:HomeEquityLineOfCreditPostResetMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:LTVNotAvailableMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:LTVNotAvailableMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:DebtToValueRatioTotalDebtMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:LTVNotAvailableMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:LtvLessThan80PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:Ltv80To100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:DebtToValueRatioLTVGreaterThan100PercentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:LTVNotAvailableMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:DelinquencyManagedLoansMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:DelinquencyManagedLoansMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:DelinquencyManagedLoansMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:DelinquencyManagedLoansMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:DelinquencyManagedLoansMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:DelinquencyManagedLoansMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:DelinquencyManagedLoansMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:ClassifiablyManagedMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:DelinquencyManagedLoansMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:FICOScoreClassifiablyManagedAndDelinquencyManagedMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:GlobalWealthManagementBusinessMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ContractualInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:PaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ExtendedMaturityAndInterestRateReductionMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:ExtendedMaturityInterestRateReductionAndPaymentDeferralMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:NorthAmericaMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:CreditCardReceivablesMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
c:PersonalSmallBusinessAndOtherMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetAcquiredWithCreditDeteriorationMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetAcquiredWithCreditDeteriorationMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FinancialAssetAcquiredWithCreditDeteriorationMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetAcquiredWithCreditDeteriorationMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:FinancialAssetAcquiredWithCreditDeteriorationMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FinancialAssetAcquiredWithCreditDeteriorationMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustmentMember
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustmentMember
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustmentMember
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustmentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustmentMember
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustmentMember
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustmentMember
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustmentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2025-03-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2025-04-01
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:ServicesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:MarketsMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:BankingSegmentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:USPersonalBankingMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OperatingSegmentsMember
c:WealthMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateNonSegmentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:MexicoConsumerSmallBusinessAndMiddleMarketBankingBusinessesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:PurchasedCreditCardRelationshipsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:PurchasedCreditCardRelationshipsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ContractBasedIntangibleAssetsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ContractBasedIntangibleAssetsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherCustomerRelationshipsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherCustomerRelationshipsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:PresentValueOfFutureProfitsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:PresentValueOfFutureProfitsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:IndefinitelivedIntangibleAssetsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:IndefinitelivedIntangibleAssetsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:PurchasedCreditCardRelationshipsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ContractBasedIntangibleAssetsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherCustomerRelationshipsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:PresentValueOfFutureProfitsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:IndefinitelivedIntangibleAssetsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:BankEntitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:BankEntitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:BrokerDealerEntitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:BrokerDealerEntitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:BankEntitiesMember
us-gaap:SeniorNotesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:BankEntitiesMember
us-gaap:SeniorNotesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CitigroupCapitalIIIMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CitigroupCapitalXIIIMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuredOvernightFinancingRateSofrMember
c:CitigroupCapitalXIIIMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LondonInterbankOfferedRateLIBOR1Member
c:CitigroupCapitalXIIIMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
srt:CumulativeEffectPeriodOfAdoptionAdjustedBalanceMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CashFlowHedgingMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueHedgingMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CashFlowHedgingMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueHedgingMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CashFlowHedgingMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueHedgingMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CashFlowHedgingMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueHedgingMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedNetUnrealizedInvestmentGainLossMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossFinancialLiabilityFairValueOptionAttributableToParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedGainLossNetCashFlowHedgeParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentNetPriorServiceCostCreditMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentNetPriorServiceCostCreditMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentNetPriorServiceCostCreditMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentNetPriorServiceCostCreditMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentNetUnamortizedGainLossMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentNetUnamortizedGainLossMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentNetUnamortizedGainLossMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentNetUnamortizedGainLossMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
c:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentCurtailmentAndSettlementAttributableToParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
c:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentCurtailmentAndSettlementAttributableToParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
c:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentCurtailmentAndSettlementAttributableToParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
c:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentCurtailmentAndSettlementAttributableToParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedDefinedBenefitPlansAdjustmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AociDerivativeQualifyingAsHedgeExcludedComponentParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AociLiabilityForFuturePolicyBenefitParentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ReclassificationOutOfAccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedOtherComprehensiveIncomeMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesPPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesPPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesTPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesTPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesTPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:SeriesVPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesVPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesWPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesWPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesWPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesXPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesXPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesXPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesYPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesYPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesYPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesZPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesZPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesZPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesAAPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesAAPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesAAPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesBBPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesBBPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesBBPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesCCPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesCCPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesCCPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesDDPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesDDPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesDDPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesEEPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesEEPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesEEPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesFFPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesFFPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesFFPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:BaseRateMember
c:SeriesGGPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesGGPreferredStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SeriesGGPreferredStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesWPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesXPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesYPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesZPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesAAPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesBBPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesCCPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesDDPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesEEPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesFFPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:UsTreasuryUstInterestRateMember
c:SeriesGGPreferredStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedCreditCardSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedCreditCardSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedLoanObligationsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedLoanObligationsMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalInvestmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalInvestmentsMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ClientIntermediationMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ClientIntermediationMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentFundsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentFundsMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedCreditCardSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedCreditCardSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedLoanObligationsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedLoanObligationsMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalInvestmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalInvestmentsMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ClientIntermediationMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ClientIntermediationMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentFundsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentFundsMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:PrivateEquityFundsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PrivateEquityFundsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:PrivateEquityFundsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PrivateEquityFundsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CitiAdministeredCPConduitsMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CitiAdministeredCPConduitsMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CitiAdministeredCPConduitsMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CitiAdministeredCPConduitsMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalInvestmentsMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalInvestmentsMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalInvestmentsMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalInvestmentsMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentFundsMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentFundsMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentFundsMember
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentFundsMember
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LiquidityFacilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:LoanCommitmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityNotPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:VariableInterestEntityNotPrimaryBeneficiaryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedCreditCardSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedCreditCardSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedCreditCardSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CollateralizedCreditCardSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CitibankCreditCardMasterTrustMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CitibankCreditCardMasterTrustMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
c:CitibankCreditCardMasterTrustMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CitibankCreditCardMasterTrustMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CitibankOMNIMasterTrustMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CitibankOMNIMasterTrustMember
2025-01-01
2025-03-31
0000831001
c:CitibankOMNIMasterTrustMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CitibankOMNIMasterTrustMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentSponsoredEnterprisesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentSponsoredEnterprisesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentSponsoredEnterprisesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentSponsoredEnterprisesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentSponsoredEnterprisesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesWithSeniorInterestsIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesWithSubordinatedInterestsIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentSponsoredEnterprisesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesWithSeniorInterestsIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesWithSubordinatedInterestsIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByPrivateEnterprisesMember
us-gaap:FinancingReceivablesEqualToGreaterThan90DaysPastDueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:PersonalLoanMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerLoanMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageServiceRightsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageServiceRightsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageServiceRightsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageServiceRightsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageServiceRightsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageServiceRightsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
2024-01-01
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityConsolidatedAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EntityConsolidatedAdministeredAssetBackedCommercialPaperConduitMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MunicipalSecuritiesTenderOptionBondTrustsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CommercialRealEstateMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:CorporateLoansMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:CorporateLoansMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:AirplanesShipsAndOtherAssetsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:AirplanesShipsAndOtherAssetsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateSwapMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateSwapMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateSwapMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateSwapMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InterestRateFutureandForwardMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestRateFutureandForwardMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InterestRateFutureandForwardMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestRateFutureandForwardMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InterestRateOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestRateOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InterestRateOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestRateOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InterestRateOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestRateOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InterestRateOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestRateOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CurrencySwapMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CurrencySwapMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CurrencySwapMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CurrencySwapMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ForeignExchangeFutureForwardandSpotMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ForeignExchangeFutureForwardandSpotMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ForeignExchangeFutureForwardandSpotMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ForeignExchangeFutureForwardandSpotMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySwapMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySwapMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySwapMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySwapMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:EquityFutureandForwardMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EquityFutureandForwardMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:EquityFutureandForwardMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EquityFutureandForwardMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:StockOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:StockOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:StockOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:StockOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:StockOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:StockOptionMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:StockOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:StockOptionMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityandOtherSwapsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityandOtherSwapsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityandOtherSwapsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityandOtherSwapsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityandOtherFuturesandForwardsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityandOtherFuturesandForwardsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityandOtherFuturesandForwardsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityandOtherFuturesandForwardsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityAndOtherContractsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityAndOtherContractsMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityAndOtherContractsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityAndOtherContractsMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NotDesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentTradingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:DesignatedAsHedgingInstrumentMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:NondesignatedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:OverTheCounterMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:ExchangeClearedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
us-gaap:ExchangeTradedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityOptionAndOtherContractOptionsMember
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherIncomeMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestIncomeExpenseNetMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:DebtSecuritiesSpecificallyHedgedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DebtSecuritiesPortfolioLayerMethodMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DebtSecuritiesSpecificallyHedgedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:DebtSecuritiesPortfolioLayerMethodMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NetInvestmentHedgingMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NetInvestmentHedgingMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NetInvestmentHedgingMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NetInvestmentHedgingMember
us-gaap:AccumulatedTranslationAdjustmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditDefaultSwapsAndOptionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TotalReturnSwapAndOtherCreditDerivativesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditDerivativeMaturitiesNextRollingTwelveMonthsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditDerivativeMaturitiesNextRollingYearTwoThroughFiveMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditDerivativeMaturitiesRollingAfterYearFiveMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditDefaultSwapsAndOptionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TotalReturnSwapAndOtherCreditDerivativesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CreditDerivativeMaturitiesNextRollingTwelveMonthsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CreditDerivativeMaturitiesNextRollingYearTwoThroughFiveMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CreditDerivativeMaturitiesRollingAfterYearFiveMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:LongMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateSwapMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateSwapMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasuredAtNetAssetValuePerShareMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsRecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasuredAtNetAssetValuePerShareMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-06-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingAssetsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingAssetsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingAssetsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-06-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingAssetsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherTradingAssetsMember
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAssetsExcludingDerivativeAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:TradingAccountAssetsAndTradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:MortgageBackedSecuritiesIssuedByUSGovernmentCorporationsAndAgenciesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ResidentialMortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USTreasuryAndGovernmentMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:USStatesAndPoliticalSubdivisionsMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignGovernmentDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CorporateDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetBackedSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:OtherDebtSecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:InvestmentsExcludingTradingSecuritiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialAssetsIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:SecuritiesSoldNotYetPurchasedMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherTradingLiabilitiesMember
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2023-12-31
0000831001
c:OtherFinancialLiabilitiesIncludingNonTradingDerivativesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueYieldAnalysisMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueYieldAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueYieldAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageBackedSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueYieldAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:StateAndMunicipalForeignGovernmentCorporateAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:StateAndMunicipalForeignGovernmentCorporateAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:StateAndMunicipalForeignGovernmentCorporateAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:StateAndMunicipalForeignGovernmentCorporateAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:StateAndMunicipalForeignGovernmentCorporateAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:StateAndMunicipalForeignGovernmentCorporateAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:StateAndMunicipalForeignGovernmentCorporateAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:StateAndMunicipalForeignGovernmentCorporateAndOtherDebtSecuritiesMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputIlliquidityDiscountMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputIlliquidityDiscountMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputIlliquidityDiscountMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputEbitdaMultipleMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputEbitdaMultipleMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputEbitdaMultipleMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputDiscountRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputDiscountRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputDiscountRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateBasisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateBasisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateBasisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityEquityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityEquityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityEquityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForeignExchangeCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForeignExchangeCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForeignExchangeCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCommodityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCommodityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCommodityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCreditCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCreditCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCreditCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputUpfrontPointsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputUpfrontPointsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputUpfrontPointsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityInterestRateCorrelationMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityInterestRateCorrelationMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityInterestRateCorrelationMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ValuationTechniqueYieldAnalysisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueYieldAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueYieldAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueYieldAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputWALMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputIlliquidityDiscountMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputIlliquidityDiscountMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputIlliquidityDiscountMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputEbitdaMultipleMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputEbitdaMultipleMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputEbitdaMultipleMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:MinimumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputDiscountRateMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:MaximumMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputDiscountRateMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:ValuationTechniqueDiscountedCashFlowMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputDiscountRateMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestRateContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateBasisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateBasisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateBasisMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ForeignExchangeContractMember
c:MeasurementInputYieldMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForwardMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForeignExchangeCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForeignExchangeCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityForeignExchangeCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityEquityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityEquityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EquityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityEquityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCommodityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCommodityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommodityContractMember
c:MeasurementInputCommodityCorrelationMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputCreditSpreadMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:CreditSpreadVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:CreditSpreadVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:CreditSpreadVolatilityMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputUpfrontPointsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputUpfrontPointsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CreditRiskContractMember
c:MeasurementInputUpfrontPointsMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputEquityVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputForwardPriceMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputInterestRateNormalVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MinimumMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:MaximumMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueModelbasedMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
c:MeasurementInputForeignExchangeVolatilityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputDiscountedCashFlowMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputDiscountedCashFlowMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputDiscountedCashFlowMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputRecoveryRateMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationComparableAnalysisMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationComparableAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationComparableAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationComparableAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
c:MeasurementInputPriceMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputAppraisedValueMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputAppraisedValueMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputAppraisedValueMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:RecoveryAnalysisValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationTechniqueComparablesAnalysisMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationComparableAnalysisMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationComparableAnalysisMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputRevenueMultipleMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
c:ValuationComparableAnalysisMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputAppraisedValueMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MinimumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputAppraisedValueMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:MaximumMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
us-gaap:MeasurementInputAppraisedValueMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
us-gaap:MarketApproachValuationTechniqueMember
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RealEstateAcquiredInSatisfactionOfDebtMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RealEstateAcquiredInSatisfactionOfDebtMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RealEstateAcquiredInSatisfactionOfDebtMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:RealEstateAcquiredInSatisfactionOfDebtMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForInvestmentImpairedMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForInvestmentImpairedMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForInvestmentImpairedMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForInvestmentImpairedMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FairValueMeasurementsNonrecurringMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel1Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel2Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:PortionAtOtherThanFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:NonMarketableEquitySecuritiesMember
us-gaap:PortionAtOtherThanFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:LeaseFinancingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LeaseFinancingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
us-gaap:FairValueInputsLevel3Member
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsSoldAndSecuritiesBorrowedOrPurchasedUnderAgreementsToResellMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:TradingAccountsAssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InvestmentsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InvestmentsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InvestmentsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InvestmentsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:CommercialPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ConsumerPortfolioSegmentMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ServicingContractsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:AssetsOtherMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:AssetsOtherMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:AssetsOtherMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:AssetsOtherMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:InterestBearingDepositsMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FederalFundsPurchasedAndSecuritiesSoldUnderAgreementsToRepurchaseMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:TradingLiabilitiesMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LiabilityMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LiabilityMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LiabilityMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LiabilityMember
2024-01-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:SecuritiesAssetsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:LoansReceivableMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
us-gaap:EstimateOfFairValueFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
2025-07-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CertainLoansAndOtherCreditProductsMember
2024-07-01
2024-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoanHeldForSaleMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageReceivablesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:MortgageReceivablesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:InterestRateLinkedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:InterestRateLinkedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ForeignExchangeLinkedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ForeignExchangeLinkedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:EquityLinkedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:EquityLinkedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CommodityLinkedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommodityLinkedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CreditLinkedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditLinkedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:LongTermDebtMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
us-gaap:CarryingReportedAmountFairValueDisclosureMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ShortTermDebtMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:PerformanceGuaranteeMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DerivativeInstrumentsConsideredGuaranteesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SecuritiesLendingIndemnificationsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditCardMerchantProcessingMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditCardArrangementswithPartnersMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:GuaranteesUnderTheFixedIncomeClearingCorporationMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:PerformanceGuaranteeMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:DerivativeInstrumentsConsideredGuaranteesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:SecuritiesLendingIndemnificationsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CreditCardMerchantProcessingMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:CreditCardArrangementswithPartnersMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:GuaranteesUnderTheFixedIncomeClearingCorporationMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ExternalCreditRatingNotRatedMember
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ClassifiedBasedOnInternalAndExternalCreditRatingsMember
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ExternalCreditRatingNotRatedMember
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ClassifiedBasedOnInternalAndExternalCreditRatingsMember
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ExternalCreditRatingNotRatedMember
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ClassifiedBasedOnInternalAndExternalCreditRatingsMember
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ExternalCreditRatingNotRatedMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:ClassifiedBasedOnInternalAndExternalCreditRatingsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ExternalCreditRatingNotRatedMember
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ClassifiedBasedOnInternalAndExternalCreditRatingsMember
us-gaap:FinancialStandbyLetterOfCreditMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ExternalCreditRatingNotRatedMember
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ClassifiedBasedOnInternalAndExternalCreditRatingsMember
c:LoansSoldWithRecourseMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:ExternalCreditRatingNonInvestmentGradeMember
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ExternalCreditRatingNotRatedMember
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ClassifiedBasedOnInternalAndExternalCreditRatingsMember
us-gaap:GuaranteeTypeOtherMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ExternalCreditRatingNotRatedMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:ClassifiedBasedOnInternalAndExternalCreditRatingsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:CommercialAndSimilarLetterOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:CommercialAndSimilarLetterOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommercialAndSimilarLetterOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommercialAndSimilarLetterOfCreditMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:OneToFourFamilyResidentialMortgagesCommitmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:OneToFourFamilyResidentialMortgagesCommitmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OneToFourFamilyResidentialMortgagesCommitmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OneToFourFamilyResidentialMortgagesCommitmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:HomeEquityMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:CommercialRealEstateConstructionAndLandDevelopmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:CommercialRealEstateConstructionAndLandDevelopmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommercialRealEstateConstructionAndLandDevelopmentMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommercialRealEstateConstructionAndLandDevelopmentMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:CreditCardLinesOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:CreditCardLinesOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditCardLinesOfCreditMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CreditCardLinesOfCreditMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:CommercialAndOtherConsumerLoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:CommercialAndOtherConsumerLoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommercialAndOtherConsumerLoanCommitmentsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CommercialAndOtherConsumerLoanCommitmentsMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:OtherCommitmentsAndContingenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
c:OtherCommitmentsAndContingenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherCommitmentsAndContingenciesMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:OtherCommitmentsAndContingenciesMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:NonUsMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
country:US
c:OtherCommitmentsAndContingenciesMember
c:FederalReserveBankStockMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
country:US
c:OtherCommitmentsAndContingenciesMember
c:FederalReserveBankStockMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CashAndDueFromBanksMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:CashAndDueFromBanksMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:DepositsWithBanksMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetPledgedAsCollateralMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
us-gaap:AssetPledgedAsCollateralMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:WeightedAverageMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
c:SubsidiaryHoldingCompanyMember
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
c:SubsidiaryHoldingCompanyMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
c:SubsidiaryHoldingCompanyMember
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
c:SubsidiaryHoldingCompanyMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
c:NonBankSubsidiariesMember
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
c:NonBankSubsidiariesMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
c:NonBankSubsidiariesMember
srt:ParentCompanyMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
c:NonBankSubsidiariesMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
us-gaap:RelatedPartyMember
2025-09-30
0000831001
srt:ReportableLegalEntitiesMember
srt:SubsidiaryIssuerMember
us-gaap:RelatedPartyMember
2024-12-31
0000831001
us-gaap:CommonStockMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SevenPointSixTwoFivePercentTrustPreferredSecuritiesOfCitigroupCapitalIIIMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:SevenPointEightSevenFivePercentFixedRateFloatingRateTrustPreferredSecuritiesOfCitigroupCapitalXIIIMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MediumTermSeniorNotesSeriesNCallableFixedRateNotesDueApril262028OfCGMHIMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MediumTermSeniorNotesSeriesNFloatingRateNotesDueSeptember172026OfCGMHIMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MediumTermSeniorNotesSeriesNFloatingRateNotesDueSeptember152028OfCGMHIMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MediumTermSeniorNotesSeriesNFloatingRateNotesDueOctober62028OfCGMHIMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
0000831001
c:MediumTermSeniorNotesSeriesNFloatingRateNotesDueMarch212029OfCGMHIMember
2025-01-01
2025-09-30
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM
10-Q
(Mark One)
☒
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended
September 30, 2025
OR
☐
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from to
Commission file number
1-9924
Citigroup Inc
.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware
52-1568099
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
388 Greenwich Street,
New York
NY
10013
(Address of principal executive offices)
(Zip code)
(
212
)
559-1000
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 formatted in Inline XBRL: See Exhibit 99.01
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
Yes
☒
No
☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).
Yes
☒
No
☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
Large accelerated filer
☒
Accelerated filer
☐
Non-accelerated filer
☐
Smaller reporting company
☐
Emerging growth company
☐
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.
☐
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes
☐
No
☒
Number of shares of Citigroup Inc. common stock outstanding on September 30, 2025:
1,789,266,159
Available online at www.citigroup.com
This page intentionally left blank.
CITIGROUP’S THIRD QUARTER 2025—FORM 10-Q
OVERVIEW
4
Citigroup’s Five Reportable Business Segments
6
MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
7
Executive Summary
7
Citi’s Multiyear Transformation
11
Recent Developments
11
Summary of Selected Financial Data
12
Segment Revenues and Income (Loss)
14
Services
15
Markets
18
Banking
21
Wealth
24
U.S. Personal Banking
27
All Other—Divestiture-Related Impacts (Reconciling Items)
30
All Other—Managed Basis
32
CAPITAL RESOURCES
36
Managing Global Risk—Table of Contents
47
MANAGING GLOBAL RISK
48
SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND
SIGNIFICANT ESTIMATES
90
DISCLOSURE CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
96
DISCLOSURE PURSUANT TO SECTION 219 OF THE IRAN THREAT REDUCTION AND SYRIA HUMAN RIGHTS ACT
96
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
97
Financial Statements and Notes—Table of Contents
101
CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
102
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED)
110
UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES,
REPURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND DIVIDENDS
216
OTHER INFORMATION
217
EXHIBIT INDEX
218
SIGNATURES
219
GLOSSARY OF TERMS AND ACRONYMS
220
OVERVIEW
This Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q should be read in conjunction with Citigroup’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 (referred to herein as Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K), Citigroup’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 (First Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q) and Citigroup’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2025 (Second Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q).
Throughout this report, “Citigroup,” “Citi” and “the Company” refer to Citigroup Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries. All “Note” references correspond to the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements herein, unless otherwise indicated.
For a list of certain terms and acronyms used in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q and other Citigroup presentations, see “Glossary of Terms and Acronyms” at the end of this report.
Additional Information
Additional information about Citigroup is available on Citi’s website at www.citigroup.com. Citigroup’s annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K and proxy statements, as well as other filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are available free of charge through Citi’s website by clicking on “SEC Filings” under the “Investors” tab. The SEC’s website also contains these filings and other information regarding Citi at www.sec.gov.
Certain reclassifications have been made to the prior periods’ financial statements and disclosures to conform to the current period’s presentation, including the following:
•
Effective July 1, 2025, gains and losses on certain economic and qualifying hedging derivatives and foreign currency transaction gains and losses related to non-U.S. dollar debt and certain foreign operations in countries with highly inflationary economies with the U.S. dollar as their functional currency reported within
Services
,
Markets
,
Banking
and
All Other
—Corporate Other, which were previously presented within
Other revenue
, are now presented within
Principal transactions
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
•
Effective July 1, 2025, certain expenses incurred in ongoing support of products and services that are predominantly variable costs, which were previously presented within
Other operating
expenses and
Transactional and tax charges
,
are now aggregated and presented within a new expenses category,
Transactional and product servicing
(see “Glossary” below for definition). Moreover, certain non-income tax charges incurred, which were previously presented within
Transactional and tax charges
and do not align with the redefined
Transactional and product servicing
, are now presented within
Other operating
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
•
Effective January 1, 2025, certain transaction processing fees paid by Citi, primarily to credit card networks, reported within
U.S. Personal Banking (USPB)
,
Services
,
Wealth
and
All Other
—Legacy Franchises (Mexico Consumer/SBMM and Asia Consumer), which were previously presented within
Other operating
expenses, are now presented as contra-revenue within
Commissions and fees
reported in
Non-interest revenue
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
•
Effective January 1, 2025,
USPB
changed its reporting for certain installment lending products that were transferred from Retail Banking to Branded Cards to reflect where these products are managed. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change.
Please see “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K for a discussion of material risks and uncertainties that could impact Citigroup’s businesses, results of operations and financial condition.
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
Citi prepares its financial statements in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and also presents certain non-GAAP financial measures (non-GAAP measures) that exclude certain items or otherwise include components that differ from the most directly comparable measures calculated in accordance with U.S. GAAP. These non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for GAAP financial measures and may not be defined or calculated the same way as non-GAAP measures with similar names used by other companies.
Citi’s non-GAAP measures in this Form 10-Q include the following:
•
Expenses
and net income per share, both excluding a goodwill impairment charge (notable item)
•
Revenues excluding divestiture-related impacts
•
All Other
(managed basis), which excludes divestiture-related impacts
•
Banking
and Corporate Lending revenues excluding gain (loss) on loan hedges
•
Tangible common equity (TCE), return on tangible common equity (RoTCE) and tangible book value per share (TBVPS)
•
Non-
Markets
net interest income
Citi’s expenses and net income per share excluding the notable item represent as reported, or GAAP, financial results adjusted for a goodwill impairment related to Citi’s agreement to sell a 25% equity stake in Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V. (Banamex) within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises. For more information on the notable item, see “Executive Summary” and “
All Other
—Managed Basis—Legacy Franchises (Managed Basis)” below.
4
Citi’s revenues excluding divestiture-related impacts represent as reported, or GAAP, financial results adjusted for items that are incurred and recognized (and the aforementioned impacts of the notable item), which are wholly and necessarily a consequence of actions taken to sell (including through a public offering), dispose of or wind down business activities associated with Citi’s previously announced exit markets within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises.
Additionally, Citi’s Chief Executive Officer, its chief operating decision maker, regularly reviews financial information for
All Other
on a managed basis that excludes these divestiture-related impacts. For more information on Citi’s results excluding divestiture-related impacts, see “Executive Summary” and “
All Other
—Divestiture-Related Impacts (Reconciling Items)” below.
Citi believes its revenues excluding divestiture-related impacts are useful to investors, industry analysts and others in evaluating Citi’s results of operations and comparing its operational performance between periods, by providing a meaningful depiction of the underlying fundamentals of period-to-period operating results; improved visibility into management decisions and their impacts on operational performance; and additional comparability to peer companies.
For more information on
Banking
and Corporate Lending revenues excluding gain (loss) on loan hedges, see “Executive Summary” and “
Banking
” below. Citi believes that
Banking
and Corporate Lending revenues excluding gain (loss) on loan hedges are useful to investors, industry analysts and others because the gain (loss) on loan hedges are independent of
Banking
and Corporate Lending’s core operations and not indicative of the performance of the business operations.
For more information on TCE, RoTCE and TBVPS, see “Capital Resources—Tangible Common Equity, Book Value Per Share, Tangible Book Value Per Share and Return on Equity” below. TCE, RoTCE and TBVPS are used by management, as well as investors, industry analysts and others, in assessing Citi’s use of equity. Citi believes TCE and RoTCE are useful to investors, industry analysts and others by providing alternative measures of capital strength and performance. Citi believes TBVPS provides additional useful information about the level of tangible assets in relation to Citi’s outstanding shares of common stock.
For more information on non-
Markets
net interest income, see “Market Risk—Non-
Markets
Net Interest Income” below.
Management uses non-
Markets
net interest income to assess the performance of Citi’s non-
Markets
lending, investing (including asset-liability management) and deposit-raising activities, apart from any volatility associated with such
Markets
’ activities. Citi believes the use of this non-GAAP measure provides investors, industry analysts and others with an alternative measure to analyze the net interest income trends of Citi’s lending, investing and deposit-raising activities, by providing a meaningful depiction of the underlying fundamentals of period-to-period operating results of those activities; improved visibility into management decisions and their impacts on operational performance; and additional comparability to peer companies.
5
Citigroup is managed pursuant to five reportable business segments (segments), also referred to as Citi’s “five businesses”:
Services
,
Markets
,
Banking
,
Wealth
and
U.S. Personal Banking.
Activities not assigned to the segments are included in
All Other
. For additional information, see the results of operations for each of the segments and
All Other
within “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” below.
Note: Mexico is included in Latin America (LATAM) within International.
(1)
Fixed
Income Markets consists of the Rates and Currencies and Spread Products and Other Fixed Income sub-businesses;
Equity
Markets consists of the
Equity Derivatives, Equity Cash and Prime Services sub-businesses.
(2)
Investment Banking consists of the
Debt Capital Markets (DCM), Equity Capital Markets (ECM) and Advisory sub-businesses.
(3)
Mexico Consumer/SBMM operates primarily through Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V. (Banamex) and its consolidated subsidiaries. Mexico Consumer/SBMM results of operations and certain balance sheet information are presented in a managerial view in this Form 10-Q and include certain intercompany allocations, managerial charges and offshore expenses that reflect the Mexico Consumer/SBMM operations as a component of Citi’s consolidated operations, and are not intended to reflect, and may differ significantly from, Banamex’s results and operations as a standalone legal entity. For additional information, see “
All Other
—Managed Basis—Legacy Franchises (Managed Basis)” below.
(4)
Includes the remaining three exit countries (Korea, Poland and Russia).
(5)
Within International, Citi is organized into six clusters: United Kingdom; Japan, Asia North and Australia (JANA); LATAM; Asia South; Europe; and Middle East and Africa (MEA). Although the chief operating decision maker (CODM) does not manage Citi’s segments and
All Other
by cluster, Citi provides additional selected financial information (revenue and certain corporate credit metrics) below for the six clusters within International.
6
MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION
AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Third Quarter of 2025—Continued Progress on Citigroup’s Strategic Priorities, Including Improved Business Performance
As described further throughout this Executive Summary, during the third quarter of 2025:
•
Citi and its five businesses each achieved positive operating leverage. This is the sixth consecutive quarter of positive operating leverage for Citi and the fifth consecutive quarter of positive operating leverage across the five businesses. Citi’s positive operating leverage was driven by revenue growth of 9.3% and disciplined expense management (up 8.7% on a reported basis, and up 3.2% excluding the impact of a notable item consisting of a goodwill impairment, as described below).
•
Citi returned approximately $6.1 billion to common shareholders in the form of share repurchases ($5.0 billion) under its multiyear $20 billion common stock repurchase program, and dividends ($1.1 billion).
•
Citi’s Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) Capital ratio under the Basel III Standardized Approach was 13.3% as of September 30
,
2025
,
approximately 120 basis points above its regulatory requirement at the end of the quarter. Effective October 1, 2025, Citigroup’s required regulatory CET1 Capital ratio decreased from 12.1% to 11.6% under the Standardized Approach, reflecting the decrease in the Stress Capital Buffer (SCB) requirement from 4.1% to 3.6% (see “Capital Resources—Stress Capital Buffer” below).
•
Citi continued to advance its transformation through the third quarter of 2025, including, among other things, making key investments to consolidate and modernize its infrastructure, simplify and automate its processes and strengthen risk and controls. (See “Citi’s Multiyear Transformation” below.)
•
As part of its strategic refresh
,
Citi continued to make progress on its remaining divestitures
,
including a significant step toward the divestiture of Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V. (Banamex) by entering into an agreement to sell a 25% equity stake to a company wholly owned by Fernando Chico Pardo and members of his immediate family, while continuing to pursue a planned initial public offering (IPO). For additional information, including the impacts from the planned divestiture of Banamex, see “
All Other
—Managed Basis—Legacy Franchises (Managed Basis)” below.
Third Quarter of 2025 Results Summary
Citigroup
Citi reported net income of $3.8 billion, or $1.86 per share, compared to net income of $3.2 billion, or $1.51 per share in the prior-year period. The current-quarter results included a notable item consisting of a goodwill impairment of $726 million ($714 million after-tax), related to Citi’s agreement to sell a 25% equity stake in Banamex. Excluding the notable item, net income per share in the current quarter was $2.24.
Net income increase
d 16% versus the prior-year period, driven by higher revenues and lower provisions, largely offset by higher expenses
.
Citi’s effective tax rate was approximately 29% compared to approximately 25% in the prior-year period, driven by the limited tax benefit of the notable item. Average diluted
shares
outstanding decreased 4%
,
driven by common share repurchases.
Citi’s revenues of $22.1 billion in the third quarter of 202
5 increased 9% versus the prior-year period, both on a reported basis and excluding divestiture-related impacts, driven by growth across each of Citi’s five businesses and Lega
cy Franchises in
All Other
(managed basis), along with the benefit of foreign exchange (FX) translation, partially offset by a decline in Corporate/Other,
also
in
All Other
(managed basis). For additional information on the divestiture-related impacts, see “
All Other
—Divestiture-Related Impacts (Reconciling Items)”
below.
Citi’s average loans were $725 billion
,
up 6% versus the prior-year period
,
driven by growth in
Markets
,
USPB
both in Retail Banking and Branded Cards and
Services
,
partially offset by lower loans in
Banking
and
All Other.
For additional information about Citi’s loans by segment and
All Other
,
including drivers and loan trends
,
see each respective segment’s and
All Other
’s
results of operations and “Credit Risk—Loans” below.
Citi’s average deposits were approximately $1.4 trillion
,
up 5% versus the prior-year period
,
driven by an increase in
Services.
For additional information about Citi’s deposits by segment and
All Other
,
including drivers and deposit trends
,
see each respective segment’s and
All Other
’s
results of operations and “
Liquidity
Risk—Deposits” below.
Expenses
Citi’s operating expenses of $14.3 billion increased 9%, on a reported basis. The increase was driven by the notable item, as well as higher compensation and benefits expenses and an increase related to the impact of FX translation. The higher compensation and benefits expenses were driven by higher performance-related compensation, higher severance and higher investments in Citi’s transformation and technology. Continued investments across the businesses were partially offset by further productivity savings and stranded cost reductions. Excluding the notable item, expenses were up 3%.
7
Provisions
Citi’s total provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims in the current period were $2.5 billion, reflecting net credit losses of $2.2 billion, and a net allowance for credit losses (ACL) build of $236 million.
Net credit losses were up 2% from the prior-year period, driven by increases in
All Other
and
Markets
, largely offset by decreases in
USPB
.
The net ACL build in the current period was driven by higher volume, changes in portfolio composition and transfer risk associated with Russia, partially offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook.
Citi’s total provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims in the prior-year period were $2.7 billion, reflecting net credit losses of $2.2 billion, and a net ACL build of $503 million, driven by changes in portfolio composition, higher volume and transfer risk associated with Russia.
For additional
information
on Citi’s ACL
,
see “
Significant
Accounting Policies and Significant
Estimates
—
Citi’
s
Allowance for Credit Losses (ACL)” below.
For additional
information on Citi’s consumer and corporate provisions, see each respective segment’s
and
All
Other
’s
results of operations and “
Credit
Risk” below.
Capital
Citigroup’s CET1 Capital ratio was 13.3% as of September 30, 2025
,
compared to 13.7%
as
of September 30, 2024
,
based on the Basel III Standardized Approach for determining risk-weighted
assets
(RWA). The decrease was primarily driven by common share repurchases, the payment of common and preferred dividends
and
an increase in RWA, partially offset by net income.
In the
third
quarter of 2025, Citi repurchased
$5.0
billion of common
shares
and paid
$1.1
billion of common dividends (see “
Unregistered
Sales of
Equity
Securities
,
Repurchases of
Equity
Securities and Dividends” below).
For additional
information on capital-related risks
,
trends and uncertainties,
see “Capital
Resources
—
Regulatory Capital Standards
and
Developments” below and “
Risk Factors
—
Strategic
Risks,” “
—
Operational
Risks” and “
—
Compliance
Risks” in Citi’s 2024
Form
10-K.
Citigroup’s Supplementary Leverage ratio as of September 30, 2025 was 5.5%
,
compared to 5.8%
as
of September
30,
2024, driven by an increase in Total Leverage
Exposure,
partially offset by
an
increase in Tier 1 Capital.
For additional
information on Citi’s capital ratios and related components
,
see “
Capital
Resources” below.
Services
Services
net income of $1.8 billion increased 9% from the prior-year period, driven by higher revenues and lower provisions, partially offset by higher expenses.
Services
revenues of
$5.4
billion increased 7%, driven by growth in both Treasury and
Trade
Solutions (TTS)
and
Securities Services. Net interest income increased 11%, primarily driven by
an
increase in average deposit balances and deposit
spreads.
Non-interest revenue decreased 3%
,
driven by higher lending revenue share with
Banking
—Corporate Lending
, largely offset by the benefit of continued growth in underlying fee drivers across the businesses, with assets under custody
and administration (AUC/AUA) up 13%, cross-border transaction value up 10% and U.S. dollar clearing volume up 5%.
TTS revenues of $3.9 billion increased 7%
,
driven by
a
14% increase in net interest income
,
partially offset by
a
15% decrease in non-interest revenue. The increase in net interest income was primarily driven by higher deposit balances and deposit spreads. The decrease in non-interest revenue was driven by the impact of higher lending revenue share with
Banking
—
Corporate Lending, partially offset by growth in underlying fee drivers. Securities Services revenues of
$1.5
billion increased 7
%,
driven by a 14% increase in
non-interest revenue. The increase in non-interest revenue was driven by a mark-to-market gain and higher custody fees due to a 13% increase in AUC/AUA, partially offset by higher lending revenue share with
Banking
—
Corporate Lending. Net interest income was unchanged, as lower deposit spreads were primarily offset by higher deposit balances.
Services
expenses of
$2.7
billion increased 5%
,
primarily
driven by higher compensation
and
benefits expenses
,
including severance
,
as
well
as
higher volume and other revenue-related expenses.
Services
p
rovisions
were $61 million in the current period, reflecting a net ACL build of $50 million, and net credit losses of $11 million. The net ACL build was driven by transfer risk associated with Russia. Provisions
were $127 million in the prior-year period, reflecting a net ACL build of $113 million, largely related to transfer risk associated with Russia, and net credit losses of $14 million.
For additional
information on the results of operations of
Services
in the third quarter of 2025,
see “
Services
”
below.
Markets
Markets
net income of $1.6 billion increased 46% from the prior-year period, driven by higher revenues and lower provisions
,
partially offset by higher expenses.
Markets
revenues of $5.6 billion increased 15%
,
driven by
a
12% increase in
Fixed
Income Markets
and a
24% increase in
Equity
Markets. The increase in
Fixed
Income Markets was driven by growth in Rates and Currencies, where revenues increased 15%, largely driven by higher revenues in Rates due to elevated client activity and by Spread Products and Other Fixed Income, where revenues were up 8%, largely driven by higher mortgage trading and financing activity, partially offset by lower commodities activity. The increase in
Equity
Markets was driven by higher client activity in Equity Derivatives and increased volumes in Equity Cash, as well as continued momentum in Prime Services, with prime balances up approximately 44%.
Markets
expenses of $3.5 billion increased 5%, primarily driven by higher compensation and benefits, as well as the impact of FX translation, partially offset by lower transactional and product servicing expenses, as higher transaction volumes were more than offset by efficiency actions.
Markets
p
rovisions
were $32 million in the current period, reflecting net credit losses of $68 million, and a net ACL release of $36 million. Net credit losses were driven by a charge-off in Spread Products and the net ACL release was for the related reserve. Provisions were $141 million in the prior-
8
year period, reflecting a net ACL build of $117 million, primarily driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality, and net credit losses of $24 million.
For additional
information on the results of operations of
Markets
in the
third
quarter of 2025
,
see “
Markets
”
below.
Banking
Banking
net income of $638 million
increased 168%
from the prior-year period,
driven by higher revenues
and
lower provisions, partially offset by higher expenses.
Banking
revenues of $2.1 billion increased 34%, driven by growth in Corporate Lending, excluding mark-to-market gain (loss) on loan hedges, and Investment Banking
,
as well as a lower mark-to-market loss on loan hedges. Excluding the gain (loss) on loan hedges
,
Banking
revenues of
$2.2 billion increased 30%. Investment Banking revenues of $1.1 billion increased 23%, primarily driven by increases in investment banking fees. Investment banking fees increased 17%
,
reflecting growth across Debt Capital Markets (DCM), Equity Capital Markets (ECM) and Advisory. DCM fees were up 19%, driven by leveraged finance. ECM fees were up 35%, driven by growth a
cross all products, notably in convertibles amid a strong equity market and tight financing spreads. Advisory fees increased 8%, driven by momentum across several sectors, continued wallet share gains with financial sponsors and more sell-side activity. Corporate Lending revenues increased 49%, including the gain (loss) on loan hedges. Excluding the gain (loss) on loan hedges, Corporate Lending revenues increased 39%, driven by the impact of higher lending revenue share from
Services
,
Markets
and Investment Banking.
Banking
expenses of $1.1 billion increased 2%, driven by higher volume-related transactional and product servicing expenses, as well as higher revenue-related compensation and benefits, including investments in the busines
s,
partially offset by prior repositioning and other related actions.
Banking
p
rovisions
were $157 million in the current period, reflecting a net ACL build of $148 million, and net credit losses of $9 million. The net ACL build was driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality and exposure growth. Provisions were $177 million in the prior-year period, reflecting a net ACL build of $141 million, driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality, and net credit losses of $36 million.
For additional information on the results of operations of
Banking
in the third quarter of 2025, see “
Banking
”
below.
Wealth
Wealth
net income of $374 million increased 32%
from the prior-year period,
driven by higher revenues
,
partially offset by higher expenses.
Wealth
revenues of $2.2 billion increased 8%, driven by growth in Citigold and
the Private Bank, partially offset by lower revenues in Wealth at Work. Net interest income of $1.3 billion increased 8%, driven by higher deposit spreads, partially offset by lower mortgage spreads. Non-interest revenue of $832 million increased 9%
,
driven by higher investment fee revenues, with client investment assets up 14%.
Wealth
expenses of $1.7 billion increased 4% from the prior-year period, driven by higher investments in technology and higher volume-related transactional and product servicing expenses, partially offset by continued productivity savings.
Wealth
provisions
were $30 million in the current period, reflecting net credit losses of $56 million, and a net ACL release of $26 million. Net credit losses included write-downs of mortgage loans to their collateral value due to the impact of the California wildfires and the net ACL release was for the related reserves. Provisions were $33 million in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $27 million, and a net ACL build of $6 million.
For additional information on the results of operations of
Wealth
in the third quarter of 2025, see “
Wealth
”
below.
U.S. Personal Banking
USPB
net income of $858 million increased 64% from the prior-year period, driven by higher revenues and lower provisions.
USPB
revenues of $5.3 billion increased 7%, driven by growth in Branded Cards and Retail Banking, partially offset by a decline in Retail Services. Net interest income increased 8%, driven by higher loan spreads and higher interest-earning balances in Branded Cards, as well as higher deposit spreads and balances in Retail Banking. Non-interest revenue decreased 10%, driven by higher rewards costs, primarily offset by higher gross interchange and credit card fees in Branded Cards and higher deposit servicing fees in Retail Banking.
Branded Cards revenues of $3.0 billion increased 8%, driven by higher loan spreads, higher interest-earning balances (up 5%) and higher gross interchange fees, partially offset by higher rewards costs. Retail Services revenues of $1.7 billion decreased 1%, driven by higher partner payment accruals and lower net interest income due to lower interest-earning balances. Retail Banking revenues of $675 million increased 30%, primarily driven by the impact of higher deposit spreads, higher deposit balances and higher deposit servicing fees.
USPB
expenses of $2.4 billion were unchanged from the prior-year period, as lower advertising and marketing expenses and lower compensation and benefits expenses were offset by higher volume-related transactional and product servicing expenses.
USPB
provisions
were $1.8 billion in the current period, reflecting net credit losses of $1.8 billion, and a net ACL build of $66 million. Net credit losses were down 5%, driven by improved credit performance in Retail Services. The net ACL build was driven by changes in portfolio composition and higher volume, largely offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook. Provisions
were $1.9 billion in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $1.9 billion, and a net ACL build of $45 million.
For additional information on the results of operations of
USPB
in the third quarter of 2025, see “
U.S. Personal Banking
”
below.
9
All Other (Managed Basis)
All Other
(managed basis) net loss was $705 million, compared to a net loss of $483 million in the prior-year period
,
driven by lower revenues, higher expenses and higher provisions.
All Other
(managed basis) revenues of $1.5 billion decreased 16%, driven by lower revenues in Corporate
/
Other, partially offset by an increase in Legacy Franchises (managed basis). Legacy Franchises (managed basis) revenues of $1.9 billion increased 8%
,
driven by growth in Mexico, including the impact of Mexican peso appreciation, partially offset by lower revenues related to closed exits and wind-downs in Asia Consumer (managed basis). Corporate
/
Other revenues of $(336) million decreased from $86 million in the prior-year period
,
driven by lower net interest income, due to a lower benefit from cash and securities reinvestment driven by actions over the past few quarters to reduce Citi’s asset sensitivity in a declining rate environment, and lower non-interest revenues.
All Other
(managed basis) expenses of $2.2 billion increased 4%, driven by higher expenses in Corporate/Other, including higher severance, largely offset by a decline in Legacy Franchises (managed basis) driven by lower expenses related to closed exits and wind-downs and lower litigation expenses, partially offset by the impact of Mexican peso appreciation.
All Other
(managed basis)
p
rovisions
were $331 million in the current period, reflecting net credit losses of $297 million, and a net ACL build of $34 million. Net credit losses were up 43%, driven by higher consumer lending volume and portfolio seasoning in Mexico Consumer/SBMM. The net ACL build was driven by changes in portfolio composition and higher consumer lending volume in Mexico Consumer/SBMM, largely offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook. Provisions
were $289 million in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $208 million, and a net ACL build of $81 million, largely driven by changes in portfolio composition and higher consumer lending volume in Mexico Consumer/SBMM.
For additional information on the results of operations of
All Other
(managed basis) in the third quarter of 2025
,
see “
All
Other—Divestiture-Related Impacts (Reconciling Items)” and “
All
Other
(Managed Basis)” below.
Macroeconomic and Other Risks and Uncertainties
Various macroeconomic
,
geopolitical and regulatory factors have contributed to economic uncertainties in the U.S. and globally
,
including
,
but not limited to, those related to the U.S. government shutdown and tariff and other policies of the U.S. administration and its trading partners. These factors could adversely affect
economic growth and unemployment in the U.S. and other countries and result in volatility and disruptions in financial markets, and tariffs could also adversely affect inflation. Such risks and uncertainties could also adversely impact Citi’s clients, customers
,
businesses
,
funding costs
,
provisions
and overall results of operations and financial condition during the remainder of 2025.
For a discussion of other trends
,
uncertainties and risks that will or could impact Citi’s segments and
All Other
,
results of operations, capital and other financial condition during the remainder of 2025, see “
Third
Quarter of 2025 Results Summary” above
,
each respective segment’s and
All Other
’s
results of operations
, “
Managing Global Risk,” including “
Managing
Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Russia” and “—Argentina
,”
and “Forward-Looking Statements”
below and “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
10
CITI’S MULTIYEAR TRANSFORMATION
Overview
As previously disclosed, Citi’s transformation, including the remediation of its 2020 Consent Orders with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB) and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), is a multiyear endeavor that is not linear.
Citi continues to expect its transformation investments to be meaningfully higher in 2025, compared to 2024, as it progresses critical bodies of work in data and controls.
For additional information on Citi’s transformation, including focus areas and status, consent order compliance and governance, see “Citi’s Multiyear Transformation” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K, Citi’s First Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q and Citi’s Second Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q, as well as Citi’s 2025 Proxy Statement for its Annual Meeting of Stockholders.
Progress
Citi continued to make significant progress in its transformation through the third quarter of 2025 and is now at or mostly at its target state for more than two-thirds of its transformation programs, including:
•
Components of the end-to-end Enterprise Risk Management lifecycle to strengthen how Citi identifies, measures, monitors and controls risk, including risk identification, risk appetite and limits management, stress testing and new activity risk management
•
A standardized control assessment process to help detect and remediate control deficiencies, including payment and trade controls
In addition, Citi continued to make progress in advancing its technology priorities, including:
•
Continued to optimize, modernize and simplify Citi by retiring or replacing 384 applications year-to-date through September 30, 2025
•
Reduced manual intervention for priority liquidity regulatory reporting processes by deploying a workflow tool
•
Expanded the adoption of Generative AI tools with the rollout of new features that enable faster and easier access and increase overall productivity
◦
Adoption continues to accelerate, with approximately 7 million utilizations of Citi’s two enterprise-wide tools year-to-date (approximately three times increase versus previous quarter)
◦
Approximately 1 million automated code reviews completed by Citi’s Generative AI tools year-to-date, saving approximately 100,000 hours per week across Citi’s developer population
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
As disclosed on Citi’s Form 8-K filed with the SEC on October 22, 2025: (i) Citi announced that its Board of Directors (the Board) appointed Jane Fraser, Citi’s Chief Executive Officer, as Chair of the Board, while John Dugan, who served as Chair of the Board since 2019, will become Lead Independent Director; and (ii) the Board’s Compensation, Performance Management and Culture Committee (the Committee) awarded restricted stock units with a grant value of $25 million and 1.055 million of Citigroup stock options to Jane Fraser. In accordance with Citi’s 2019 Stock Incentive Plan, the options award will be effectuated on two grant dates: (i) 1.0 million Citigroup stock options were formally granted on October 22, 2025; and (ii) 55,000 Citigroup stock options will be formally granted in 2026, on a date to be determined by the Committee. These actions reflect the Board’s intent to ensure leadership continuity as Citi extends the growing momentum it is demonstrating in strengthening its business performance, executing its transformation and delivering enhanced shareholder value.
11
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
SUMMARY OF SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
Citigroup Inc. and Consolidated Subsidiaries
Third Quarter
Nine Months
In millions of dollars, except per share amounts
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
Net interest income
$
14,940
$
13,362
12
%
$
44,127
$
40,362
9
%
Non-interest revenue
7,150
6,847
4
21,227
20,895
2
Revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
22,090
$
20,209
9
%
$
65,354
$
61,257
7
%
Operating expenses
(1)
14,290
13,144
9
41,292
40,497
2
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
2,450
2,675
(8)
8,045
7,516
7
Income from continuing operations before income taxes
$
5,350
$
4,390
22
%
$
16,017
$
13,244
21
%
Income taxes
1,559
1,116
40
4,085
3,299
24
Income from continuing operations
$
3,791
$
3,274
16
%
$
11,932
$
9,945
20
%
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes
(1)
(1)
—
(2)
(2)
—
Net income before attribution of noncontrolling interests
$
3,790
$
3,273
16
%
$
11,930
$
9,943
20
%
Net income attributable to noncontrolling interests
38
35
9
95
117
(19)
Citigroup’s net income
$
3,752
$
3,238
16
%
$
11,835
$
9,826
20
%
Earnings per share
Basic
Income from continuing operations
$
1.89
$
1.53
24
%
$
5.87
$
4.67
26
%
Net income
1.89
1.53
24
5.87
4.67
26
Diluted
Income from continuing operations
$
1.86
$
1.51
23
%
$
5.78
$
4.61
25
%
Net income
1.86
1.51
23
5.78
4.61
25
Dividends declared per common share
0.60
0.56
7
1.72
1.62
6
Common dividends
$
1,118
$
1,089
3
%
$
3,253
$
3,143
3
%
Preferred dividends
274
277
(1)
830
798
4
Common share repurchases
5,000
1,000
400
8,750
1,500
483
Table continues on the next page, including footnotes.
12
SUMMARY OF SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
(Continued)
Citigroup Inc. and Consolidated Subsidiaries
In millions of dollars, except per share amounts,
ratios and direct staff
Third Quarter
Nine Months
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
At September 30:
Total assets
$
2,642,475
$
2,430,663
9
%
Total deposits
1,383,929
1,309,999
6
Long-term debt
315,846
299,081
6
Citigroup common stockholders’ equity
193,973
192,733
1
Total Citigroup stockholders’ equity
213,023
209,083
2
Average assets
2,688,800
2,492,080
8
$
2,617,915
$
2,466,302
6
%
Direct staff
(in thousands)
227
229
(1)
%
Performance metrics
Return on average assets
0.55
%
0.52
%
0.60
%
0.53
%
Return on average common stockholders’ equity
(2)
7.1
6.2
7.6
6.4
Return on average total stockholders’ equity
(2)
7.0
6.2
7.5
6.3
Return on tangible common equity (RoTCE)
(3)
8.0
7.0
8.6
7.2
Operating leverage
(4)
59 bps
281 bps
473 bps
(133) bps
Efficiency ratio (total operating expenses/total revenues, net)
64.7
65.0
63.2
66.1
Basel III ratios
CET1 Capital
(5)
13.27
%
13.71
%
Tier 1 Capital
(5)
14.97
15.24
Total Capital
(5)
15.31
15.21
Supplementary Leverage ratio
5.52
5.85
Citigroup common stockholders’ equity to assets
7.34
%
7.93
%
Total Citigroup stockholders’ equity to assets
8.06
8.60
Dividend payout ratio
(6)
32
37
30
%
35
%
Total payout ratio
(7)
176
71
109
51
Book value per common share
$
108.41
$
101.91
6
%
Tangible book value per share (TBVPS)
(3)
95.72
89.67
7
(1) Effective January 1, 2025, certain transaction processing fees paid by Citi, primarily to credit card networks, reported within
USPB
,
Services
,
Wealth
and
All Other
—Legacy Franchises (Mexico Consumer/SBMM and Asia Consumer), which were previously presented within
Other operating
expenses, are presented as contra-revenue within
Commissions and fees
reported in
Non-interest revenue
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
(2) The return on average common stockholders’ equity is calculated using net income less preferred stock dividends divided by average common stockholders’ equity. The return on average total Citigroup stockholders’ equity is calculated using net income divided by average Citigroup stockholders’ equity.
(3) RoTCE and TBVPS are non-GAAP financial measures. For information on RoTCE and TBVPS, see “Capital Resources—Tangible Common Equity, Book Value Per Share, Tangible Book Value Per Share and Return on Equity” below.
(4) Represents the year-over-year growth rate in basis points (bps) of
Total revenues, net of interest expense
less the year-over-year growth rate of
Total operating expenses
. Positive operating leverage indicates that the revenue growth rate was greater than the expense growth rate.
(5) Citi’s binding CET1 Capital and Tier 1 Capital ratios were derived under the Basel III Standardized Approach, whereas Citi’s binding Total Capital ratio was derived under the Basel III Advanced Approaches framework for both periods presented. As of September 30, 2025, the Common Equity Tier 1 Capital ratio under the Basel III Standardized Approach became the most binding ratio. In the prior quarter, the Tier 1 Capital ratio under the Basel III Standardized Approach was the most binding ratio.
(6) Dividends declared per common share as a percentage of net income per diluted share.
(7) Total common dividends declared plus common share repurchases as a percentage of net income available to common shareholders (
Net income
less preferred dividends). See “Consolidated Statement of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity,” Note 10 and “Equity Security Repurchases” below for the component details.
13
SEGMENT REVENUES AND INCOME (LOSS)
REVENUES
(1)
Third Quarter
Nine Months
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
Services
$
5,363
$
5,015
7
%
$
15,314
$
14,453
6
%
Markets
5,563
4,817
15
17,428
15,260
14
Banking
2,132
1,597
34
6,005
4,960
21
Wealth
2,164
1,995
8
6,426
5,489
17
USPB
5,331
4,964
7
15,678
14,905
5
All Other
—managed basis
(2)
1,535
1,820
(16)
4,678
6,168
(24)
All Other
—divestiture-related impacts (Reconciling Items)
(2)
2
1
100
(175)
22
NM
Total Citigroup net revenues
$
22,090
$
20,209
9
%
$
65,354
$
61,257
7
%
INCOME
Third Quarter
Nine Months
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
Income (loss) from continuing operations
Services
$
1,819
$
1,683
8
%
$
4,877
$
4,696
4
%
Markets
1,583
1,089
45
5,127
3,979
29
Banking
635
236
169
1,638
1,172
40
Wealth
374
283
32
1,152
668
72
USPB
858
522
64
2,252
990
127
All Other
—managed basis
(2)
(701)
(494)
(42)
(2,142)
(1,389)
(54)
All Other
—divestiture-related impacts (Reconciling Items)
(2)
(777)
(45)
NM
(972)
(171)
(468)
Income from continuing operations
$
3,791
$
3,274
16
%
$
11,932
$
9,945
20
%
Discontinued operations
$
(1)
$
(1)
—
%
$
(2)
$
(2)
—
%
Less: Net income attributable to noncontrolling interests
38
35
9
95
117
(19)
Citigroup’s net income
$
3,752
$
3,238
16
%
$
11,835
$
9,826
20
%
(1) See footnote 1 in “Results of Operations—Summary of Selected Financial Data” above for the description of a change in presentation.
(2)
All Other
(managed basis) excludes divestiture-related impacts (Reconciling Items) related to (i) Citi’s divestitures of its Asia Consumer businesses and (ii) the planned IPO of Banamex, within Legacy Franchises. The Reconciling Items are reflected in the relevant line items in Citi’s Consolidated Statement of Income. See “
All Other
—Divestiture-Related Impacts (Reconciling Items)” below.
NM Not meaningful
14
SERVICES
Services
includes TTS and Securities Services. TTS provides an integrated suite of tailored cash management, payments and trade and working capital solutions to multinational corporations, financial institutions and public sector organizations. Securities Services connects investors and issuers across global markets, providing a comprehensive product offering, including on-the-ground local market expertise, post-trade technologies, customized data solutions and a wide range of securities services solutions that can be tailored to meet clients’ needs.
Services
revenue is generated primarily from spreads and fees associated with these activities.
Services
earns spread revenue on deposits, as well as interest on loans. Revenue generated from these activities is primarily recorded in Net interest income in the table below.
Fee income is earned for assisting clients with transactional services and clearing. Revenue generated from these activities is recorded in Commissions and fees. Revenue is also generated from assets under custody and administration (AUC/AUA) and is primarily recorded in Administration and other fiduciary fees. For additional information on these various types of revenues, see Note 5.
Services
revenues reflect the impact of a revenue sharing arrangement with
Banking
—Corporate Lending, for
Services
products sold to Corporate Lending clients. This generally results in a reduction in
Services
reported revenue recorded in All other as part of Non-interest revenue in the table below.
Third Quarter
Nine Months
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
Net interest income (including dividends)
$
3,823
$
3,435
11
%
$
10,951
$
9,977
10
%
Fee revenue
Commissions and fees
(1)
880
834
6
2,599
2,490
4
Administration and other fiduciary fees
746
701
6
2,156
2,081
4
Total fee revenue
$
1,626
$
1,535
6
%
$
4,755
$
4,571
4
%
Principal transactions
190
214
(11)
547
541
1
All other
(2)
(276)
(169)
(63)
(939)
(636)
(48)
Total non-interest revenue
$
1,540
$
1,580
(3)
%
$
4,363
$
4,476
(3)
%
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
5,363
$
5,015
7
%
$
15,314
$
14,453
6
%
Total operating expenses
(1)
$
2,707
$
2,575
5
%
$
7,970
$
7,967
—
%
Net credit losses on loans
11
14
(21)
37
20
85
Credit reserve build (release) for loans
(4)
7
NM
73
(59)
NM
Provision for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
(8)
7
NM
(20)
21
NM
Provisions for credit losses on other assets and HTM debt securities
62
99
(37)
375
182
106
Provision (release) for credit losses
$
61
$
127
(52)
%
$
465
$
164
184
%
Income from continuing operations before taxes
$
2,595
$
2,313
12
%
$
6,879
$
6,322
9
%
Income taxes
776
630
23
2,002
1,626
23
Income from continuing operations
$
1,819
$
1,683
8
%
$
4,877
$
4,696
4
%
Noncontrolling interests
17
32
(47)
48
84
(43)
Net income
$
1,802
$
1,651
9
%
$
4,829
$
4,612
5
%
Efficiency ratio
50
%
51
%
52
%
55
%
Balance Sheet data
(in billions of dollars)
EOP assets
$
627
$
608
3
%
Average assets
616
591
4
$
596
$
582
2
%
15
Revenue by line of business
Net interest income
$
3,121
$
2,731
14
%
$
8,935
$
8,083
11
%
Non-interest revenue
761
896
(15)
2,261
2,483
(9)
TTS
$
3,882
$
3,627
7
%
$
11,196
$
10,566
6
%
Net interest income
$
702
$
704
—
%
$
2,016
$
1,894
6
%
Non-interest revenue
779
684
14
2,102
1,993
5
Securities Services
$
1,481
$
1,388
7
%
$
4,118
$
3,887
6
%
Total
Services
$
5,363
$
5,015
7
%
$
15,314
$
14,453
6
%
Revenue by geography
North America
$
1,637
$
1,360
20
%
$
4,621
$
3,898
19
%
International
3,726
3,655
2
10,693
10,555
1
Total
$
5,363
$
5,015
7
%
$
15,314
$
14,453
6
%
International revenue by cluster
United Kingdom
$
494
$
498
(1)
%
$
1,461
$
1,446
1
%
Japan, Asia North and Australia (JANA)
712
706
1
2,057
1,949
6
LATAM
645
675
(4)
1,825
2,112
(14)
Asia South
683
639
7
1,898
1,771
7
Europe
648
558
16
1,831
1,670
10
Middle East and Africa (MEA)
544
579
(6)
1,621
1,607
1
Total
$
3,726
$
3,655
2
%
$
10,693
$
10,555
1
%
Key drivers
(3)
Average loans by line of business
(in billions of dollars)
TTS
$
93
$
86
8
%
$
91
$
83
10
%
Securities Services
1
1
—
1
1
—
Total
$
94
$
87
8
%
$
92
$
84
10
%
ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans
(4)
0.35
%
0.38
%
Average deposits by line of business
(in billions of dollars)
TTS
$
744
$
690
8
%
$
716
$
683
5
%
Securities Services
149
135
10
143
129
11
Total
$
893
$
825
8
%
$
859
$
812
6
%
AUC/AUA
(in trillions of dollars)
(5)
$
29.7
$
26.3
13
%
Cross-border transaction value
(in billions of dollars)
104.8
95.0
10
$
301.2
$
278.4
8
%
U.S. dollar clearing volume
(in millions)
(6)
44.8
42.7
5
131.8
123.9
6
Commercial card spend volume
(in billions of dollars)
$
18.4
$
18.3
1
$
53.5
$
53.1
1
(1) See footnote 1 in “Results of Operations—Summary of Selected Financial Data” above for the description of a change in presentation.
(2)
Services
revenues reflect the impact of a revenue sharing arrangement with
Banking
—Corporate Lending, for
Services
products sold to Corporate Lending clients. This generally results in a reduction in
Services
reported revenue.
(3) Management uses this information in reviewing the segment’s results and believes it is useful to investors concerning underlying segment performance and trends.
(4) Excludes loans that are carried at fair value for all periods.
(5) AUC/AUA includes assets for which Citi provides custody or safekeeping services for assets held directly or by a third party on behalf of clients, or assets for which Citi provides administrative services for clients. Securities Services managed AUC/AUA, of which Citi provided both custody and administrative services to certain clients related to $2.3 trillion and $2.1 trillion of such assets at September 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
(6) Represents the number of U.S. dollar clearing payment instructions processed on behalf of U.S. and foreign-domiciled entities (primarily financial institutions).
NM Not meaningful
16
3Q25 vs. 3Q24
Net income
of $1.8 billion increased 9%, driven by higher revenues and lower provisions, partially offset by higher expenses.
Revenues
increased 7%, driven by higher net interest income in TTS and higher non-interest revenue in Securities Services, partially offset by lower non-interest revenue in TTS.
Net interest income increased 11%, primarily driven by an increase in average deposit balances and deposit spreads. Average deposits increased 8%, driven by growth in both TTS and Securities Services, reflecting growth across North America and International, largely driven by an increase in operating deposits.
Non-interest revenue declined 3%, driven by higher revenue share with
Banking
—Corporate Lending, largely offset by higher fee revenue (up 6%), reflecting the benefit of continued growth in underlying fee drivers across the businesses, particularly AUC/AUA, cross-border transaction value and U.S. dollar clearing volume.
TTS revenues increased 7%, driven by a 14% increase in net interest income, partially offset by a 15% decrease in non-interest revenue. The increase in net interest income was primarily driven by higher average deposit balances, which increased 8%, as well as higher deposit spreads. The decrease in non-interest revenue was driven by higher lending revenue share, partially offset by growth in fees and underlying fee drivers, including an increase in cross-border transaction value of 10% and an increase in U.S. dollar clearing volume of 5%.
Securities Services revenues increased 7%, driven by a 14% increase in non-interest revenue. The increase in non-interest revenue was driven by a mark-to-market gain and higher custody fees due to a 13% increase in AUC/AUA, partially offset by higher lending revenue share. Net interest income was unchanged, as lower deposit spreads were primarily offset by higher average deposit balances, which increased 10%.
Expenses
increased 5%, primarily driven by higher compensation and benefits expenses, including severance, as well as higher volume and other revenue-related expenses.
Provisions
were $61 million in the current period, reflecting a net ACL build of $50 million, and net credit losses of $11 million. The net ACL build was driven by transfer risk associated with Russia. Provisions were $127 million in the prior-year period, reflecting a net ACL build of $113 million, largely related to transfer risk associated with Russia, and net credit losses of $14 million. For additional information on Citi’s ACL, see “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates” below. For additional information on
Services
’ corporate credit portfolio, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Corporate Credit” below.
For additional information on trends in
Services
’ deposits and loans, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Loans” and “Managing Global Risk—Liquidity Risk—Deposits” below.
For additional information about trends, uncertainties and risks related to
Services
’ future results, see “Executive Summary” above, “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Argentina” and “—Russia” and “Forward-Looking Statements” below and “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
2025 YTD vs. 2024 YTD
Net income
of $4.8 billion increased 5%, driven by higher revenues, partially offset by higher provisions.
Revenues
increased 6%, driven by higher net interest income in TTS and Securities Services and higher non-interest revenue in Securities Services, partially offset by lower non-interest revenue in TTS.
Net interest income increased 10%, driven by an increase in average deposit balances and deposit spreads. Average deposits increased 6%, driven by growth in TTS and Securities Services, with growth across both North America and International, largely driven by an increase in operating deposits. Non-interest revenue declined 3%, driven by higher revenue share, largely offset by the benefit of continued growth in fees and underlying fee drivers in TTS and Securities Services.
TTS revenues increased 6%, driven by an 11% increase in net interest income, partially offset by a 9% decrease in non-interest revenue. The increase in net interest income was driven by higher deposit spreads and a 5% increase in average deposit balances. The decrease in non-interest revenue was driven by higher lending revenue share, partially offset by growth in fees and underlying fee drivers, including an increase in cross-border transaction value of 8% and an increase in U.S. dollar clearing volume of 6%.
Securities Services revenues increased 6%, driven by a 6% increase in net interest income and a 5% increase in non-interest revenue. The increase in net interest income was driven by higher average deposits, which increased 11%, partially offset by lower deposit spreads. The increase in non-interest revenue was driven by a mark-to-market gain and higher custody fees, due to an increase in AUC/AUA.
Expenses
were unchanged, compared to the prior-year period, as higher compensation and benefits expenses, including severance, were offset by episodic tax- and legal-related expenses in the prior-year period.
Provisions
were $465 million, reflecting a net ACL build of $428 million, and net credit losses of $37 million. The net ACL build was driven by transfer risk associated with Russia. Provisions were $164 million in the prior-year period, reflecting a net ACL build of $144 million, driven by transfer risk associated with Russia, and net credit losses of $20 million.
17
MARKETS
Markets
includes Fixed Income Markets and Equity Markets and provides corporate, institutional and public sector clients around the world with a full range of sales and trading services across equities, foreign exchange, rates, spread products and commodities. The range of services includes market-making across asset classes, risk management solutions, financing and prime brokerage.
Citi assesses its
Markets
business performance on a total revenues basis, as security inventory is often hedged by derivative instruments creating offsetting gains and losses across revenue lines. As an example, securities that generate Net interest income may be hedged by derivative instruments, which are reported under Principal transactions.
As a market maker,
Markets
facilitates transactions by holding inventory to meet client demand, with resulting gains or losses largely recorded as
Principal transactions
. Fee revenue is generated from services such as trading, financing,
brokerage, securitization and underwriting. “Other” revenue includes gains (losses) on AFS debt and equity securities (non-trading), and other non-recurring items. Revenue generated from all of these activities is primarily recorded in Non-interest revenue in the table below.
Markets
revenues also reflect the impact of a revenue sharing arrangement with
Banking
—Corporate Lending, for
Markets
products sold to Corporate Lending clients. This generally results in a reduction in
Markets
reported revenue recorded in All other.
Net interest income includes interest and dividends on securities held and interest on long- and short-term debt, secured funding transactions, deposits, loans and funding costs.
Markets
maintains an international presence supported by trading floors in nearly 80 countries and Citi’s proprietary network in over 90 countries and jurisdictions.
Third Quarter
Nine Months
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
Net interest income (including dividends)
$
2,251
$
1,405
60
%
$
7,166
$
5,149
39
%
Fee revenue
Brokerage and fees
400
391
2
1,199
1,073
12
Investment banking fees
(1)
163
118
38
404
322
25
Other
63
64
(2)
166
188
(12)
Total fee revenue
$
626
$
573
9
%
$
1,769
$
1,583
12
%
Principal transactions
2,746
2,807
(2)
8,351
8,481
(2)
All other
(2)
(60)
32
NM
142
47
202
Total non-interest revenue
$
3,312
$
3,412
(3)
%
$
10,262
$
10,111
1
%
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(3)
$
5,563
$
4,817
15
%
$
17,428
$
15,260
14
%
Total operating expenses
$
3,491
$
3,339
5
%
$
10,468
$
10,028
4
%
Net credit losses (recoveries) on loans
68
24
183
218
168
30
Credit reserve build (release) for loans
(44)
37
NM
57
46
24
Provision (release) for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
13
47
(72)
14
48
(71)
Provisions for credit losses for other assets and HTM debt securities
(5)
33
NM
52
67
(22)
Provision (release) for credit losses
$
32
$
141
(77)
%
$
341
$
329
4
%
Income from continuing operations before taxes
$
2,040
$
1,337
53
%
$
6,619
$
4,903
35
%
Income taxes
457
248
84
1,492
924
61
Income from continuing operations
$
1,583
$
1,089
45
%
$
5,127
$
3,979
29
%
Noncontrolling interests
21
17
24
55
58
(5)
Net income
$
1,562
$
1,072
46
%
$
5,072
$
3,921
29
%
Efficiency ratio
63
%
69
%
60
%
66
%
Balance Sheet data
(in billions of dollars)
EOP assets
$
1,182
$
1,002
18
%
Average assets
1,231
1,082
14
$
1,191
$
1,065
12
%
18
Revenue by line of business
Fixed Income Markets
$
4,023
$
3,578
12
%
$
12,768
$
11,272
13
%
Equity Markets
1,540
1,239
24
4,660
3,988
17
Total
$
5,563
$
4,817
15
%
$
17,428
$
15,260
14
%
Rates and Currencies
$
2,823
$
2,465
15
%
$
9,005
$
7,731
16
%
Spread Products and Other Fixed Income
1,200
1,113
8
3,763
3,541
6
Total Fixed Income Markets revenues
$
4,023
$
3,578
12
%
$
12,768
$
11,272
13
%
Revenue by geography
North America
$
2,195
$
1,773
24
%
$
6,501
$
5,871
11
%
International
3,368
3,044
11
10,927
9,389
16
Total
$
5,563
$
4,817
15
%
$
17,428
$
15,260
14
%
International revenue by cluster
United Kingdom
$
830
$
1,007
(18)
%
$
3,744
$
3,086
21
%
Japan, Asia North and Australia (JANA)
737
703
5
2,207
2,049
8
LATAM
626
398
57
1,651
1,458
13
Asia South
460
433
6
1,436
1,212
18
Europe
388
229
69
971
740
31
Middle East and Africa (MEA)
327
274
19
918
844
9
Total
$
3,368
$
3,044
11
%
$
10,927
$
9,389
16
%
Key drivers
(4)
(in billions of dollars)
Average loans
$
147
$
119
24
%
$
137
$
119
15
%
Net credit losses (NCLs) as a percentage of average loans
0.18
%
0.08
%
0.21
%
0.19
%
ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans
(5)
0.78
%
0.77
%
Average trading account assets
$
556
$
462
20
$
527
$
432
22
(1) Investment banking fees are primarily composed of underwriting, advisory, loan syndication structuring and other related financing activity.
(2)
Markets
revenues reflect the impact of a revenue sharing arrangement with
Banking
—Corporate Lending, for
Markets
products sold to Corporate Lending clients. This generally results in a reduction in
Markets
reported revenue.
(3) Citi assesses its
Markets
business performance on a total revenue basis, as offsets may occur across revenue line items. For example, securities that generate
Net interest income
may be risk managed by derivatives that are recorded in
Principal transactions
revenue within
Non-interest revenue
. For a description of the composition of these revenue line items, see Notes 4, 5 and 6.
(4) Management uses this information in reviewing the segment’s results and believes it is useful to investors concerning underlying segment performance and trends.
(5) Excludes loans that are carried at fair value for all periods.
NM Not meaningful
19
3Q25 vs. 3Q24
Net income
of $1.6 billion increased 46%, driven by higher revenues and lower provisions, partially offset by higher expenses.
Revenues
increased 15%, driven by higher revenues in both Fixed Income Markets and Equity Markets.
Fixed Income Markets revenues
increased 12%, driven by growth in both Rates and Currencies revenues and Spread Products and Other Fixed Income. Rates and Currencies revenues increased 15%, largely driven by growth in Rates amid policy uncertainty and elevated client activity. Spread Products and Other Fixed Income revenues increased 8%, largely driven by higher mortgage trading and financing activity, partially offset by lower commodities activity.
Equity Markets revenues increased
24%, driven by higher client activity in Equity Derivatives, as well as higher volumes in Equity Cash and continued momentum in Prime Services, with prime balances up approximately 44%.
Expenses
increased 5%, primarily driven by higher revenue-related compensation and benefits, along with the impact of FX translation, partially offset by lower transactional and product servicing expenses, as higher transaction volumes were more than offset by efficiency actions.
Provisions
were $32 million in the current period, reflecting net credit losses of $68 million, and a net ACL release of $36 million. Net credit losses were driven by a charge-off in Spread Products, and the net ACL release was for the related reserve. Provisions were $141 million in the prior-year period, reflecting a net ACL build of $117 million, primarily driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality, and net credit losses of $24 million
.
For additional information on Citi’s ACL, see “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates” below.
For additional information on
Markets
’
corporate credit portfolio, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Corporate Credit” below.
For additional information on trends in
Markets
’ deposits and loans, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Loans” and “Managing Global Risk—Liquidity Risk—Deposits” below.
For additional information about trends, uncertainties and risks related to
Markets
’ future results, see “Executive Summary” above, “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Argentina” and “—Russia” and “Forward-Looking Statements” below and “Risk Factors” and “
Markets
” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
2025 YTD vs. 2024 YTD
Net income
of $5.1 billion increased 29%, driven by higher revenues, partially offset by higher expenses.
Revenues
increased 14%, driven by higher revenues in both Fixed Income Markets and Equity Markets.
Fixed Income Markets revenues increased 13%, reflecting an increase in Rates and Currencies revenues and higher revenues in Spread Products and Other Fixed Income. Rates and Currencies revenues increased 16%, primarily driven by Rates, reflecting increased client activity and monetization of market activity. Spread Products and Other Fixed Income revenues increased 6%, largely driven by higher financing activity and mortgage trading, partially offset by declines in commodities.
Equity Markets revenues increased 17%, primarily driven by Prime Services, as well as higher volumes in Equity Cash and monetization of market activity in Equity Derivatives, partially offset by prior-year gains related to the Visa B share exchange.
Expenses
increased 4%, primarily driven by higher revenue-related compensation and benefits and higher volume-related expenses.
Provisions
were $341 million, reflecting net credit losses of $218 million, and a net ACL build of $123 million. Net credit losses were driven by charge-offs in Spread Products. The net ACL build was driven by changes in portfolio composition, including exposure growth and credit quality, changes in the macroeconomic outlook and transfer risk associated with Russia, largely offset by reserve releases related to charge-offs in Spread Products. Provisions were $329 million in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $168 million, driven by charge-offs in Spread Products, and a net ACL build of $161 million, driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality, and changes in the macroeconomic outlook.
20
BANKING
Banking
includes Investment Banking (
Debt Capital Markets (DCM), Equity Capital Markets (ECM) and Advisory sub-businesses)
and Corporate Lending. Investment Banking supports clients’ capital-raising needs to help strengthen and grow their businesses, including equity and debt capital markets strategic financing solutions and loan syndication structuring, as well as advisory services related to mergers and acquisitions, divestitures, restructurings and corporate defense activities. Corporate Lending consists of corporate and commercial banking, serving as the conduit for Citi’s product suite to clients.
Banking
revenues reflect the impact of a revenue sharing arrangement with
Banking
—Corporate Lending, for Investment Banking,
Markets
and
Services
products sold to Corporate Lending clients. This generally results in an increase in
Banking
reported revenue. The revenue share to
Banking
—Corporate Lending is
recorded in All other as part of Non-interest revenue in the table below.
Third Quarter
Nine Months
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
Net interest income (including dividends)
$
562
$
527
7
%
$
1,583
$
1,636
(3)
%
Fee revenue
Investment banking fees
(1)
1,169
999
17
3,331
2,906
15
Other
65
31
110
173
123
41
Total fee revenue
$
1,234
$
1,030
20
%
$
3,504
$
3,029
16
%
Principal transactions
(164)
(204)
20
(433)
(575)
25
All other
(2)
500
244
105
1,351
870
55
Total non-interest revenue
$
1,570
$
1,070
47
%
$
4,422
$
3,324
33
%
Total revenues, net of interest expense
$
2,132
$
1,597
34
%
$
6,005
$
4,960
21
%
Total operating expenses
$
1,139
$
1,116
2
%
$
3,310
$
3,426
(3)
%
Net credit losses on loans
9
36
(75)
59
142
(58)
Credit reserve build (release) for loans
38
62
(39)
253
(78)
NM
Provision (release) for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
98
59
66
207
(46)
NM
Provisions (releases) for credit losses on other assets and HTM debt securities
12
20
(40)
25
(2)
NM
Provisions (releases) for credit losses
$
157
$
177
(11)
%
$
544
$
16
NM
Income from continuing operations before taxes
$
836
$
304
175
%
$
2,151
$
1,518
42
%
Income taxes
201
68
196
513
346
48
Income from continuing operations
$
635
$
236
169
%
$
1,638
$
1,172
40
%
Noncontrolling interests
(3)
(2)
(50)
(6)
4
NM
Net income
$
638
$
238
168
%
$
1,644
$
1,168
41
%
Efficiency ratio
53
%
70
%
55
%
69
%
Balance Sheet data
(in billions of dollars)
EOP assets
$
141
$
151
(7)
%
Average assets
149
152
(2)
$
148
$
153
(3)
%
Revenue by line of business
Total Investment Banking
(2)
$
1,146
$
934
23
%
$
3,162
$
2,712
17
%
Corporate Lending (excluding gain (loss) on loan hedges)
(2)(3)
1,030
742
39
2,935
2,422
21
Total
Banking
revenues (excluding gain (loss) on loan hedges)
(2)(3)
$
2,176
$
1,676
30
%
$
6,097
$
5,134
19
%
Gain (loss) on loan hedges
(2)(3)
(44)
(79)
44
(92)
(174)
47
Total
Banking
revenues (including gain (loss) on loan hedges)
(2)(3)
$
2,132
$
1,597
34
%
$
6,005
$
4,960
21
%
21
Investment banking fees
Advisory
$
427
$
394
8
%
$
1,259
$
892
41
%
Equity underwriting (ECM)
174
129
35
519
474
9
Debt underwriting (DCM)
568
476
19
1,553
1,540
1
Total
$
1,169
$
999
17
%
$
3,331
$
2,906
15
%
Revenue by geography
North America
$
995
$
837
19
%
$
2,765
$
2,359
17
%
International
1,137
760
50
3,240
2,601
25
Total
$
2,132
$
1,597
34
%
$
6,005
$
4,960
21
%
International revenue by cluster
United Kingdom
$
304
$
158
92
%
$
827
$
547
51
%
Japan, Asia North and Australia (JANA)
207
152
36
614
472
30
LATAM
204
159
28
555
566
(2)
Asia South
145
97
49
422
332
27
Europe
177
135
31
567
477
19
Middle East and Africa (MEA)
100
59
69
255
207
23
Total
$
1,137
$
760
50
%
$
3,240
$
2,601
25
%
Key drivers
(4)
(in billions of dollars)
Average loans
$
81
$
88
(8)
%
$
82
$
89
(8)
%
NCLs as a percentage of average loans
0.04
%
0.16
%
0.10
%
0.21
%
ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans
(5)
1.83
%
1.54
%
(1) Investment banking fees are primarily composed of underwriting, advisory, loan syndication structuring and other related financing activity.
(2)
Banking
revenues reflect the impact of a revenue sharing arrangement with
Banking
—Corporate Lending, for Investment Banking,
Markets
and
Services
products sold to Corporate Lending clients. This generally results in an increase in
Banking
reported revenue.
(3) Credit derivatives are used to economically hedge a portion of the corporate loan portfolio that includes both accrual loans and loans at fair value. Gain (loss) on loan hedges includes the mark-to-market on the credit derivatives, partially offset by the mark-to-market on the loans in the portfolio that are at fair value. Hedges on accrual loans reflect the mark-to-market on credit derivatives used to economically hedge the corporate loan accrual portfolio. The fixed premium costs of these hedges are netted against the corporate lending revenues to reflect the cost of credit protection. Citigroup’s results of operations excluding the impact of gain (loss) on loan hedges are non-GAAP financial measures.
(4) Management uses this information in reviewing the segment’s results and believes it is useful to investors concerning underlying segment performance and trends.
(5) Excludes loans that are carried at fair value for all periods.
NM Not meaningful
22
The discussion of the results of operations for
Banking
below excludes (where noted) the impact of any gain (loss) on hedges of accrual loans, which are non-GAAP financial measures. For a reconciliation of these metrics to the reported results, see the table above.
3Q25 vs. 3Q24
Net income
of $638 million increased 168%, driven by higher revenues and lower provisions, partially offset by higher expenses.
Revenues
increased 34% (including gain (loss) on loan hedges), driven by growth in Corporate Lending (excluding the impact of losses on loan hedges) and Investment Banking and a lower mark-to-market loss on loan hedges (a $44 million loss versus a $79 million loss in the prior-year period). Excluding the impact of gain (loss) on loan hedges,
Banking
revenues increased 30%.
Investment Banking revenues increased 23%, primarily driven by a 17% increase in investment banking fees, reflecting growth in DCM, ECM and Advisory. DCM fees were up 19%, driven by growth in leveraged finance. ECM fees were up 35%, driven by growth across all products, notably in convertibles, amid a strong equity market and tight financing spreads. Advisory fees increased 8%, with momentum across several sectors and continued wallet share gains with financial sponsors, as well as increased sell-side activity.
Corporate Lending revenues increased 49%, including the impact of gain (loss) on loan hedges. Excluding the impact of gain (loss) on loan hedges, Corporate Lending revenues increased 39%, driven by the impact of higher lending revenue share from
Services
,
Markets
and Investment Banking.
Expenses
increased 2%, driven by higher volume-related transactional and product servicing expenses, as well as higher revenue-related compensation and benefits, which includes investments made in the business, partially offset by prior repositioning and other related actions.
Provisions
were $157 million in the current period, reflecting a net ACL build of $148 million, and net credit losses of $9 million. The net ACL build was driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality and exposure growth. Provisions were $177 million in the prior-year period, reflecting a net ACL build of $141 million, driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality, and net credit losses of $36 million. For additional information on Citi’s ACL, see “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates” below. For additional information on
Banking
’s
corporate credit portfolio, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Corporate Credit” below.
For additional information on trends in
Banking
’s deposits and loans, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Loans” and “Managing Global Risk—Liquidity Risk—Deposits” below.
For additional information about trends, uncertainties and risks related to
Banking
’s future results, see “Executive Summary” above, “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Argentina” and “—Russia” and “Forward-Looking Statements” below and “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
2025 YTD vs. 2024 YTD
Net income
of $1.6 billion increased 41%, driven by higher revenues and lower expenses, partially offset by increased provisions.
Revenues
increased 21% (including gain (loss) on loan hedges), reflecting higher Corporate Lending revenues
(excluding the impact of losses on loan hedges), as well as higher revenues in Investment Banking and lower losses on loan hedges (a $92 million loss versus a $174 million loss in the prior-year period). Excluding the impact of gain (loss) on loan hedges,
Banking
revenues increased 19%.
Investment Banking revenues increased 17%, reflecting a 15% increase in investment banking fees, driven by growth in Advisory and ECM. Advisory fees increased 41%, due to strong previously announced deals that closed, with wallet share gains across several sectors and with financial sponsors. ECM fees increased 9%, driven by higher financing activity, given the favorable market environment. DCM fees were up 1%, as increased activity in leveraged finance was offset by decreased investment-grade volumes compared to a strong performance in the prior-year period.
Corporate Lending revenues increased 26%, including the impact of gain (loss) on loan hedges. Excluding the impact of gain (loss) on loan hedges, Corporate Lending revenues increased 21%, driven by the impact of higher lending revenue share from
Services
,
Investment Banking and
Markets
.
Expenses
decreased 3%, driven by the benefits of prior repositioning and other related actions, partially offset by volume-related expenses.
Provisions
were $544 million, reflecting a net ACL build of $485 million, and net credit losses of $59 million. The net ACL build was driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality and exposure growth, and changes in the macroeconomic outlook. Provisions were $16 million in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $142 million, and a net ACL release of $126 million, driven by changes in the macroeconomic outlook, partially offset by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality.
23
WEALTH
Wealth
includes the Private Bank, Citigold and Wealth at Work and provides financial services to a range of client segments consisting of ultra-high net worth, high net worth and affluent clients. These services include banking, investment, lending, custody and trust product offerings in approximately 20 countries, including the U.S. and four wealth management centers: Singapore, Hong Kong, the UAE and London.
The Private Bank provides financial services to ultra-high net worth clients through customized product offerings. Citigold provides financial services to affluent and high net worth clients through elevated product offerings and financial relationships. Wealth at Work provides financial services to professional industries (including law firms, consulting groups and accounting and asset management firms) through tailored solutions.
At September 30, 2025,
Wealth
had the following:
•
$660 billion in client investment assets
•
$318 billion in deposits
•
$151 billion in loans, including $89 billion in mortgage loans, $32 billion in margin loans, $25 billion in personal, small business and other loans and $5 billion in outstanding credit card balances
For additional information on
Wealth
’s end-of-period consumer loan portfolios and metrics, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Consumer Credit” below.
Third Quarter
Nine Months
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
Net interest income
$
1,332
$
1,233
8
%
$
3,884
$
3,261
19
%
Fee revenue
Commissions and fees
(1)
406
342
19
1,175
1,022
15
Other
(2)
232
241
(4)
724
704
3
Total fee revenue
$
638
$
583
9
%
$
1,899
$
1,726
10
%
All other
(3)
194
179
8
643
502
28
Total non-interest revenue
$
832
$
762
9
%
$
2,542
$
2,228
14
%
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
2,164
1,995
8
6,426
5,489
17
Total operating expenses
(1)
$
1,654
$
1,594
4
%
$
4,851
$
4,765
2
%
Net credit losses on loans
56
27
107
134
91
47
Credit reserve build (release) for loans
(25)
8
NM
(28)
(225)
88
Provision (release) for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
(1)
(1)
—
(4)
(9)
56
Provisions for benefits and claims (PBC), and other assets
—
(1)
100
—
(3)
100
Provisions (releases) for credit losses and PBC
$
30
$
33
(9)
%
$
102
$
(146)
NM
Income from continuing operations before taxes
$
480
$
368
30
%
$
1,473
$
870
69
%
Income taxes
106
85
25
321
202
59
Income from continuing operations
$
374
$
283
32
%
$
1,152
$
668
72
%
Noncontrolling interests
—
—
—
—
—
—
Net income
$
374
$
283
32
%
$
1,152
$
668
72
%
Efficiency ratio
76
%
80
%
75
%
87
%
Balance Sheet data
(in billions of dollars)
EOP assets
$
232
$
230
1
%
Average assets
233
229
2
$
227
$
232
(2)
%
Revenue by line of business
Private Bank
$
656
$
614
7
%
$
2,051
$
1,796
14
%
Citigold
1,294
1,137
14
3,672
3,073
19
Wealth at Work
214
244
(12)
703
620
13
Total
$
2,164
$
1,995
8
%
$
6,426
$
5,489
17
%
24
Revenue by geography
North America
$
1,066
$
1,000
7
%
$
3,220
$
2,620
23
%
International
1,098
995
10
3,206
2,869
12
Total
$
2,164
$
1,995
8
%
$
6,426
$
5,489
17
%
International revenue by cluster
United Kingdom
$
100
$
88
14
%
$
314
$
246
28
%
Japan, Asia North and Australia (JANA)
396
363
9
1,136
1,011
12
LATAM
35
33
6
112
96
17
Asia South
390
348
12
1,143
1,013
13
Europe
82
67
22
231
222
4
Middle East and Africa (MEA)
95
96
(1)
270
281
(4)
Total
$
1,098
$
995
10
%
$
3,206
$
2,869
12
%
Key drivers
(4)
(in billions of dollars)
EOP client balances
Client investment assets
(5)
$
660
$
580
14
%
Deposits
318
316
1
Loans
151
151
—
Total
$
1,129
$
1,047
8
%
Net new investment assets (NNIA)
(6)
$
18.6
$
13.8
35
%
$
37.1
$
26.9
38
%
Average deposits
315
316
—
311
316
(2)
Average loans
151
150
1
149
150
(1)
ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans
0.34
%
0.36
%
(1) See footnote 1 in “Results of Operations—Summary of Selected Financial Data” above for the description of a change in presentation.
(2) Primarily related to fiduciary and administrative fees.
(3) Primarily related to principal transactions revenue including FX translation.
(4) Management uses this information in reviewing the segment’s results and believes it is useful to investors concerning underlying segment performance and trends.
(5) Includes assets under management, and trust and custody assets.
(6) Represents investment asset inflows, including dividends, interest and distributions, less investment asset outflows. See “Glossary” below for additional information. NNIA flows can fluctuate across quarters due to a variety of factors, including, but not limited to, the macroeconomic environment, market volatility, investor sentiment, client activity, seasonal effects and product mix and offering changes.
NM Not meaningful
25
3Q25 vs. 3Q24
Net income
of $374 million increased 32%, driven by higher revenues, partially offset by higher expenses.
Revenues
increased 8%, driven by growth in Citigold and the Private Bank, partially offset by lower revenues in Wealth at Work. Net interest income increased 8%, driven by growth in deposit spreads across the lines of business, partially offset by lower mortgage spreads. Non-interest revenue increased 9%, driven by higher investment fee revenues, with client investment assets up 14%.
Client balances increased 8%, driven by higher client investment assets, due to higher market valuations and strong NNIA generation, partially offset by the sale of a trust business. NNIA increased to $19 billion in the current quarter and over $52 billion during the last 12 months, representing 9% organic growth.
Average deposits were unchanged, as outflows, including a shift in deposits to higher-yielding investments on Citi’s platform, were offset by net new deposits and transfers of certain relationships and the associated deposits to
Wealth
from
USPB
(including $4 billion of transfers during the third quarter of 2025). Average loans were also unchanged, as growth in securities-based lending volumes was offset by transfers of certain relationships and associated mortgage loans to
USPB
from
Wealth
and reductions across other lending portfolios.
Private Bank revenues increased 7%, driven by higher deposit spreads and higher investment fee revenues, partially offset by lower mortgage spreads.
Citigold revenues increased 14%, primarily driven by higher deposit spreads and higher investment fee revenues.
Wealth at Work revenues decreased 12%, driven by lower mortgage spreads, which the business expects to continue. The decline in revenues was partially offset by higher deposit spreads and higher investment fee revenues.
Expenses
increased 4%, driven by higher investments in technology and higher volume-related transactional and product servicing expenses, partially offset by continued productivity savings.
Provisions
were $30 million in the current period, reflecting net credit losses of $56 million, and a net ACL release of $26 million. Net credit losses included write-downs of mortgage loans to their collateral value due to the impact of the California wildfires and the net ACL release was for the related reserves. Provisions were $33 million in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $27 million, and a net ACL build of $6 million. For additional information on Citi’s ACL, see “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates” below.
For additional information on
Wealth
’s
loan portfolios, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Consumer Credit” below.
For additional information about trends, uncertainties and risks related to
Wealth
’s future results, see “Executive Summary” above, “Forward-Looking Statements” below and “Risk Factors—Strategic Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
2025 YTD vs. 2024 YTD
Net income
of $1.2 billion increased 72%, driven by higher revenues, partially offset by higher provisions and higher expenses.
Revenues
increased 17%, driven by growth across all lines of business. Net interest income was up 19%, driven by higher deposit spreads, partially offset by lower mortgage spreads and lower average deposit volumes. Non-interest revenue increased 14%, driven by higher investment fee revenues and the gain on sale of an alternative investments fund platform.
Private Bank revenues increased 14%, driven by higher deposit spreads, the gain on sale of an alternative investments fund platform and higher investment fee revenues, partially offset by lower mortgage spreads.
Citigold revenues increased 19%, driven by higher deposit spreads, higher investment fee revenues and higher lending revenues, partially offset by lower average deposit balances.
Wealth at Work revenues increased 13%, driven by higher deposit spreads and
higher investment fee revenues, largely offset by lower mortgage spreads.
Expenses
increased 2%, driven by higher volume-related transactional and product servicing expenses, higher severance costs and higher investments in technology, largely offset by the benefits from prior repositioning actions.
Provisions
were $102 million, reflecting net credit losses of $134 million, and a net ACL release of $32 million. Net credit losses included write-downs of mortgage loans to their collateral value due to the impact of the California wildfires. The net ACL release was driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality. Provisions were a benefit of $146 million in the prior-year period, reflecting a net ACL release of $237 million, driven by changes in the margin lending portfolio and changes in the macroeconomic outlook, and net credit losses of $91 million.
26
U.S. PERSONAL BANKING
U.S. Personal Banking (USPB)
includes Branded Cards, Retail Services and Retail Banking. Branded Cards includes proprietary credit card portfolios (Value, Cash and Rewards), co-branded card portfolios (including Costco and American Airlines) and personal installment loans. Retail Services includes co-brand and private label relationships (including, among others, The Home Depot, Best Buy, Macy’s and Sears). Retail Banking includes traditional banking services, including deposits, mortgages and other lending products, to retail and small business customers. Retail Banking branches are concentrated in six key metropolitan areas: New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Miami and Washington, D.C.
At September 30, 2025,
USPB
had the following:
•
$222 billion in loans, including:
◦
$168 billion in outstanding credit card balances
◦
$49 billion in mortgages
◦
$4 billion in personal installment loans
◦
$1 billion in small business and personal loans
•
$90 billion in deposits
For additional information on
USPB
’s end-of-period consumer loan portfolios and metrics, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Consumer Credit” below.
Third Quarter
Nine Months
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
% Change
Net interest income
$
5,694
$
5,293
8
%
$
16,706
$
15,622
7
%
Fee revenue
Interchange fees
(1)(2)
2,488
2,388
4
7,311
7,108
3
Card rewards and partner payments
(3,031)
(2,839)
(7)
(8,860)
(8,266)
(7)
Other
(2)
162
110
47
452
329
37
Total fee revenue
$
(381)
$
(341)
(12)
%
$
(1,097)
$
(829)
(32)
%
All other
(3)
18
12
50
69
112
(38)
Total non-interest revenue
$
(363)
$
(329)
(10)
%
$
(1,028)
$
(717)
(43)
%
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
5,331
4,964
7
15,678
14,905
5
Total operating expenses
(1)
$
2,365
$
2,376
—
%
$
7,188
$
7,181
—
%
Net credit losses on loans
1,776
1,864
(5)
5,648
5,659
—
Credit reserve build (release) for loans
64
41
56
(113)
760
NM
Provision for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
—
—
—
1
—
NM
Provisions for benefits and claims (PBC), and other assets
2
4
(50)
2
9
(78)
Provisions for credit losses and PBC
$
1,842
$
1,909
(4)
%
$
5,538
$
6,428
(14)
%
Income from continuing operations before taxes
$
1,124
$
679
66
%
$
2,952
$
1,296
128
%
Income taxes
266
157
69
700
306
129
Income from continuing operations
$
858
$
522
64
%
$
2,252
$
990
127
%
Noncontrolling interests
—
—
—
—
—
—
Net income
$
858
$
522
64
%
$
2,252
$
990
127
%
Efficiency ratio
44
%
48
%
46
%
48
%
Balance Sheet data
(in billions of dollars)
EOP assets
$
252
$
245
3
%
Average assets
253
244
4
$
249
$
239
4
%
EOP loans
222
213
4
EOP deposits
90
85
5
Revenue by line of business
(1)(4)
Branded Cards
$
2,970
$
2,741
8
%
$
8,684
$
7,929
10
%
Retail Services
1,686
1,704
(1)
5,010
5,329
(6)
Retail Banking
675
519
30
1,984
1,647
20
Total
$
5,331
$
4,964
7
%
$
15,678
$
14,905
5
%
27
Key drivers
(5)
(in billions of dollars, except as otherwise noted)
Average loans
$
220
$
210
5
%
$
218
$
207
5
%
ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans
(6)
6.33
%
6.52
%
NCLs as a percentage of average loans
3.20
%
3.53
%
3.47
%
3.65
%
Average deposits
90
85
6
90
93
(3)
Branded Cards
Credit card spend volume
$
136
$
129
5
%
$
397
$
381
4
%
Average loans
120
115
5
118
113
5
NCLs as a percentage of average loans
3.54
%
3.63
%
3.77
%
3.74
%
New credit cards account acquisitions
(7)
(in thousands of accounts)
1,343
1,224
10
3,837
3,538
8
Retail Services
Credit card spend volume
$
22
$
22
(1)
%
$
63
$
65
(3)
%
Average loans
50
51
(2)
51
51
(1)
NCLs as a percentage of average loans
5.28
%
6.14
%
5.86
%
6.30
%
New credit cards account acquisitions
(7)
(in thousands of accounts)
1,868
1,799
4
5,469
5,491
—
Retail Banking
Branches
(actual)
653
641
2
%
Average mortgage loans
$
49
$
43
14
$
48
$
42
14
%
NCLs as a percentage of average loans
0.28
%
0.24
%
0.27
%
0.25
%
(1) See footnote 1 in “Results of Operations—Summary of Selected Financial Data” above for the description of a change in presentation.
(2) Primarily related to credit cards and retail banking related fees.
(3) Primarily related to foreign exchange revenues in Retail Banking and revenue incentives from card networks in Branded Cards.
(4) Effective January 1, 2025,
USPB
changed its reporting for certain installment lending products that were transferred from Retail Banking to Branded Cards to reflect where these products are managed. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change.
(5) Management uses this information in reviewing the segment’s results and believes it is useful to investors concerning underlying segment performance and trends.
(6) Excludes loans that are carried at fair value for all periods.
(7) Represents the number of new credit card accounts opened.
NM Not meaningful
28
3Q25 vs. 3Q24
Net income
of $858 million increased 64%, driven by higher revenues and lower provisions.
Revenues
increased 7%, driven by growth in Branded Cards and Retail Banking, partially offset by a decline in Retail Services. Net interest income increased 8%, driven by higher loan spreads and higher interest-earning balances in Branded Cards, as well as higher deposit spreads and balances in Retail Banking. Non-interest revenue decreased 10%, driven by higher rewards costs, primarily offset by higher gross interchange and credit card fees in Branded Cards and higher deposit servicing fees in Retail Banking.
Branded Cards revenues increased 8%, driven by higher loan spreads, higher interest-earning balances, which were up 5%, and higher gross interchange fees, partially offset by higher rewards costs. Branded Cards average loans increased 5%, driven by higher card spend volume, which was up 5%.
Retail Services revenues decreased 1%, driven by higher partner payment accruals and lower net interest income due to lower interest-earning balances. Retail Services average loans decreased 2%, driven by lower card spend volume, which was down 1%.
Retail Banking revenues increased 30%, primarily driven by the impact of higher deposit spreads, higher deposit balances and higher deposit servicing fees. Average deposits increased 6%, as net new deposits were partially offset by client transfers to
Wealth
(including $4 billion of transfers during the third quarter of 2025).
Expenses
were unchanged from the prior-year period, as lower advertising and marketing expenses and lower compensation and benefits expenses were offset by higher volume-related transactional and product servicing expenses.
Provisions
were $1.8 billion in the current period, reflecting net credit losses of $1.8 billion, and a net ACL build of $66 million. Net credit losses were down 5%, driven by improved credit performance in Retail Services. The net ACL build was driven by changes in portfolio composition and higher volume, largely offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook. Provisions were $1.9 billion in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $1.9 billion, and a net ACL build of $45 million. For additional information on Citi’s ACL, see “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates” below.
For additional information on
USPB
’s Branded Cards, Retail Services and Retail Banking loan portfolios, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Consumer Credit” below.
For additional information about trends, uncertainties and risks related to
USPB
’s future results, see “Executive Summary” above, “Forward-Looking Statements” below and “Risk Factors—Strategic Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
2025 YTD vs. 2024 YTD
Net income
of $2.3 billion increased 127%, driven by lower provisions and higher revenues.
Revenues
increased 5%, driven by growth in Branded Cards and Retail Banking, partially offset
by a decline in Retail Services. Net interest income increased 7%, driven by higher loan spreads, higher interest-earning balances in Branded Cards and higher deposit spreads in Retail Banking. Non-interest revenue decreased 43%, driven by higher rewards costs in Branded Cards and higher partner payment accruals in Retail Services, partially offset by higher gross interchange fees in Branded Cards.
Branded Cards revenues increased 10%, driven by higher loan spreads and higher interest-earning balances, which were up 7%, and higher gross interchange fees, partially offset by higher rewards costs.
Branded Cards average loans increased 5%, driven by higher card spend volume, which was up 4%.
Retail Services revenues decreased 6%, driven by higher partner payment accruals due to lower net credit losses and lower interest income due to lower average loan volume. Retail Services average loans decreased 1%, driven by lower card spend volume, which was down 3%.
Retail Banking revenues increased 20%, primarily driven by the impact of higher deposit spreads. Average deposits decreased 3%, as net new deposits were more than offset by client transfers to
Wealth.
Expenses
were unchanged, as higher legal and fraud-related expenses and advertising and marketing were offset by continued productivity savings, primarily lower compensation and benefits.
Provisions
were $5.5 billion, reflecting net credit losses of $5.6 billion, and a net ACL release of $110 million. Net credit losses were largely unchanged, as the decrease of 8% in Retail Services from improved credit performance was offset by an increase of 5% in Branded Cards due to loan growth. The net ACL release was driven by a reduction in cards loan volume
and changes in portfolio composition, primarily offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook. Provisions were $6.4 billion in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $5.7 billion, and a net ACL build of $769 million, driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality, partially offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook.
29
ALL OTHER—Divestiture-Related Impacts (Reconciling Items)
The table below presents a reconciliation from
All Other
(U.S. GAAP) to
All Other
(managed basis).
All Other
(U.S. GAAP), less Reconciling Items, equals
All Other
(managed basis). The Reconciling Items are reflected on each relevant line item in Citi’s Consolidated Statement of Income.
All Other
(managed basis) results exclude divestiture-related impacts (see the “Reconciling Items” column in the table below) related to (i) Citi’s divestitures of its Asia
Consumer businesses and (ii) the planned divestiture of Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V., reported within
All Other
(U.S. GAAP). Legacy Franchises (managed basis) results also exclude these divestiture-related impacts. Certain of the results of operations of
All Other
(managed basis) and Legacy Franchises (managed basis) are non-GAAP financial measures (see “Overview—Non-GAAP Financial Measures” above).
Third Quarter
2025
2024
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
All Other
(U.S. GAAP)
Reconciling Items
(2)
All Other
(managed basis)
All Other
(U.S. GAAP)
Reconciling Items
(3)
All Other
(managed basis)
Net interest income
$
1,278
$
—
$
1,278
$
1,469
$
—
$
1,469
Non-interest revenue
259
2
257
352
1
351
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
1,537
$
2
$
1,535
$
1,821
$
1
$
1,820
Total operating expenses
(1)
$
2,934
$
766
$
2,168
$
2,144
$
67
$
2,077
Net credit losses on loans
294
(3)
297
207
(1)
208
Credit reserve build (release) for loans
16
—
16
55
—
55
Provision for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
(6)
—
(6)
(7)
—
(7)
Provisions for benefits and claims (PBC), other assets and HTM debt securities
24
—
24
33
—
33
Provisions (benefits) for credit losses and PBC
$
328
$
(3)
$
331
$
288
$
(1)
$
289
Income (loss) from continuing operations before taxes
$
(1,725)
$
(761)
$
(964)
$
(611)
$
(65)
$
(546)
Income taxes (benefits)
(247)
16
(263)
(72)
(20)
(52)
Income (loss) from continuing operations
$
(1,478)
$
(777)
$
(701)
$
(539)
$
(45)
$
(494)
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes
(1)
—
(1)
(1)
—
(1)
Noncontrolling interests
3
—
3
(12)
—
(12)
Net income (loss)
$
(1,482)
$
(777)
$
(705)
$
(528)
$
(45)
$
(483)
Nine Months
2025
2024
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
All Other
(U.S. GAAP)
Reconciling Items
(4)
All Other
(managed basis)
All Other
(U.S. GAAP)
Reconciling Items
(5)
All Other
(managed basis)
Net interest income
$
3,837
$
—
$
3,837
$
4,717
$
—
$
4,717
Non-interest revenue
666
(175)
841
1,473
22
1,451
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
4,503
$
(175)
$
4,678
$
6,190
$
22
$
6,168
Total operating expenses
(1)
$
7,505
$
837
$
6,668
$
7,130
$
262
$
6,868
Net credit losses on loans
811
2
809
678
7
671
Credit reserve build (release) for loans
148
(11)
159
(39)
—
(39)
Provision for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
(13)
—
(13)
(15)
—
(15)
Provisions for benefits and claims (PBC), other assets and HTM debt securities
109
—
109
101
—
101
Provisions (benefits) for credit losses and PBC
$
1,055
$
(9)
$
1,064
$
725
$
7
$
718
Income (loss) from continuing operations before taxes
$
(4,057)
$
(1,003)
$
(3,054)
$
(1,665)
$
(247)
$
(1,418)
Income taxes (benefits)
(943)
(31)
(912)
(105)
(76)
(29)
Income (loss) from continuing operations
$
(3,114)
$
(972)
$
(2,142)
$
(1,560)
$
(171)
$
(1,389)
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes
(2)
—
(2)
(2)
—
(2)
Noncontrolling interests
(2)
—
(2)
(29)
—
(29)
Net income (loss)
$
(3,114)
$
(972)
$
(2,142)
$
(1,533)
$
(171)
$
(1,362)
30
(1) See footnote 1 in “Results of Operations—Summary of Selected Financial Data” above for the description of a change in presentation.
(2) The three months ended September 30, 2025 includes approximately $766 million in operating expenses (approximately $744 million after-tax), driven by a goodwill impairment charge in Mexico ($726 million ($714 million after-tax)) and separation costs in Mexico.
(3) The three months ended September 30, 2024 includes approximately $67 million in operating expenses (approximately $46 million after-tax), primarily driven by separation costs in Mexico and severance costs in the Asia exit markets. For additional information, see Citi’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2024.
(4) The nine months ended September 30, 2025 includes (i) an approximate $186 million loss recorded in revenue (approximately $157 million after-tax), driven by the announced sale of the Poland consumer banking business; and (ii) approximately $837 million in operating expenses (approximately $793 million after-tax), driven by a goodwill impairment charge in Mexico ($726 million ($714 million after-tax)) and separation costs in Mexico and severance costs in the Asia exit markets (approximately $89 million (approximately $62 million after-tax)).
(5) The nine months ended September 30, 2024 includes approximately $262 million in operating expenses (approximately $181 million after-tax), primarily related to separation costs in Mexico and severance costs in the Asia exit markets. For additional information, see Citi’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2024.
31
ALL OTHER—Managed Basis
At September 30, 2025,
All Other
(managed basis) had $208 billion in assets, primarily related to (i) Mexico Consumer/SBMM and Asia Consumer reported within Legacy Franchises (managed basis) and (ii) Corporate Treasury investment securities and Citi’s deferred tax assets (DTAs) reported within Corporate/Other.
Legacy Franchises (Managed Basis)
Legacy Franchises (managed basis) includes the following:
•
Mexico Consumer/SBMM
•
Asia Consumer, largely representing the consumer banking operations of the remaining three exit countries (Korea, Poland and Russia)
•
Legacy Holdings Assets, consisting of approximately $1.7 billion of legacy consumer mortgage loans in North America, as well as other legacy assets
Mexico Consumer/SBMM operates primarily through Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V. (Banamex) and its consolidated subsidiaries, including Banco Nacional de Mexico, S.A., which provides traditional retail banking and branded card products to consumers and small business customers and traditional middle-market banking products and services to commercial customers, and other affiliated subsidiaries that offer retirement fund administration and insurance products.
The results of operations, as well as certain disclosed balance sheet information, for Mexico Consumer/SBMM are presented in a managerial view within this Form 10-Q, and include certain intercompany allocations, managerial charges and offshore expenses that reflect the Mexico Consumer/SBMM operations as a component of Citi’s consolidated operations. The Mexico Consumer/SBMM results are therefore not intended to reflect, and may differ significantly from, Banamex’s results and operations as a standalone legal entity.
Citi has continued to make substantial progress on its remaining divestitures, including a significant step toward the divestiture of Banamex. As previously disclosed, on September 24, 2025, Citi announced its entry into an agreement to sell 25% of Banamex’s outstanding common shares to a company wholly owned by Fernando Chico Pardo and members of his immediate family. This transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals in Mexico. For additional information about this transaction, see Citi’s Form 8-K filed with the SEC on September 24, 2025.
Citi’s third-quarter results included a notable item consisting of a non-cash goodwill impairment of $726 million ($714 million after-tax), recorded in
Other operating
expenses, in connection with the agreed-upon bid with the buyer. The goodwill impairment was regulatory capital neutral to Citi. In addition, the goodwill impairment was a divestiture-related impact and therefore was not recorded in
All Other
(managed basis) or discussed in the results of operations of
All Other
(managed basis) below.
At closing of the 25% share sale transaction, and prior to deconsolidation, there will be a temporary benefit to Citi’s stockholders’ equity due to the reclassification of the negative CTA associated with Banamex from
Accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI)
(within stockholders’ equity) to
Noncontrolling interests
, which is expected to be partially offset by the net loss on sale recorded primarily in additional paid-in capital. The net loss reflected within stockholders’ equity, primarily recorded in additional paid-in capital, reflects the difference between the sale consideration received and 25% of the Banamex book value.
Additionally, Citi’s
AOCI
includes CTA losses, net of hedges and taxes, amounting to approximately $(9) billion, attributable to Banamex and its consolidated subsidiaries as of September 30, 2025 (for additional information, see Note 19). Citi will deconsolidate Banamex if it owns less than 50% of Banamex’s voting stock ownership and Citi does not have substantive participating rights in Banamex.
During the quarter in which a deconsolidation of Banamex occurs, Citi’s CTA loss attributable to Banamex and its consolidated subsidiaries will be recognized in its income statement, impacting EPS and RoTCE, and reversing the temporary capital benefit from prior sales. The cumulative impact of the CTA loss will be regulatory capital neutral to Citi. The $(9) billion in CTA losses is subject to change prior to deconsolidation, including as a result of FX movements.
Since announcing its intention to exit consumer banking across 14 markets in Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Mexico as part of its strategic refresh, Citi has:
•
closed sales in nine of those markets;
•
completed the separation of Mexico Consumer/SBMM from its
Services
,
Markets
,
Banking
and
Wealth
businesses in Mexico;
•
announced its entry into an agreement to sell 25% of Banamex’s outstanding common shares;
•
announced the sale of the Poland consumer banking business, which is expected to close by mid-2026, subject to regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions;
•
continued to make progress on its wind-downs in Korea and Russia (Citi completed the wind-down of its consumer loan portfolio in Russia during the second quarter of 2025); and
•
substantially completed the wind-down of Citi’s consumer business in China.
See Note 2 for additional information on Legacy Franchises’ consumer banking business sales and wind-downs. For additional information about Citi’s continued efforts to reduce its operations and exposures in Russia, see “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Russia” below and “Risk Factors—Other Risks” and “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Russia” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
32
At September 30, 2025, on a combined basis, Legacy Franchises (managed basis) had the following:
•
1,285 retail branches
•
$42 billion in deposits
•
$17 billion in retail banking loans
•
$9 billion in outstanding credit card balances
•
$7 billion in outstanding corporate loans, reported within Mexico SBMM
For additional information on the loans and deposits of Mexico Consumer/SBMM and Asia Consumer, see “Mexico Consumer/SBMM—” and “Asia Consumer—key indicators” in the table below.
Corporate/Other
Corporate/Other
includes certain unallocated costs of global staff functions (including finance, risk, human resources, legal and compliance-related costs), other corporate expenses and unallocated global operations and technology expenses and income taxes, as well as results of Corporate Treasury investment activities and discontinued operations.
33
Third Quarter
Nine Months
% Change
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
2025
2024
% Change
2025
2024
Net interest income
$
1,278
$
1,469
(13)
%
$
3,837
$
4,717
(19)
%
Non-interest revenue
257
351
(27)
841
1,451
(42)
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
1,535
$
1,820
(16)
%
$
4,678
$
6,168
(24)
%
Total operating expenses
(1)
$
2,168
$
2,077
4
%
$
6,668
$
6,868
(3)
%
Net credit losses on loans
297
208
43
809
671
21
Credit reserve build (release) for loans
16
55
(71)
159
(39)
NM
Provision (release) for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
(6)
(7)
14
(13)
(15)
13
Provisions (release) for benefits and claims (PBC), other assets and HTM debt securities
24
33
(27)
109
101
8
Provisions for credit losses and PBC
$
331
$
289
15
%
$
1,064
$
718
48
%
Income (loss) from continuing operations before taxes
$
(964)
$
(546)
(77)
%
$
(3,054)
$
(1,418)
(115)
%
Income taxes (benefits)
(263)
(52)
(406)
(912)
(29)
NM
Income (loss) from continuing operations
$
(701)
$
(494)
(42)
%
$
(2,142)
$
(1,389)
(54)
%
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes
(1)
(1)
—
(2)
(2)
—
Noncontrolling interests
3
(12)
125
(2)
(29)
93
Net income (loss)
$
(705)
$
(483)
(46)
%
$
(2,142)
$
(1,362)
(57)
%
Balance Sheet data
(in billions of dollars)
EOP assets
$
208
$
195
7
%
Average assets
207
194
7
$
207
$
195
6
%
Revenue by line of business
(1)
Mexico Consumer/SBMM
$
1,722
$
1,523
13
%
$
4,725
$
4,719
—
%
Asia Consumer
149
191
(22)
439
662
(34)
Legacy Holdings Assets
—
20
(100)
19
(109)
NM
Corporate/Other
(336)
86
(491)
(505)
896
NM
Total
$
1,535
$
1,820
(16)
%
$
4,678
$
6,168
(24)
%
Mexico Consumer/SBMM
—
key indicators
(in billions of dollars)
EOP loans
$
28.5
$
23.5
21
%
EOP deposits
40.6
34.6
17
Average loans
27.2
23.9
14
$
25.5
$
24.7
3
%
NCLs as a percentage of average loans (Mexico Consumer only)
5.46
%
4.36
%
5.42
%
4.44
%
Loans 90+ days past due as a percentage of EOP loans (Mexico Consumer only)
1.60
1.37
Loans 30–89 days past due as a percentage of EOP loans (Mexico Consumer only)
1.58
1.47
Asia Consumer—key indicators
(2)
(in billions of dollars)
EOP loans
$
2.7
$
5.5
(51)
%
EOP deposits
1.3
8.4
(85)
Average loans
2.8
5.6
(50)
$
3.8
$
6.2
(39)
%
Legacy Holdings Assets
—
key indicators
(in billions of dollars)
EOP loans
$
1.8
$
2.5
(28)
%
(1) See footnote 1 in “Results of Operations—Summary of Selected Financial Data” above for the description of a change in presentation.
(2) The key indicators for Asia Consumer also reflect the reclassification of loans and deposits to
Other assets
and
Other liabilities
under held-for-sale (HFS) accounting on Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet.
NM Not meaningful
34
3Q25 vs. 3Q24
Net loss
was $705 million, compared to a net loss of $483 million in the prior-year period, driven by lower revenues, higher expenses and higher provisions, largely offset by higher income tax benefits, partially due to the geographic mix of earnings.
All Other
(managed basis) revenues decreased 16%, driven by lower revenues in Corporate/Other, partially offset by an increase in Legacy Franchises (managed basis).
Legacy Franchises (managed basis) revenues increased 8%, driven by higher revenues in Mexico Consumer/SBMM, partially
offset by lower revenues in Asia Consumer (managed basis).
Mexico Consumer/SBMM revenues increased 13%, driven by higher lending volumes in retail banking and cards, higher deposit volumes, higher fee revenues and the impact of Mexican peso appreciation.
Asia Consumer (managed basis) revenues decreased 22%, driven by the closed exits and wind-downs.
Legacy Holdings Assets revenues decreased to $0 million from $20 million,
largely driven by the wind-down of the retail banking business in the U.K.
Corporate/Other revenues decreased to $(336) million, compared to $86 million in the prior-year period, driven by lower net interest income and lower non-interest revenue. The lower net interest income was driven by actions taken over the past few quarters to reduce Citi’s asset sensitivity in a declining interest rate environment. The lower non-interest revenue was partially driven by the impact of mark-downs on certain investments and positions.
Expenses
(managed basis) increased 4%, driven by higher investments in Citi’s transformation and technology, higher severance costs and the impact of the Mexican peso appreciation, largely offset by a reduction from the closed exits and wind-downs and lower litigation expenses.
Provisions
(managed basis) were $331 million in the current period, reflecting net credit losses of $297 million, and a net ACL build of $34 million. Net credit losses were up 43%, driven by higher consumer lending volume and portfolio seasoning in Mexico Consumer/SBMM. The net ACL build was driven by changes in portfolio composition and higher consumer lending volume in Mexico Consumer/SBMM, largely offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook. Provisions were $289 million in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $208 million, and a net ACL build of $81 million, largely driven by changes in portfolio composition and higher consumer lending volume in Mexico Consumer/SBMM. For additional information on Citi’s ACL, see “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates” below.
For additional information on the consumer portion of
All Other
—Legacy Franchises, including the Mexico Consumer loan portfolios, see “Managing Global Risk—Credit Risk—Consumer Credit” below.
For additional information about trends, uncertainties and risks related to
All Other
’s (managed basis) future results, see “Executive Summary” above, “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Russia” and “Forward-Looking Statements” below and “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
2025 YTD vs. 2024 YTD
Net loss
was $2.1 billion, compared to a net loss of $1.4 billion in the prior-year period, driven by lower revenues and higher provisions, largely offset by higher income tax benefits, partially driven by the resolution of a tax audit in the current year, and lower expenses.
All Other
(managed basis) revenues decreased 24%, driven by lower revenues in Corporate/Other and Legacy Franchises (managed basis).
Legacy Franchises (managed basis) revenues decreased 2%, driven by lower revenues in Asia Consumer (managed basis), largely offset by higher revenues in Legacy Holdings Assets.
Mexico Consumer/SBMM revenues were largely unchanged, as higher revenue driven by lending volumes in retail banking and cards, higher deposit volumes and higher fee revenues were offset by the Mexico peso depreciation and an episodic item in the second quarter of 2025.
Asia Consumer (managed basis) revenues decreased 34%, driven by the closed exits and wind-downs.
Legacy Holdings Assets revenues increased to $19 million, compared to $(109) million in the prior-year period, reflecting higher funding costs in the prior-year period.
Corporate/Other revenues were $(505) million, compared to $896 million in the prior-year period, driven by lower net interest income and lower non-interest revenue. The lower net interest income was due to a lower benefit from cash and securities reinvestment, driven by actions taken over the last few quarters to reduce Citi’s asset sensitivity in a declining interest rate environment. The lower non-interest revenue was primarily driven by gains in the prior-year period on the sale of certain investments and other assets, and the impact of mark-downs on certain investments and positions.
Expenses
(managed basis) decreased 3%, driven by a reduction from the closed exits and wind-downs, lower deposit insurance costs (see Note 18 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 10-K), a restructuring charge in the prior-year period (see Note 9), the impact of Mexican peso depreciation and civil money penalties in the prior-year period. This decline was primarily offset by higher investments in Citi’s transformation and technology and higher severance costs.
Provisions
(managed basis) were $1.1 billion, reflecting net credit losses of $809 million, and a net ACL build of $255 million. Net credit losses increased 21%, driven by higher consumer lending volume and portfolio seasoning in Mexico Consumer/SBMM. The net ACL build was primarily driven by higher consumer lending volume, changes in portfolio composition, transfer risk associated with Russia and changes in the macroeconomic outlook. Provisions were $718 million in the prior-year period, reflecting net credit losses of $671 million, and a net ACL build of $47 million.
35
CAPITAL RESOURCES
For additional information about capital resources, including Citi’s capital management, regulatory capital buffers, the stress testing component of capital planning and current regulatory capital standards and developments, see “Capital Resources” and “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
During the third quarter of 2025, Citi returned a total of $6.1 billion of capital to common shareholders in the form of $5.0 billion of share repurchases (approximately 52 million common shares) under Citi’s multiyear $20 billion common stock repurchase program (of which there was $11.3 billion remaining at September 30, 2025) and $1.1 billion in dividends. Year-to-date, Citi returned approximately $12.0 billion to common shareholders, including $8.75 billion in the form of share repurchases. For additional information, see “Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities, Repurchases of Equity Securities and Dividends” below.
Citi paid common dividends of $0.60 per share for the third quarter of 2025, and on October 13, 2025, declared common dividends of $0.60 per share for the fourth quarter of 2025. Citi plans to maintain a quarterly common dividend of $0.60 per share, subject to financial and macroeconomic conditions as well as its Board of Directors’ approval.
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital Ratio
Citi’s Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) Capital ratio under the Basel III Standardized Approach was 13.3% as of September 30, 2025, compared to 13.5% as of June 30, 2025 and 13.6% as of December 31, 2024, relative to a required regulatory CET1 Capital ratio of 12.1% as of such dates under the Standardized Approach. Citi’s CET1 Capital ratio under the Basel III Advanced Approaches was 11.7% as of September 30, 2025, compared to 11.9% as of June 30, 2025 and 12.1% as of December 31, 2024, relative to a required regulatory CET1 Capital ratio of 10.5% as of such dates under the Advanced Approaches framework.
Citi’s CET1 Capital ratio decreased under both the Standardized Approach and Advanced Approaches framework from June 30, 2025, driven primarily by common share repurchases, the payment of common and preferred dividends and increases in Standardized Approach RWA and Advanced Approaches RWA, partially offset by net income, lower deferred tax assets and net beneficial movements in
AOCI
.
Citi’s CET1 Capital ratio decreased under both the Standardized Approach and Advanced Approaches from year-end 2024, primarily driven by common share repurchases, the payment of common and preferred dividends and increases in Standardized Approach RWA and Advanced Approaches RWA, partially offset by year-to-date net income and net beneficial movements in
AOCI
.
Stress Capital Buffer
In August 2025, the FRB confirmed Citi’s Stress Capital Buffer (SCB) requirement of 3.6%, down from the previous 4.1%. Accordingly, based on the current SCB standard, Citi’s required regulatory CET1 Capital ratio effective October 1, 2025 decreased to 11.6% from 12.1% under the Standardized Approach, incorporating the 3.6% SCB and Citi’s current GSIB (Global Systemically Important Bank) surcharge of 3.5%. Citi’s required regulatory CET1 Capital ratio under the Advanced Approaches (using the fixed 2.5% Capital Conservation Buffer) remains unchanged at 10.5%. The SCB applies to Citigroup only; the regulatory capital framework applicable to Citibank, including the Capital Conservation Buffer, is unaffected by Citigroup’s SCB.
For information on proposed changes to the SCB, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Standards and Developments” below.
36
Citigroup’s Capital Resources
The following table presents Citi’s required risk-based capital ratios as of September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024:
Advanced Approaches
(1)
Standardized Approach
(2)
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
CET1 Capital ratio
10.5
%
10.5
%
10.5
%
12.1
%
12.1
%
12.1
%
Tier 1 Capital ratio
12.0
12.0
12.0
13.6
13.6
13.6
Total Capital ratio
14.0
14.0
14.0
15.6
15.6
15.6
(1)
For all periods presented, Citi’s required risk-based capital ratios under the Advanced Approaches included the 2.5% Capital Conservation Buffer and 3.5% GSIB surcharge (all of which must be composed of CET1 Capital).
(2)
Citi’s required risk-based capital ratios under the Standardized Approach included the 4.1% SCB and 3.5% GSIB surcharge (all of which must be composed of CET1 Capital). See “Stress Capital Buffer” above for more information. For additional information on regulatory capital buffers, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Buffers” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The following tables present Citi’s capital components and ratios as of September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024:
Advanced Approaches
Standardized Approach
In millions of dollars, except ratios
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
CET1 Capital
(1)
$
158,480
$
158,943
$
155,363
$
158,480
$
158,943
$
155,363
Tier 1 Capital
(1)
178,793
176,619
174,527
178,793
176,619
174,527
Total Capital (Tier 1 Capital + Tier 2 Capital)
(1)
206,617
204,181
197,371
215,365
212,915
205,827
Total Risk-Weighted Assets
1,349,747
1,335,913
1,280,190
1,194,274
1,178,756
1,139,988
Credit Risk
(1)
$
970,480
$
958,329
$
901,345
$
1,129,568
$
1,116,409
$
1,073,354
Market Risk
63,966
61,492
66,221
64,706
62,347
66,634
Operational Risk
315,301
316,092
312,624
—
—
—
CET1 Capital ratio
(2)
11.74
%
11.90
%
12.14
%
13.27
%
13.48
%
13.63
%
Tier 1 Capital ratio
(2)
13.25
13.22
13.63
14.97
14.98
15.31
Total Capital ratio
(2)
15.31
15.28
15.42
18.03
18.06
18.06
In millions of dollars, except ratios
Required
Capital Ratios
September 30, 2025
June 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Quarterly Adjusted Average Total Assets
(1)(3)
$
2,651,329
$
2,608,993
$
2,433,364
Total Leverage Exposure
(1)(4)
3,236,413
3,195,323
2,985,418
Leverage ratio
4.0
%
6.74
%
6.77
%
7.17
%
Supplementary Leverage ratio
5.0
5.52
5.53
5.85
(1)
Commencing January 1, 2025, the capital effects resulting from adoption of the current expected credit losses (CECL) methodology have been fully reflected in Citi’s regulatory capital. For additional information, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Treatment—Modified Transition of the Current Expected Credit Losses Methodology” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
(2)
Citi’s binding CET1 Capital and Tier 1 Capital ratios were derived under the Basel III Standardized Approach, whereas Citi’s binding Total Capital ratio was derived under the Basel III Advanced Approaches framework for all periods presented.
(3)
Leverage ratio denominator. Represents quarterly average total assets less amounts deducted from Tier 1 Capital.
(4)
Supplementary Leverage ratio denominator. Represents quarterly average on-balance sheet assets and certain off-balance sheet exposures calculated in accordance with the U.S. Basel III rules less amounts deducted from Tier 1 Capital.
As indicated in the table above, Citigroup’s capital ratios at September 30, 2025 were in excess of the regulatory capital requirements under the U.S. Basel III rules. In addition, Citigroup was “well capitalized” under current federal bank regulatory agencies definitions as of September 30, 2025.
37
Components of Citigroup Capital
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
CET1 Capital
Citigroup common stockholders’ equity
(1)
$
194,038
$
190,815
Add: Qualifying noncontrolling interests
217
186
Regulatory capital adjustments and deductions:
Add: CECL transition provision
(2)
—
757
Less: Accumulated net unrealized gains (losses) on cash flow hedges, net of tax
(116)
(220)
Less: Cumulative unrealized net gain (loss) related to changes in fair value of financial liabilities attributable to own creditworthiness, net of tax
(1,443)
(910)
Less: Intangible assets:
Goodwill, net of related DTLs
(3)
17,876
17,994
Identifiable intangible assets other than MSRs, net of related DTLs
3,169
3,357
Less: Defined benefit pension plan net assets and other
1,725
1,504
Less: DTAs arising from net operating loss, foreign tax credit and general business credit
carry-forwards
(4)
10,807
11,628
Less: Excess over 10%/15% limitations for other DTAs, certain common stock investments
and MSRs
(4)(5)
3,757
3,042
Total CET1 Capital (Standardized Approach and Advanced Approaches)
$
158,480
$
155,363
Additional Tier 1 Capital
Qualifying noncumulative perpetual preferred stock
(1)
$
18,985
$
17,783
Qualifying trust preferred securities
(6)
1,431
1,422
Qualifying noncontrolling interests
34
30
Regulatory capital deductions:
Less: Other
137
71
Total Additional Tier 1 Capital (Standardized Approach and Advanced Approaches)
$
20,313
$
19,164
Total Tier 1 Capital (CET1 Capital + Additional Tier 1 Capital)
(Standardized Approach and Advanced Approaches)
$
178,793
$
174,527
Tier 2 Capital
Qualifying subordinated debt
$
22,519
$
18,185
Qualifying noncontrolling interests
40
38
Eligible allowance for credit losses
(2)(7)
14,295
13,560
Regulatory capital deduction:
Less: Other
282
483
Total Tier 2 Capital (Standardized Approach)
$
36,572
$
31,300
Total Capital (Tier 1 Capital + Tier 2 Capital) (Standardized Approach)
$
215,365
$
205,827
Adjustment for excess of eligible credit reserves over expected credit losses
(2)(7)
$
(8,748)
$
(8,456)
Total Tier 2 Capital (Advanced Approaches)
$
27,824
$
22,844
Total Capital (Tier 1 Capital + Tier 2 Capital) (Advanced Approaches)
$
206,617
$
197,371
(1)
Issuance costs of $65 million and $67 million related to outstanding noncumulative perpetual preferred stock at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, were excluded from common stockholders’ equity and netted against such preferred stock in accordance with FRB regulatory reporting requirements, which differ from those under U.S. GAAP.
(2)
Commencing January 1, 2025, the capital effects resulting from adoption of the CECL methodology have been fully reflected in Citi’s regulatory capital. For additional information, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Treatment—Modified Transition of the Current Expected Credit Losses Methodology” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
(3)
Includes goodwill “embedded” in the valuation of significant common stock investments in unconsolidated financial institutions.
(4)
Of Citi’s $29.6 billion of net DTAs at September 30, 2025, $10.8 billion of net DTAs arising from net operating loss, foreign tax credit and general business credit tax carry-forwards, as well as $3.8 billion of DTAs arising from temporary differences that exceeded the 10% limitation, were excluded from Citi’s CET1 Capital as of September 30, 2025. DTAs arising from net operating loss, foreign tax credit and general business credit tax carry-forwards are required to be entirely deducted from CET1 Capital under the U.S. Basel III rules. DTAs arising from temporary differences are required to be deducted from capital only if they exceed 10%/15% limitations under the U.S. Basel III rules.
(5)
Assets subject to 10%/15% limitations include MSRs, DTAs arising from temporary differences and significant common stock investments in unconsolidated financial institutions. At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, this deduction related only to DTAs arising from temporary differences that exceeded the 10% limitation.
(6)
Represents Citigroup Capital XIII trust preferred securities, which are permanently grandfathered as Tier 1 Capital under the U.S. Basel III rules.
38
(7)
Under the Standardized Approach, the allowance for credit losses is eligible for inclusion in Tier 2 Capital up to 1.25% of credit risk-weighted assets, with any excess allowance for credit losses being deducted in arriving at credit risk-weighted assets, which differs from the Advanced Approaches framework, in which eligible credit reserves that exceed expected credit losses are eligible for inclusion in Tier 2 Capital to the extent that the excess reserves do not exceed 0.6% of credit risk-weighted assets. The total amount of eligible credit reserves in excess of expected credit losses that were eligible for inclusion in Tier 2 Capital, subject to limitation, under the Advanced Approaches framework were $5.5 billion and $5.1 billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
Citigroup Capital Rollforward
In millions of dollars
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2025
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
CET1 Capital, beginning of period
$
158,943
$
155,363
Net income (loss)
3,752
11,835
Common and preferred dividends declared
(1,392)
(4,083)
Treasury stock
(5,046)
(8,091)
Common stock and additional paid-in capital
177
(109)
CTA net of hedges, net of tax
134
2,950
Unrealized gains (losses) on debt securities AFS, net of tax
450
1,243
Defined benefit plans liability adjustment, net of tax
27
(36)
Adjustment related to change in fair value of financial liabilities attributable to
own creditworthiness, net of tax
(1)
14
(51)
Other Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (
AOCI
)
1
6
Goodwill, net of related DTLs
648
118
Identifiable intangible assets other than MSRs, net of related DTLs
67
188
Defined benefit pension plan net assets
(24)
(75)
DTAs arising from net operating loss, foreign tax credit and general business
credit carry-forwards
356
821
Excess over 10%/15% limitations for other DTAs, certain common stock
investments and MSRs
447
(715)
CECL transition provision
—
(757)
Other
(74)
(127)
Net change in CET1 Capital
$
(463)
$
3,117
CET1 Capital, end of period (Standardized Approach and Advanced Approaches)
$
158,480
$
158,480
Additional Tier 1 Capital, beginning of period
$
17,676
$
19,164
Qualifying perpetual preferred stock
2,694
1,202
Qualifying trust preferred securities
3
9
Other
(60)
(62)
Net change in Additional Tier 1 Capital
$
2,637
$
1,149
Tier 1 Capital, end of period (Standardized Approach and Advanced Approaches)
$
178,793
$
178,793
Tier 2 Capital, beginning of period (Standardized Approach)
$
36,296
$
31,300
Qualifying subordinated debt
(112)
4,334
Eligible allowance for credit losses
157
735
Other
231
203
Net change in Tier 2 Capital (Standardized Approach)
$
276
$
5,272
Tier 2 Capital, end of period (Standardized Approach)
$
36,572
$
36,572
Total Capital, end of period (Standardized Approach)
$
215,365
$
215,365
Tier 2 Capital, beginning of period (Advanced Approaches)
$
27,562
$
22,844
Qualifying subordinated debt
(112)
4,334
Excess of eligible credit reserves over expected credit losses
143
443
Other
231
203
Net change in Tier 2 Capital (Advanced Approaches)
$
262
$
4,980
Tier 2 Capital, end of period (Advanced Approaches)
$
27,824
$
27,824
Total Capital, end of period (Advanced Approaches)
$
206,617
$
206,617
(1) Includes the changes in Citigroup (own credit) credit valuation adjustments (CVA) attributable to own creditworthiness, net of tax.
39
Citigroup Risk-Weighted Assets Rollforward (Basel III Standardized Approach)
In millions of dollars
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2025
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
Total Risk-Weighted Assets, beginning of period
$
1,178,756
$
1,139,988
General credit risk exposures
(1)
7,561
12,188
Derivatives
(2)
4,780
10,779
Securities financing transactions
(3)
445
17,141
Securitization exposures
(624)
1,252
Equity exposures
(304)
1,471
Other exposures
(4)
1,301
13,383
Net change in Credit Risk-Weighted Assets
$
13,159
$
56,214
Net change in Market Risk-Weighted Assets
(5)
$
2,359
$
(1,928)
Total Risk-Weighted Assets, end of period
$
1,194,274
$
1,194,274
(1)
General credit risk exposures include cash and balances due from depository institutions, securities, and loans and leases. General credit risk exposures increased during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, primarily due to increased lending exposures, partially offset by the recategorization of certain exposures to other assets in March 2025.
(2)
Derivatives increased during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, driven by increased exposures mainly from equity derivatives and foreign exchange.
(3)
Securities financing transactions include repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements, securities loaned and borrowed and eligible margin loans. Securities financing transactions increased during the nine months ended September 30, 2025, primarily driven by increased exposures.
(4)
Other exposures increased during the nine months ended September 30, 2025, mainly due to the recategorization of certain exposures previously classified as general credit risk exposures to other assets in March 2025, accompanied by broad-based exposure increases.
(5)
Market risk increased during the three months ended September 30, 2025, primarily due to Value at Risk (VaR) and Stressed VaR driven by increased exposures.
40
Citigroup Risk-Weighted Assets Rollforward (Basel III Advanced Approaches)
In millions of dollars
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2025
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
Total Risk-Weighted Assets, beginning of period
$
1,335,913
$
1,280,190
General credit risk exposures
(1)
24,936
48,158
Derivatives
(2)
(14,772)
(3,126)
Securities financing transactions
(3)
660
5,674
Securitization exposures
(258)
960
Equity exposures
(277)
1,322
Other exposures
(4)
1,863
16,148
Net change in Credit Risk-Weighted Assets
$
12,152
$
69,136
Net change in Market Risk-Weighted Assets
(5)
$
2,473
$
(2,255)
Net change in Operational Risk-Weighted Assets
(6)
$
(791)
$
2,676
Total Risk-Weighted Assets, end of period
$
1,349,747
$
1,349,747
(1)
General credit risk exposures include cash and balances due from depository institutions, securities, and loans and leases. General credit risk exposures increased during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, primarily due to increased exposures in lending and investment securities as well as risk parameter updates, partially offset by the recategorization of certain exposures to other assets in March 2025.
(2)
Derivatives decreased during the three months ended September 30, 2025, mainly due to a credit valuation adjustment (CVA) data update. Derivatives decreased during the nine months ended September 30, 2025, mainly due to a CVA data update, partially offset by an increase driven by portfolio changes.
(3)
Securities financing transactions include repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements, securities loaned and borrowed and eligible margin loans. Securities financing transactions increased during the nine months ended September 30, 2025, primarily driven by increased exposures.
(4)
Other exposures increased during the nine months ended September 30, 2025, mainly due to the recategorization of certain exposures previously classified as general credit risk exposures to other assets in March 2025, accompanied by broad-based exposure increases.
(5)
Market risk increased during the three months ended September 30, 2025, primarily due to Value at Risk (VaR) and Stressed VaR driven by increased exposures. Market risk decreased during the nine months ended September 30, 2025, mainly driven by model improvements.
(6)
Operational risk increased during the nine months ended September 30, 2025, mainly due to model severity parameter updates.
41
Supplementary Leverage Ratio
The following table presents Citi’s Supplementary Leverage ratio and related components as of September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024:
In millions of dollars, except ratios
September 30, 2025
June 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Tier 1 Capital
(1)
$
178,793
$
176,619
$
174,527
Total Leverage Exposure
On-balance sheet assets
(2)
$
2,691,377
$
2,672,411
$
2,494,016
Certain off-balance sheet exposures
(3)
Potential future exposure on derivative contracts
161,233
150,382
136,931
Effective notional of sold credit derivatives, net
(4)
40,851
43,094
36,507
Counterparty credit risk for repo-style transactions
(5)
28,585
26,302
23,391
Other off-balance sheet exposures
351,838
366,247
332,169
Total of certain off-balance sheet exposures
$
582,507
$
586,025
$
528,998
Less: Tier 1 Capital deductions
37,471
38,812
37,596
Total Leverage Exposure
$
3,236,413
$
3,219,624
$
2,985,418
Supplementary Leverage ratio
5.52
%
5.49
%
5.85
%
(1)
Commencing January 1, 2025, the capital effects resulting from adoption of the CECL methodology have been fully reflected in Citi’s regulatory capital. For additional information, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Treatment—Modified Transition of the Current Expected Credit Losses Methodology” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
(2)
Represents the daily average of on-balance sheet assets for the quarter.
(3)
Represents the average of certain off-balance sheet exposures calculated as of the last day of each month in the quarter.
(4)
Under the U.S. Basel III rules, banking organizations are required to include in Total Leverage Exposure the effective notional amount of sold credit derivatives, with netting of exposures permitted if certain conditions are met.
(5)
Repo-style transactions include repurchase and reverse repurchase transactions as well as securities borrowing and securities lending transactions.
As presented in the table above, Citigroup’s Supplementary Leverage ratio was 5.5% at September 30, 2025 and June 30, 2025, compared to 5.8% at December 31, 2024. The decrease from year-end 2024 was primarily driven by an increase in Total Leverage Exposure, common share repurchases and the payment of common and preferred dividends, partially offset by year-to-date net income and net beneficial movements in
AOCI
.
42
Capital Resources of Citigroup’s Subsidiary U.S. Depository Institutions
Citigroup’s subsidiary U.S. depository institutions are also subject to regulatory capital standards issued by their respective primary bank regulatory agencies, which are similar to the standards of the FRB.
The following tables present the capital components and ratios for Citibank, Citi’s primary subsidiary U.S. depository institution, as of September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024:
Advanced Approaches
Standardized Approach
In millions of dollars, except ratios
Required Capital Ratios
(1)
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
CET1 Capital
(2)
$
158,744
$
157,575
$
153,483
$
158,744
$
157,575
$
153,483
Tier 1 Capital
(2)
160,878
159,707
155,613
160,878
159,707
155,613
Total Capital (Tier 1 Capital + Tier 2 Capital)
(2)(3)
171,042
169,842
165,581
178,518
177,374
173,060
Total Risk-Weighted Assets
1,133,477
1,145,351
1,109,387
1,010,248
1,021,796
998,817
Credit Risk
(2)
$
837,242
$
841,708
$
811,464
$
966,268
$
968,635
$
953,377
Market Risk
43,162
53,100
45,383
43,980
53,161
45,440
Operational Risk
253,073
250,543
252,540
—
—
—
CET1 Capital ratio
(4)(5)
7.0
%
14.01
%
13.76
%
13.83
%
15.71
%
15.42
%
15.37
%
Tier 1 Capital ratio
(4)(5)
8.5
14.19
13.94
14.03
15.92
15.63
15.58
Total Capital ratio
(4)(5)
10.5
15.09
14.83
14.93
17.67
17.36
17.33
In millions of dollars, except ratios
Required
Capital Ratios
September 30, 2025
June 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Quarterly Adjusted Average Total Assets
(2)(6)
$
1,833,284
$
1,784,392
$
1,726,312
Total Leverage Exposure
(2)(7)
2,334,263
2,280,745
2,195,386
Leverage ratio
(5)
5.0
%
8.78
%
8.95
%
9.01
%
Supplementary Leverage ratio
(5)
6.0
6.89
7.00
7.09
(1)
Citibank’s required risk-based capital ratios are inclusive of the 2.5% Capital Conservation Buffer (all of which must be composed of CET1 Capital).
(2)
Commencing January 1, 2025, the capital effects resulting from adoption of the CECL methodology have been fully reflected in Citibank’s regulatory capital. For additional information, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Treatment—Modified Transition of the Current Expected Credit Losses Methodology” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
(3)
Under the Standardized Approach, the allowance for credit losses is eligible for inclusion in Tier 2 Capital up to 1.25% of credit risk-weighted assets, with any excess allowance for credit losses being deducted in arriving at credit risk-weighted assets, which differs from the Advanced Approaches framework, in which eligible credit reserves that exceed expected credit losses are eligible for inclusion in Tier 2 Capital to the extent that the excess reserves do not exceed 0.6% of credit risk-weighted assets.
(4)
Citibank’s binding CET1 Capital, Tier 1 Capital and Total Capital ratios were derived under the Basel III Advanced Approaches framework for all periods presented.
(5)
Citibank must maintain required CET1 Capital, Tier 1 Capital, Total Capital and Leverage ratios of 6.5%, 8.0%, 10.0% and 5.0%, respectively, to be considered “well capitalized” under the revised Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) regulations applicable to insured depository institutions as established by the U.S. Basel III rules. Citibank must also maintain a required Supplementary Leverage ratio of 6.0% to be considered “well capitalized.”
(6)
Leverage ratio denominator. Represents quarterly average total assets less amounts deducted from Tier 1 Capital.
(7)
Supplementary Leverage ratio denominator. Represents quarterly average on-balance sheet assets and certain off-balance sheet exposures calculated in accordance with the U.S. Basel III rules less amounts deducted from Tier 1 Capital.
As presented in the table above, Citibank’s capital ratios at September 30, 2025 were in excess of the regulatory capital requirements under the U.S. Basel III rules. In addition, Citibank was “well capitalized” as of September 30, 2025.
Citibank’s Supplementary Leverage ratio was 6.9% at September 30, 2025, compared to 7.0% at June 30, 2025 and 7.1% at December 31, 2024. The decreases were primarily driven by increases in Total Leverage Exposure and the payment of dividends, partially offset by net income and net beneficial movements in
AOCI
.
43
Impact of Changes on Citigroup and Citibank Capital Ratios
The following tables present the hypothetical sensitivity of Citigroup’s and Citibank’s capital ratios to changes of $100 million in CET1 Capital, Tier 1 Capital and Total Capital (numerator), and changes of $1 billion in Advanced Approaches and Standardized Approach RWA and quarterly adjusted average total assets, as well as Total Leverage Exposure (denominator), as of September 30, 2025. This
information is provided for the purpose of analyzing the impact that a change in Citigroup’s or Citibank’s financial position or results of operations could have on these ratios. These sensitivities only consider a single change to either a component of capital, RWA, quarterly adjusted average total assets or Total Leverage Exposure. Accordingly, an event that affects more than one factor may have a larger basis point impact than is reflected in these tables.
CET1 Capital ratio
Tier 1 Capital ratio
Total Capital ratio
In basis points
Impact of
$100 million
change in
CET1 Capital
Impact of
$1 billion
change in RWA
Impact of
$100 million
change in
Tier 1 Capital
Impact of
$1 billion
change in RWA
Impact of
$100 million
change in
Total Capital
Impact of
$1 billion
change in RWA
Citigroup
Advanced Approaches
0.7
0.9
0.7
1.0
0.7
1.1
Standardized Approach
0.8
1.1
0.8
1.3
0.8
1.5
Citibank
Advanced Approaches
0.9
1.2
0.9
1.3
0.9
1.3
Standardized Approach
1.0
1.6
1.0
1.6
1.0
1.8
Leverage ratio
Supplementary Leverage ratio
In basis points
Impact of
$100 million
change in
Tier 1 Capital
Impact of
$1 billion change in quarterly adjusted average total assets
Impact of
$100 million
change in
Tier 1 Capital
Impact of
$1 billion change in Total Leverage Exposure
Citigroup
0.4
0.3
0.3
0.2
Citibank
0.5
0.5
0.4
0.3
Citigroup Broker-Dealer Subsidiaries
At September 30, 2025, Citigroup Global Markets Inc., a U.S. broker-dealer registered with the SEC that is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Citigroup, had net capital, computed in accordance with the SEC’s net capital rule, of $19 billion, which exceeded the minimum requirement by $13 billion.
Moreover, Citigroup Global Markets Limited, a broker-dealer registered with the United Kingdom’s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) that is also an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of Citigroup, had total regulatory capital of $26 billion at September 30, 2025, which exceeded the PRA’s combined buffer and minimum regulatory capital requirements.
In addition, certain of Citi’s other broker-dealer subsidiaries are subject to regulation in the countries in which they do business, including requirements to maintain specified levels of net capital or its equivalent. Citigroup’s other principal broker-dealer subsidiaries were in compliance with their regulatory capital requirements at September 30, 2025.
44
Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity (TLAC)
The table below details Citi’s eligible external TLAC and long-term debt (LTD) amounts and ratios, and each TLAC and LTD regulatory requirement, as well as the surplus amount in dollars in excess of each requirement:
September 30, 2025
In billions of dollars, except ratios
External TLAC
LTD
Total eligible amount
$
345
$
160
% of Advanced Approaches risk-
weighted assets
25.6
%
11.9
%
Regulatory requirement
(1)(2)
22.5
9.5
Surplus amount
$
41
$
32
% of Total Leverage Exposure
10.7
%
4.9
%
Regulatory requirement
9.5
4.5
Surplus amount
$
38
$
14
(1) External TLAC includes method 1 GSIB surcharge of 2.0%.
(2) LTD includes method 2 GSIB surcharge of 3.5%.
As of September 30, 2025, Citi exceeded each of the TLAC and LTD regulatory requirements, resulting in a $14 billion surplus above its binding TLAC requirement of LTD as a percentage of Total Leverage Exposure.
For additional information on Citi’s TLAC-related requirements, see “Capital Resources—Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity (TLAC)” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Regulatory Capital Standards and Developments
Stress Capital Buffer (SCB) Requirements
On April 17, 2025, the FRB issued a notice of proposed rulemaking intended to reduce the volatility of the SCB requirement by averaging the results of the annual supervisory stress test over two years. The proposal would also change the annual effective date of the SCB requirement from October 1 to January 1 in each year. This proposal remains outstanding and the timing is uncertain.
Leverage Capital Requirements
On June 27, 2025, the U.S. banking agencies issued a notice of proposed rulemaking designed to ensure that the enhanced Supplementary Leverage ratio (eSLR) standards serve as a backstop to risk-based capital requirements rather than a binding constraint.
The proposal would recalibrate the eSLR buffer applicable to GSIBs, currently set at 2%, to equal 50% of the GSIB’s method 1 surcharge. It would also replace the requirement that a depository institution subsidiary of a GSIB maintain a Supplementary Leverage ratio (SLR) of at least 6% to be considered “well capitalized,” with a buffer requirement also equal to 50% of the GSIB’s method 1 surcharge, which would apply on top of the 3% SLR such depository institution subsidiaries must maintain to be considered “adequately capitalized.” The proposal would also make corresponding changes to the external TLAC and LTD leverage-based requirements to align with the proposed modifications to the eSLR standard.
If adopted as proposed, both Citigroup and Citibank, N.A. would be required to maintain an eSLR buffer of 1%, based on Citi’s current GSIB method 1 surcharge of 2%, for a total SLR requirement of 4%. This compares to the current SLR requirement of 5% for Citigroup and 6% for Citibank, N.A. In addition, the proposal would lower Citi’s TLAC and LTD leverage-based requirements from the current 9.5% TLAC leverage-based requirement and 4.5% LTD leverage-based requirement to 8.5% and 3.5%, respectively.
For information on proposed changes to U.S. regulatory capital requirements, known as the Basel III Endgame, as well as to the GSIB surcharge and the TLAC rule, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Standards and Developments” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Stress Testing Framework
On October 24, 2025, the FRB issued a notice of proposed rulemaking intended to enhance the transparency and public accountability of the FRB’s stress testing framework, which informs institutions’ stress capital buffer requirements. The proposal includes a request for comment on the FRB’s stress test models and proposes to codify an enhanced annual disclosure process; comments are due by January 22, 2026. The FRB released a related proposal on October 24, 2025, seeking comments on the proposed stress test scenarios for the 2026 supervisory stress test, with comments due by December 1, 2025.
45
Tangible Common Equity, Book Value Per Share, Tangible Book Value Per Share and Return on Equity
As defined by Citi, tangible common equity (TCE) represents common stockholders’ equity less goodwill and identifiable intangible assets (other than mortgage servicing rights (MSRs)). Return on tangible common equity (RoTCE) represents annualized net income available to common shareholders as a percentage of average TCE. Tangible book value per share (TBVPS) represents average TCE divided by average common shares outstanding. Other companies may calculate these measures differently.
In millions of dollars or shares, except per share amounts
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
Total Citigroup stockholders’ equity
$
213,023
$
208,598
Less: Preferred stock
19,050
17,850
Common stockholders’ equity
$
193,973
$
190,748
Less:
Goodwill
19,126
19,300
Identifiable intangible assets (other than MSRs)
3,582
3,734
Goodwill and identifiable intangible assets (other than MSRs) related to
businesses held-for-sale (HFS)
—
16
Tangible common equity (TCE)
$
171,265
$
167,698
Common shares outstanding (CSO)
1,789.3
1,877.1
Book value per share (common stockholders’ equity/CSO)
$
108.41
$
101.62
Tangible book value per share (TCE/CSO)
95.72
89.34
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Net income available to common shareholders
$
3,478
$
2,961
$
11,005
$
9,028
Average common stockholders’ equity
$
195,471
$
191,444
$
194,296
$
189,552
Less:
Average goodwill
19,550
19,669
19,814
19,491
Average intangible assets (other than MSRs)
3,611
3,478
3,659
3,580
Average goodwill and identifiable intangible assets
(other than MSRs) related to businesses HFS
8
8
12
4
Average TCE
$
172,302
$
168,289
$
170,811
$
166,477
Return on average common stockholders’ equity
7.1
%
6.2
%
7.6
%
6.4
%
RoTCE
8.0
7.0
8.6
7.2
46
Managing Global Risk—Table of Contents
MANAGING GLOBAL RISK
48
CREDIT RISK
(1)
48
Loans
48
Corporate Credit
49
Consumer Credit
54
Additional Consumer and Corporate Credit Details
60
Loans Outstanding
60
Details of Credit Loss Experience
61
Allowance for Credit Losses on Loans (ACLL)
62
Non-Accrual Loans and Assets
64
LIQUIDITY RISK
67
High-Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA)
68
Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR)
68
Deposits
69
Long-Term Debt
70
Secured Funding Transactions and Short-Term Borrowings
72
Credit Ratings
73
MARKET RISK
(1)
74
Market Risk of Non-Trading Portfolios
74
Market Risk of Trading Portfolios
84
OTHER RISKS
85
Country Risk
85
Russia
87
Ukraine
88
Argentina
89
(1) For additional information regarding certain credit risk, market risk and other quantitative and qualitative information, refer to
Citi’s Pillar 3 Basel III Advanced Approaches Disclosures, as required by the rules of the FRB, on Citi’s Investor Relations website.
These Pillar 3 disclosures are not incorporated by reference into, and do not form any part of, this Form 10-Q.
47
MANAGING GLOBAL RISK
For Citi, effective risk management is of primary importance to its overall operations. Accordingly, Citi’s risk management process has been designed to monitor, evaluate and manage the principal risks it assumes in conducting its activities. Specifically, the activities that Citi engages in, and the risks those activities generate, must be consistent with Citi’s Mission and Value Proposition and the key Leadership Principles that support it, as well as Citi’s risk appetite. For more information on managing global risk at Citi, see “Managing Global Risk” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
CREDIT RISK
For more information on credit risk, including Citi’s credit risk management, measurement and stress testing, and Citi’s consumer and corporate credit portfolios, see “Credit Risk” and “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K. In addition, see Notes 14 and 15.
Loans
The table below details the average loans, by segment and
All Other
, and the total Citigroup end-of-period loans for each of the periods indicated:
In billions of dollars
3Q25
2Q25
3Q24
Services
$
94
$
94
$
87
Markets
147
136
119
Banking
81
84
88
Wealth
151
149
150
USPB
Branded Cards
$
120
$
118
$
115
Retail Services
50
50
51
Retail Banking
50
49
44
Total
USPB
$
220
$
217
$
210
All Other
$
32
$
32
$
33
Total Citigroup loans (AVG)
$
725
$
712
$
687
Total Citigroup loans (EOP)
$
734
$
725
$
689
Average loans increased 6% year-over-year and 2% sequentially. The year-over-year increase was driven by growth in
Markets
,
USPB
and
Services
, partially offset by declines in
Banking
and
All Other
.
As of the third quarter of 2025, average loans for:
•
Services
increased 8% year-over-year, driven by demand in TTS for working capital loans as well as export and agency finance.
•
Markets
increased 24% year-over-year, driven by asset-backed financing and commercial warehouse lending in Spread Products as well as higher client activity in Equity Derivatives.
•
Banking
decreased 8% year-over-year, as average balances declined amid lower aggregate demand.
•
Wealth
experienced growth in securities-based lending volumes, offset by transfers of certain relationships and associated mortgage loans to
USPB
from
Wealth
and reductions across other lending portfolios.
•
USPB
increased 5% year-over-year, driven by growth in Retail Banking, largely due to transfers of certain relationships and associated mortgage loans to
USPB
from
Wealth
, as well as growth in Branded Cards, driven by higher card spend volume.
•
All Other
decreased 3% year-over-year, driven by the continued wind-downs in Asia Consumer within Legacy Franchises (including the impact of moving HFS loans to
Other assets
), offset by growth in Mexico Consumer/SBMM lending volumes and the impact of the Mexican peso appreciation.
End-of-period loans increased 7% year-over-year and 1% sequentially (quarter-over-quarter). The year-over-year increase was driven by growth in
Markets
and
Services
,
as well as growth in Branded Cards and Retail Banking in
USPB
, partially offset by a decline in
Banking.
48
CORPORATE CREDIT
The following table details Citi’s corporate credit portfolio across
Services
,
Markets
,
Banking
and the Mexico SBMM portion of
All Other
—Legacy Franchises
(excluding loans carried at fair value and loans held-for-sale), and before consideration of collateral or hedges, by remaining tenor or expiration for the periods indicated:
September 30, 2025
June 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In billions of dollars
Due
within
1 year
Greater
than 1 year
but within
5 years
Greater
than
5 years
Total
exposure
Due
within
1 year
Greater
than 1 year
but within
5 years
Greater
than
5 years
Total
exposure
Due
within
1 year
Greater
than 1 year
but within
5 years
Greater
than
5 years
Total
exposure
Direct outstandings (on-balance sheet)
(1)
$
145
$
132
$
50
$
327
$
140
$
134
$
46
$
320
$
133
$
122
$
39
$
294
Unfunded lending commitments
(off-balance sheet)
(2)
147
307
27
481
133
275
24
432
131
274
24
429
Total exposure
$
292
$
439
$
77
$
808
$
273
$
409
$
70
$
752
$
264
$
396
$
63
$
723
(1) Includes drawn loans, overdrafts, bankers’ acceptances and leases.
(2) Includes unused commitments to lend, letters of credit and financial guarantees.
Portfolio Mix—Geography and Counterparty
Citi’s corporate credit portfolio is diverse across geographies and types of counterparties. The following table presents the percentages of this portfolio across North America and the clusters within International based on the country of risk of the obligor (for additional information on Citi’s international exposures, see “Other Risks—Country Risk—Top 25 Country Exposures” below):
September 30,
2025
June 30, 2025
December 31,
2024
North America
57
%
56
%
56
%
International
43
44
44
Total
100
%
100
%
100
%
International by cluster
(percentages are based on total Citi)
Europe
17
%
17
%
16
%
LATAM
7
7
7
United Kingdom
6
6
6
Japan, Asia North and Australia (JANA)
6
6
6
Asia South
4
4
5
Middle East and Africa (MEA)
3
4
4
The maintenance of accurate and consistent risk ratings across the corporate credit portfolio facilitates the comparison of credit exposure across all lines of business, geographies and products. Counterparty risk ratings reflect an estimated probability of default for a counterparty, and internal risk ratings are derived by leveraging validated statistical models and scorecards in combination with consideration of factors specific to the obligor or market, such as management experience, competitive position, regulatory environment and commodity prices. Facility risk ratings are assigned that reflect the probability of default of the obligor and factors that affect the loss given default of the facility, such as parental support
or collateral. Internal ratings that generally correspond to BBB and above are considered investment grade, while those below are considered non-investment grade.
The following table presents the corporate credit portfolio by facility risk rating as a percentage of the total corporate credit portfolio:
Total exposure
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
AAA/AA/A
48
%
49
%
49
%
BBB
29
30
30
BB/B
21
19
19
CCC or below
2
2
2
Total
100
%
100
%
100
%
Note: Total exposure includes direct outstandings and unfunded lending commitments.
In addition to the obligor and facility risk ratings assigned to all exposures, Citi may classify exposures in the corporate credit portfolio. These classifications are consistent with Citi’s interpretation of the U.S. banking regulators’ definition of criticized exposures, which may categorize exposures as special mention, substandard, doubtful or loss.
Risk ratings and classifications are reviewed regularly and adjusted as appropriate. The credit review process incorporates quantitative and qualitative factors, including financial and non-financial disclosures or metrics, idiosyncratic events or changes to the competitive, regulatory or macroeconomic environment.
Citi believes the corporate credit portfolio to be appropriately rated and classified as of September 30, 2025. Citi has applied management judgment to adjust internal ratings and classifications of exposures as both the macroeconomic environment and obligor-specific factors have changed, particularly where additional stress has been observed.
49
Obligor risk ratings may be downgraded, reflecting the increase in the probability of default. Downgrades of obligor risk ratings tend to result in a higher provision for credit losses. In addition, appetite per obligor is reduced consistent with the ratings, and downgrades may result in the purchase of additional credit derivatives or other risk/structural mitigants to hedge the incremental credit risk, or may result in Citi seeking to reduce exposure to an obligor or an industry sector. Citi will continue to review exposures to ensure that the appropriate probability of default is incorporated into all risk assessments.
See Note 14 for additional information on Citi’s corporate credit portfolio.
Portfolio Mix—Industry
Citi’s corporate credit portfolio is diversified by industry. The following table details the allocation of Citi’s total corporate credit portfolio by industry:
Total exposure
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
Transportation and industrials
19
%
20
%
20
%
Technology, media and telecom
15
12
12
Banks and finance companies
(1)
13
13
12
Real estate
10
11
11
Commercial
8
8
8
Residential
2
3
3
Consumer retail
10
11
11
Power, chemicals, metals and mining
9
8
9
Energy and commodities
6
6
6
Healthcare
5
5
5
Public sector
4
4
4
Insurance
3
4
4
Asset managers and funds
3
3
3
Financial markets infrastructure
3
2
2
Other industries
—
1
1
Total
100
%
100
%
100
%
(1) As of the periods in the table, Citi had less than 1% exposure to securities firms. See corporate credit portfolio by industry, below.
50
The following table details Citi’s corporate credit portfolio by industry as of September 30, 2025:
Non-investment grade
Selected metrics
In millions of dollars
Total credit exposure
(1)(8)
Funded
(2)
Unfunded
(3)
Investment grade
Non-criticized
Criticized performing
Criticized non-performing
(4)
30 days or more past due and accruing
Net credit losses (recoveries)
Credit derivative hedges
(5)
Transportation and industrials
$
154,601
$
58,668
$
95,933
$
114,814
$
33,668
$
5,676
$
443
$
40
$
8
$
(8,106)
Industrials
73,675
23,450
50,225
50,774
19,254
3,389
258
34
1
(4,287)
Autos
(6)
52,163
22,986
29,177
41,971
8,622
1,558
12
4
5
(2,658)
Transportation
28,763
12,232
16,531
22,069
5,792
729
173
2
2
(1,161)
Technology, media and telecom
118,779
33,060
85,719
73,686
40,679
4,026
388
28
2
(7,089)
Banks and finance companies
101,235
68,382
32,853
89,730
10,275
1,135
95
1
153
(605)
Real estate
84,054
60,364
23,690
69,874
9,895
3,313
972
268
11
(905)
Commercial
64,403
42,586
21,817
50,478
9,729
3,224
972
268
11
(905)
Residential
19,651
17,778
1,873
19,396
166
89
—
—
—
—
Consumer retail
84,032
35,950
48,082
58,382
21,423
3,982
245
58
62
(5,530)
Power, chemicals, metals and mining
69,957
19,090
50,867
48,844
16,274
4,644
195
82
(3)
(5,837)
Power
29,169
5,825
23,344
23,120
5,338
640
71
22
—
(2,820)
Chemicals
26,745
7,078
19,667
16,419
7,491
2,769
66
59
1
(2,118)
Metals and mining
14,043
6,187
7,856
9,305
3,445
1,235
58
1
(4)
(899)
Energy and commodities
(7)
44,905
11,889
33,016
36,259
7,719
734
193
3
87
(3,247)
Healthcare
37,564
8,109
29,455
29,593
6,530
1,381
60
24
5
(3,368)
Public sector
30,839
16,172
14,667
27,521
2,753
554
11
15
2
(669)
Insurance
27,792
3,834
23,958
25,329
2,367
96
—
1
—
(4,030)
Asset managers and funds
25,808
9,002
16,806
21,277
4,385
146
—
8
—
(105)
Financial markets infrastructure
23,706
457
23,249
23,561
145
—
—
—
—
(14)
Securities firms
1,277
202
1,075
1,118
158
1
—
—
—
(18)
Other industries
4,001
2,229
1,772
2,793
1,100
88
20
25
(4)
(1)
Total
$
808,550
$
327,408
$
481,142
$
622,781
$
157,371
$
25,776
$
2,622
$
553
$
323
$
(39,524)
(1) Represents gross credit exposures excluding any purchased credit protection.
(2) Funded excludes loans carried at fair value of $7.9 billion and HFS of $3.0 billion as of September 30, 2025.
(3) Unfunded includes lending-related commitments carried at fair value and HFS as of September 30, 2025.
(4) Includes non-accrual loan exposures and related criticized unfunded exposures.
(5) Represents the amount of purchased credit protection in the form of derivatives to economically hedge funded and unfunded exposures. Of the $39.5 billion of purchased credit protection, $36.8 billion represents the total notional amount of purchased credit derivatives on individual reference entities. The remaining $2.7 billion represents the first loss tranche of portfolios of purchased credit derivatives with a total notional amount of $20.8 billion, where the protection seller absorbs the first loss on the referenced loan portfolios.
(6) Autos total credit exposure includes securitization financing facilities secured by auto loans and leases, extended mainly to the finance company subsidiaries of global auto manufacturers, bank subsidiaries and independent auto finance companies, of approximately $19.5 billion ($11.0 billion of which was funded exposure with 100% rated investment grade) as of September 30, 2025.
(7) In addition to this exposure, Citi has energy-related exposure within the public sector (e.g., energy-related state-owned entities) and the transportation and industrials sector (e.g., offshore drilling entities) included in the table above. As of September 30, 2025, Citi’s total exposure to these energy-related entities was approximately $4.1 billion, of which approximately $1.4 billion consisted of direct outstanding funded loans.
(8) Includes $0.7 billion and $0.1 billion of funded and unfunded exposure at September 30, 2025, respectively, primarily related to commercial credit card delinquency-managed loans.
Exposure to Commercial Real Estate
As of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, Citi’s total credit exposure to commercial real estate (CRE) was $74 billion and $65 billion, including $6 billion of exposure related to office buildings in both periods. This total CRE exposure consisted of approximately $65 billion and $56 billion, respectively, related to corporate clients, included in the real estate category in the tables above and below. Total CRE exposure also includes approximately $9 billion in both periods, related to
Wealth
clients, not included in the tables above and below as they are not considered corporate exposures.
In addition, as of September 30, 2025, approximately 80% of Citi’s total CRE exposure was rated investment grade and more than 76% was to borrowers in the U.S. (compared to approximately 78% rated investment grade and more than 75% to borrowers in the U.S. as of December 31, 2024).
As of September 30, 2025, the percentage of the ACLL attributed to the total funded CRE exposure (including
Wealth
) was approximately 1.6%, and there were $891 million of non-accrual CRE loans. As of December 31, 2024, the percentage of the ACLL attributed to the total funded CRE exposure (including
Wealth
) was approximately 1.6%, and there were $574 million of non-accrual CRE loans.
51
The following table details Citi’s corporate credit portfolio by industry as of December 31, 2024:
Non-investment grade
Selected metrics
In millions of dollars
Total credit exposure
(1) (8)
Funded
(2)
Unfunded
(3)
Investment grade
Non-criticized
Criticized performing
Criticized non-performing
(4)
30 days or more past due and accruing
Net credit losses (recoveries)
Credit derivative hedges
(5)
Transportation and industrials
$
144,381
$
57,166
$
87,215
$
106,336
$
32,849
$
4,944
$
252
$
73
$
19
$
(7,643)
Autos
(6)
50,266
23,427
26,839
40,758
8,591
909
8
3
4
(2,420)
Transportation
26,138
11,416
14,722
19,460
5,792
795
91
3
(7)
(1,165)
Industrials
67,977
22,323
45,654
46,118
18,466
3,240
153
67
22
(4,058)
Technology, media and telecom
88,797
29,534
59,263
68,615
16,776
3,217
189
68
55
(6,720)
Banks and finance companies
86,500
56,716
29,784
76,754
8,625
882
239
7
5
(560)
Consumer retail
80,871
32,212
48,659
57,425
19,579
3,676
191
30
43
(5,423)
Real estate
74,481
53,186
21,295
61,430
8,976
3,545
530
6
173
(813)
Commercial
55,810
36,200
19,610
42,960
8,782
3,545
523
6
156
(813)
Residential
18,671
16,986
1,685
18,470
194
—
7
—
17
—
Power, chemicals, metals and mining
66,669
18,504
48,165
49,383
12,653
4,416
217
35
75
(5,267)
Power
32,185
5,092
27,093
27,204
4,414
417
150
1
48
(2,406)
Chemicals
20,618
7,529
13,089
12,747
5,034
2,779
58
33
28
(2,064)
Metals and mining
13,866
5,883
7,983
9,432
3,205
1,220
9
1
(1)
(797)
Energy and commodities
(7)
41,919
11,686
30,233
33,899
7,266
555
199
3
(5)
(3,153)
Healthcare
39,028
8,537
30,491
29,579
8,018
1,411
20
19
13
(3,267)
Insurance
28,317
2,115
26,202
26,734
1,560
17
6
2
—
(4,089)
Public sector
26,022
13,209
12,813
23,344
2,308
360
10
28
7
(678)
Asset managers and funds
19,648
5,258
14,390
17,679
1,788
181
—
—
(4)
(97)
Financial markets infrastructure
17,368
181
17,187
17,238
130
—
—
—
—
(29)
Securities firms
1,876
590
1,286
1,407
468
1
—
—
—
(20)
Other industries
7,213
4,733
2,480
4,979
2,099
114
21
42
16
(51)
Total
$
723,090
$
293,627
$
429,463
$
574,802
$
123,095
$
23,319
$
1,874
$
313
$
397
$
(37,810)
(1) Represents gross credit exposures excluding any purchased credit protection.
(2) Funded excludes loans carried at fair value of $7.8 billion and HFS of $3.6 billion as of December 31, 2024.
(3) Unfunded includes lending-related commitments carried at fair value and HFS as of December 31, 2024.
(4) Includes non-accrual loan exposures and related criticized unfunded exposures.
(5) Represents the amount of purchased credit protection in the form of derivatives to economically hedge funded and unfunded exposures. Of the $37.8 billion of purchased credit protection, $34.8 billion represents the total notional amount of purchased credit derivatives on individual reference entities. The remaining $3 billion represents the first loss tranche of portfolios of purchased credit derivatives with a total notional amount of $22.9 billion, where the protection seller absorbs the first loss on the referenced loan portfolios.
(6) Autos total credit exposure includes securitization financing facilities secured by auto loans and leases, extended mainly to the finance company subsidiaries of global auto manufacturers, bank subsidiaries and independent auto finance companies, of approximately $17.5 billion ($10.5 billion of which was funded exposure with 100% rated investment grade) as of December 31, 2024.
(7) In addition to this exposure, Citi has energy-related exposure within the public sector (e.g., energy-related state-owned entities) and the transportation and industrials sector (e.g., offshore drilling entities) included in the table above. As of December 31, 2024, Citi’s total exposure to these energy-related entities was approximately $4.4 billion, of which approximately $2.1 billion consisted of direct outstanding funded loans.
(8) Includes $0.6 billion and $0.1 billion of funded and unfunded exposure at December 31, 2024, respectively, primarily related to commercial credit card delinquency-managed loans.
52
Credit Risk Mitigation
As part of its overall risk management activities, Citigroup uses credit derivatives, both partial and full term, and other risk mitigants to economically hedge portions of the credit risk in its corporate credit portfolio, in addition to outright asset sales. In advance of the expiration of partial-term economic hedges, Citi will determine, among other factors, the economic feasibility of hedging the remaining life of the instrument. The results of the mark-to-market and any realized gains or losses on credit derivatives are reflected primarily in
Principal transactions
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
At September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024,
Banking
had economic hedges on the corporate credit portfolio of $39.5 billion, $40.1 billion and $37.8 billion, respectively. Citi’s expected credit loss model used in the calculation of its ACL does not include the favorable impact of credit derivatives and other mitigants that are marked-to-market.
The following is the risk rating distribution of the underlying corporate credit portfolio exposures in
Banking
for which credit protection was purchased:
Rating of Hedged Exposure
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
AAA/AA/A
47
%
47
%
44
%
BBB
41
42
45
BB/B
11
10
10
CCC or below
1
1
1
Total
100
%
100
%
100
%
53
CONSUMER CREDIT
The following section provides information about Citi’s consumer credit portfolio across
Wealth
,
USPB
and the consumer portion of
All Other—
Legacy Franchises.
Consumer Credit Portfolio
The following table presents Citi’s quarterly end-of-period consumer loans
(1)
:
In billions of dollars
3Q24
4Q24
1Q25
2Q25
3Q25
Wealth
(2)(3)
Mortgages
(4)
$
91.5
$
89.0
$
87.9
$
88.6
$
89.1
Margin lending
28.1
29.4
31.5
31.3
32.0
Personal, small business and other
26.4
24.1
23.1
25.9
25.5
Cards
5.0
5.0
4.8
4.9
4.8
Total
$
151.0
$
147.5
$
147.3
$
150.7
$
151.4
USPB
Branded Cards
(5)
$
115.9
$
121.1
$
116.3
$
120.2
$
121.2
Credit cards
112.1
117.3
112.6
116.6
117.4
Personal installment loans
(5)
3.8
3.8
3.7
3.6
3.8
Retail Services
51.6
53.8
50.2
50.7
50.1
Retail Banking
(5)
45.6
46.8
48.2
49.3
50.3
Mortgages
(4)
44.4
45.5
47.0
48.1
49.2
Personal, small business and other
1.2
1.3
1.2
1.2
1.1
Total
$
213.1
$
221.7
$
214.7
$
220.2
$
221.6
All Other
—Legacy Franchises
Mexico Consumer
$
17.4
$
17.2
$
17.9
$
20.0
$
21.2
Asia Consumer
(6)
5.5
4.7
4.5
3.0
2.7
Legacy Holdings Assets
(7)
2.2
2.0
1.9
1.9
1.7
Total
$
25.1
$
23.9
$
24.3
$
24.9
$
25.6
Total consumer loans
$
389.2
$
393.1
$
386.3
$
395.8
$
398.6
(1)
End-of-period loans include interest and fees on credit cards.
(2)
Consists of $97.9 billion, $98.0 billion, $96.7 billion, $98.0 billion and $99.8 billion of loans in North America as of September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025, March 31, 2025, December 31, 2024 and September 30, 2024, respectively. For additional information on the credit quality of the
Wealth
portfolio, see Note 14.
(3)
Consists of $53.5 billion, $52.7 billion, $50.6 billion, $49.5 billion and $51.2 billion of loans outside North America as of September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025, March 31, 2025, December 31, 2024 and September 30, 2024, respectively.
(4)
See Note 14 for details on loan-to-value ratios for the portfolios and FICO scores for the U.S. portfolio.
(5)
Effective January 1, 2025,
USPB
changed its reporting for certain installment lending products that were transferred from Retail Banking to Branded Cards to reflect where these products are managed. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change.
(6)
Asia Consumer loan balances, reported within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises, include the three remaining Asia Consumer loan portfolios—Korea, Poland (through the first quarter of 2025) and Russia until the completion of its consumer loan portfolio wind-down in the second quarter of 2025. Asia Consumer loan balances exclude approximately $2 billion of loans ($1 billion of retail banking loans and $1 billion of credit card loan balances) for both the second and third quarters of 2025. These loans were reclassified to held-for-sale (HFS) (
Other assets
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet) as a result of Citi’s agreement to sell its Poland consumer banking business (expected to close by mid-2026). See Note 2.
(7) Consists of certain North America consumer mortgages.
For information on changes to Citi’s consumer loans, see “Credit Risk—Loans” above.
54
Consumer Credit Trends
U.S. Personal Banking
U.S. Personal Banking (USPB)
includes Branded Cards, Retail Services and Retail Banking. Branded Cards includes proprietary credit card portfolios (Value, Cash and Rewards), co-branded card portfolios (including Costco and American Airlines) and personal installment loans. Retail Services includes co-brand and private label relationships (including, among others, The Home Depot, Best Buy, Macy’s and Sears). Retail Banking includes traditional banking services, including deposits, mortgages and other lending products, to retail and small business customers concentrated in six key U.S. metropolitan areas. Retail Banking also provides mortgages through correspondent channels.
As of September 30, 2025, approximately 76% of
USPB
EOP loans consisted of Branded Cards and Retail Services credit card loans, of which 70% represented Branded Cards loans and 30% represented Retail Services loans. Branded Cards and Retail Services credit card loans generally drive the overall credit performance of
USPB
, as Branded Cards and Retail Services card net credit losses represented approximately 95% of
USPB
’s total net credit losses for the third quarter of 2025.
As presented in the chart above, the third quarter of 2025 net credit loss rate for
USPB
decreased quarter-over-quarter, largely driven by seasonality, and decreased year-over-year, reflecting improvements in portfolio performance (see “Branded Cards—Credit Cards” and “Retail Services” below).
The 90+ days past due delinquency rate was broadly stable quarter-over-quarter, and decreased year-over-year, reflecting improvements in portfolio performance in cards.
Branded Cards—Credit Cards
USPB
’s Branded Cards portfolio consists of both proprietary Citi branded cards portfolios (Value, Cash and Rewards) and co-branded cards portfolios (including Costco and American Airlines) and personal installment loans. Citi’s Branded Cards portfolio has a diverse combination of credit card products.
As presented in the chart above, the third quarter of 2025 net credit loss rate for Branded Cards’ credit cards decreased quarter-over-quarter, largely driven by seasonality, and decreased year-over-year, reflecting improvements in portfolio performance.
The 90+ days past due delinquency rate was broadly stable quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year.
Retail Services
USPB
’s Retail Services partners with more than 20 retailers and dealers to offer private label and co-branded cards. Retail Services’ target market focuses on select industry segments such as home improvement, specialty retail, consumer electronics and fuel.
As presented in the chart above, the third quarter of 2025 net credit loss rate for Retail Services decreased quarter-over-quarter, largely driven by seasonality, and decreased year-over-year, reflecting improvements in portfolio performance.
The 90+ days past due delinquency rate increased
quarter-over-quarter, primarily driven by seasonality, and
decreased year-over-year, reflecting improvements in portfolio
performance.
55
For additional details on provisions for credit losses, loan delinquency and other information for Citi’s cards portfolios, see
USPB
’s results of operations above and Note 14.
Retail Banking
USPB
’s Retail Banking portfolio consists primarily of consumer mortgages (including home equity) and unsecured lending products, such as small business loans and revolving products. The portfolio is generally delinquency managed, where Citi evaluates credit risk based on FICO scores, delinquencies and the value of underlying collateral. The consumer mortgages in this portfolio have historically been extended to high credit quality customers, generally with loan-to-value ratios that are less than or equal to 80% on first and second mortgages. For additional information, see “Loan-to-Value (LTV) Ratios” in Note 14.
As presented in the chart above, the third quarter of 2025 net credit loss rate for Retail Banking was broadly stable quarter-over-quarter, and increased year-over-year, primarily driven by overdraft loans.
The 90+ days past due delinquency rate was stable quarter-over-quarter, and increased year-over-year, driven by consumer mortgages enrolled in forbearance programs related to the California wildfires.
Wealth
Wealth
provides consumer mortgages, margin lending, credit cards and other lending products to customer segments that range from affluent to ultra-high net worth through the Private Bank, Citigold and Wealth at Work businesses. These customer segments represent a target market that is characterized by historically low default rates and delinquencies and includes loans that are delinquency managed or classifiably managed. The delinquency-managed portfolio consists primarily of mortgages, margin lending and credit cards.
As of September 30, 2025, approximately $47 billion, or 31%, of the portfolios were classifiably managed and primarily consisted of margin loans, commercial real estate loans, personal and small business loans and other lending programs. These classifiably managed loans are primarily evaluated for credit risk based on their internal risk rating, of which 68% were rated investment grade. The 90+ days past due delinquency rates shown in the chart above were calculated only for the delinquency-managed portfolio, while the net credit loss rates were calculated using net credit losses for both the delinquency and classifiably managed portfolios.
As presented in the chart above, the third quarter of
2025 net credit loss rate in
Wealth
increased quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year, primarily driven by write-downs of mortgage loans to their collateral value due to the impact of the California wildfires. The 90+ days past due delinquency rate decreased quarter-over-quarter, driven by the resumption of payments on consumer mortgages exiting forbearance programs and write-downs of mortgage loans to their collateral value, both due to the impact of the California wildfires. The 90+ days past due delinquency rate increased year-over-year, driven by consumer mortgages that enrolled in forbearance programs related to the California wildfires. The low net credit loss and 90+ days past due delinquency rates continued to reflect the strong credit profiles of the portfolios.
56
Mexico Consumer
Mexico Consumer provides credit cards, consumer mortgages and small business and personal loans. Mexico Consumer serves a mass-market segment in Mexico and focuses on developing multiproduct relationships with customers.
As of September 30, 2025, approximately 40% of Mexico Consumer’s EOP loans consisted of credit card loans, which largely drives the overall credit performance of the Mexico Consumer portfolios, as the cards net credit losses represented approximately 64% of total Mexico Consumer net credit losses for the third quarter of 2025.
As presented in the chart above, the third quarter of
2025 net credit loss rate in Mexico Consumer increased
quarter-over-quarter, driven by seasonality and the ongoing normalization of loss and delinquency rates from post-pandemic lows, and increased year-over-year, primarily driven by the ongoing normalization of loss and delinquency rates from post-pandemic lows.
The 90+ days past due delinquency rate was broadly stable quarter-over-quarter, and increased year-over-year, primarily driven by the ongoing normalization of loss and delinquency rates from post-pandemic lows.
For additional details on provisions, loan delinquency and other information for Citi’s consumer loan portfolios, see the results of operations for
USPB
,
Wealth
and
All Other
above and Note 14.
U.S. Cards FICO Distribution
The following tables present the current FICO score distributions for Citi’s Branded Cards and Retail Services portfolios based on end-of-period receivables. FICO scores are updated as they become available.
Branded Cards
FICO distribution
(1)
September 30, 2025
June 30, 2025
September 30, 2024
≥ 740
55
%
56
%
55
%
660–739
34
33
34
< 660
11
11
11
Total
100
%
100
%
100
%
Retail Services
FICO distribution
(1)
September 30, 2025
June 30, 2025
September 30, 2024
≥ 740
36
%
36
%
34
%
660–739
41
41
42
< 660
23
23
24
Total
100
%
100
%
100
%
(1) Excludes immaterial balances for Canada and for customers for which no FICO scores are available.
The FICO distribution of the Branded Cards portfolio was largely unchanged quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year. The FICO distribution of the Retail Services portfolio was unchanged quarter-over-quarter, and improved year-over-year, reflecting improvements in portfolio performance. The FICO distribution continued to reflect the strong underlying credit quality of the portfolios. See Note 14 for additional information on FICO scores.
57
Additional Consumer Credit Details
Consumer Loan Delinquencies Amounts and Ratios
EOP
loans
(1)
90+ days past due
(2)
30–89 days past due
(2)
In millions of dollars,
except EOP loan amounts in billions
September 30,
2025
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
September 30,
2024
September 30,
2025
June 30,
2025
September 30,
2024
Wealth
delinquency-managed loans
(3)
$
104.6
$
386
$
452
$
223
$
291
$
263
$
269
Ratio
0.37
%
0.43
%
0.21
%
0.28
%
0.25
%
0.25
%
Wealth
classifiably managed loans
(4)
46.8
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
USPB
(5)(6)
Total
$
221.6
$
2,599
$
2,596
$
2,679
$
2,527
$
2,380
$
2,596
Ratio
1.17
%
1.18
%
1.26
%
1.14
%
1.08
%
1.22
%
Credit cards and personal installment loans total (d+b)
171.3
2,398
2,401
2,529
2,330
2,162
2,406
Ratio
1.40
%
1.40
%
1.51
%
1.36
%
1.27
%
1.44
%
Credit cards total (a+c) = (d)
(6)
$
167.5
$
2,377
$
2,380
$
2,510
$
2,283
$
2,112
$
2,356
Ratio
1.42
%
1.42
%
1.53
%
1.36
%
1.26
%
1.44
%
Branded Cards (a+b)
$
121.2
$
1,291
$
1,311
$
1,266
$
1,271
$
1,167
$
1,224
Ratio
1.07
%
1.09
%
1.09
%
1.05
%
0.97
%
1.06
%
Credit cards (a)
117.4
1,270
1,290
1,247
1,224
1,117
1,174
Ratio
1.08
%
1.11
%
1.11
%
1.04
%
0.96
%
1.05
%
Personal installment loans (b)
3.8
21
21
19
47
50
50
Ratio
0.55
%
0.58
%
0.50
%
1.24
%
1.39
%
1.32
%
Retail Services (c)
$
50.1
$
1,107
$
1,090
$
1,263
$
1,059
$
995
$
1,182
Ratio
2.21
%
2.15
%
2.45
%
2.11
%
1.96
%
2.29
%
Retail Banking
(5)
$
50.3
$
201
$
195
$
150
$
197
$
218
$
190
Ratio
0.40
%
0.40
%
0.33
%
0.39
%
0.45
%
0.42
%
All Other
Total
$
25.6
$
410
$
391
$
353
$
404
$
372
$
348
Ratio
1.61
%
1.58
%
1.42
%
1.59
%
1.51
%
1.40
%
Mexico Consumer
21.2
339
315
238
334
304
255
Ratio
1.60
%
1.58
%
1.37
%
1.58
%
1.52
%
1.47
%
Asia Consumer
(7)
2.7
15
16
25
18
17
34
Ratio
0.56
%
0.53
%
0.45
%
0.67
%
0.57
%
0.62
%
Legacy Holdings Assets (consumer)
(8)
1.7
56
60
90
52
51
59
Ratio
3.73
%
3.53
%
4.50
%
3.47
%
3.00
%
2.95
%
Total Citigroup consumer
$
398.6
$
3,395
$
3,439
$
3,255
$
3,222
$
3,015
$
3,213
Ratio
0.97
%
0.99
%
0.95
%
0.92
%
0.86
%
0.93
%
(1)
End-of-period (EOP) loans include interest and fees on credit cards.
(2)
The ratios of 90+ days past due and 30–89 days past due are calculated based on EOP loans, net of unearned income.
(3)
Excludes EOP classifiably managed Private Bank loans. These loans are not included in the delinquency numerator, denominator and ratios.
(4)
These loans are evaluated for non-accrual status and write-off primarily based on their internal risk classification and not solely on their delinquency status, and, therefore, delinquency metrics are excluded from this table. As of September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and September 30, 2024, 68%, 70% and 72% of
Wealth
classifiably managed loans were rated investment grade. For additional information on the credit quality of the
Wealth
portfolio, including classifiably managed portfolios, see “Consumer Credit Trends” above.
(5)
The 90+ days past due and 30–89 days past due and related ratios for
Retail Banking exclude loans guaranteed by U.S. government-sponsored agencies since the potential risk of loss predominantly resides with the U.S. government-sponsored agencies. The amounts excluded for loans 90+ days past due and (EOP loans) were $57 million ($0.4 billion), $57 million ($0.5 billion) and $60 million ($0.5 billion) at September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and September 30, 2024, respectively. The amounts excluded for loans 30–89 days past due (the 30–89 days past due EOP loans have the same adjustments as the 90+ days past due EOP loans) were $57 million, $61 million and $69 million at September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and September 30, 2024, respectively. The EOP loans in the table include the guaranteed loans.
(6)
The 90+ days past due balances for Branded Cards and Retail Services are generally still accruing interest. Citi’s policy is generally to accrue interest on credit card loans until 180 days past due, unless notification of bankruptcy filing has been received earlier.
58
(7)
Asia Consumer loan balances and the related delinquencies, reported within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises, include the three remaining Asia Consumer loan portfolios: Korea, Poland (through the first quarter of 2025) and Russia until the completion of its consumer loan portfolio wind-down in the second quarter of 2025. During the second quarter of 2025, Citi’s Poland consumer banking business was classified as HFS as a result of Citi’s agreement to sell the business. Accordingly, the Poland consumer loans are recorded in
Other assets
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. As a result, the Poland consumer loans and related delinquencies are not included in this table for the second or third quarters of 2025. See Note 2.
(8)
The 90+ days past due and 30–89 days past due and related ratios exclude U.S. mortgage loans that are primarily related to U.S. mortgages guaranteed by U.S. government-sponsored agencies since the potential risk of loss predominantly resides with the U.S. agencies. The amounts excluded for 90+ days past due and (EOP loans) were $58 million ($0.2 billion), $62 million ($0.2 billion) and $68 million ($0.2 billion) at September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and September 30, 2024, respectively. The amounts excluded for loans 30–89 days past due (the 30–89 days past due EOP loans have the same adjustments as the 90+ days past due EOP loans) were $33 million, $32 million and $35 million at September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and September 30, 2024, respectively. The EOP loans in the table include the guaranteed loans.
N/A Not applicable
Consumer Loan Net Credit Losses (NCLs) and Ratios
Average loans
(1)
Net credit losses
(2)
In millions of dollars, except average loan amounts in billions
3Q25
3Q25
2Q25
3Q24
Wealth
$
150.9
$
56
$
40
$
27
Ratio
0.15
%
0.11
%
0.07
%
USPB
Total
$
220.3
$
1,776
$
1,889
$
1,864
Ratio
3.20
%
3.49
%
3.53
%
Credit cards and personal installment loans total (d+b)
170.5
1,741
1,856
1,837
Ratio
4.05
%
4.43
%
4.40
%
Credit cards total (a+c) = (d)
$
166.8
$
1,681
$
1,799
$
1,784
Ratio
4.00
%
4.39
%
4.37
%
Branded Cards (a+b)
$
120.2
$
1,072
$
1,119
$
1,047
Ratio
3.54
%
3.80
%
3.63
%
Credit cards (a)
116.5
1,012
1,062
994
Ratio
3.45
%
3.73
%
3.56
%
Personal installment loans (b)
3.7
60
57
53
Ratio
6.43
%
6.18
%
5.70
%
Retail Services (c)
$
50.3
$
669
$
737
$
790
Ratio
5.28
%
5.89
%
6.14
%
Retail Banking
$
49.8
$
35
$
33
$
27
Ratio
0.28
%
0.27
%
0.24
%
All Other
—Legacy Franchises (managed basis)
(3)
Total
$
25.1
$
293
$
251
$
208
Ratio
4.63
%
4.04
%
3.23
%
Mexico Consumer
20.4
281
250
195
Ratio
5.46
%
5.28
%
4.36
%
Asia Consumer (managed basis)
(3)(4)
2.8
15
5
18
Ratio
2.13
%
0.50
%
1.28
%
Legacy Holdings Assets (consumer)
1.9
(3)
(4)
(5)
Ratio
(0.63)
%
(0.84)
%
(0.90)
%
Reconciling Items
(3)
(3)
5
(1)
Total Citigroup
$
396.3
$
2,122
$
2,185
$
2,098
Ratio
2.12
%
2.25
%
2.16
%
(1)
Average loans include interest and fees on credit cards.
(2)
The ratios of net credit losses are calculated based on average loans, net of unearned income.
(3)
All Other
(managed basis) excludes divestiture-related impacts (Reconciling Items) related to (i) Citi’s divestitures of its Asia Consumer businesses and (ii) the planned IPO of Banamex, within Legacy Franchises. The Reconciling Items are reflected in Citi’s Consolidated Statement of Income. See “
All Other
—Divestiture-Related Impacts (Reconciling Items)” above.
(4)
Asia Consumer NCLs and average loan balances, reported within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises, include the three remaining Asia Consumer loan portfolios: Korea, Poland (through the first quarter of 2025) and Russia until the completion of its consumer loan portfolio wind-down in the second quarter of 2025. During the second quarter of 2025, Citi’s Poland consumer banking business was classified as HFS as a result of Citi’s agreement to sell the business. In accordance with HFS accounting treatment, the Poland consumer average loans (approximately $2 billion in the third quarter of 2025 and $1 billion in the second quarter of 2025) are recorded in
Other assets
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet, and the related NCLs of approximately $3 million in the third quarter of 2025 and $(5) million in the second quarter of 2025 were reclassified to
Other revenue
.
Accordingly, these NCLs are not included in this table. See Note 2.
59
ADDITIONAL CONSUMER AND CORPORATE CREDIT DETAILS
Loans Outstanding
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
1st Qtr.
4th Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
In millions of dollars
2025
2025
2025
2024
2024
Consumer loans
In North America offices
(1)
Residential first mortgages
(2)
$
117,799
$
116,315
$
114,664
$
114,593
$
114,126
Home equity loans
(2)
2,916
2,965
3,025
3,141
3,242
Credit cards
167,446
167,291
162,806
171,059
163,699
Personal, small business and other
32,434
32,930
32,591
33,155
33,308
Total
$
320,595
$
319,501
$
313,086
$
321,948
$
314,375
In offices outside North America
(1)
Residential mortgages
(2)
$
24,078
$
24,083
$
24,326
$
24,456
$
25,702
Credit cards
13,754
13,402
12,885
12,927
12,930
Personal, small business and other
39,609
38,257
35,784
33,995
35,474
Total
$
77,441
$
75,742
$
72,995
$
71,378
$
74,106
Consumer loans, net of unearned income, excluding
portfolio-layer cumulative basis adjustments
(3)
$
398,036
$
395,243
$
386,081
$
393,326
$
388,481
Unallocated portfolio-layer cumulative basis adjustments
$
592
$
516
$
231
$
(224)
$
670
Consumer loans, net of unearned income
(3)
$
398,628
$
395,759
$
386,312
$
393,102
$
389,151
Corporate loans
In North America offices
(1)
Commercial and industrial
$
59,062
$
59,382
$
63,172
$
57,730
$
58,403
Financial institutions
65,116
56,727
47,993
41,815
38,796
Mortgage and real estate
(2)
17,885
17,887
18,104
18,411
18,353
Installment and other
(4)
22,824
25,480
22,225
25,529
23,147
Lease financing
129
185
237
235
233
Total
$
165,016
$
159,661
$
151,731
$
143,720
$
138,932
In offices outside North America
(1)
Commercial and industrial
$
96,624
$
97,338
$
96,277
$
92,856
$
98,024
Financial institutions
26,694
27,131
27,139
27,276
25,879
Mortgage and real estate
(2)
9,746
9,434
8,333
8,136
7,900
Installment and other
(4)
32,349
31,776
28,261
25,800
25,693
Lease financing
44
45
39
40
41
Governments and official institutions
4,751
4,151
3,944
3,630
3,237
Total
$
170,208
$
169,875
$
163,993
$
157,738
$
160,774
Corporate loans, net of unearned income, excluding portfolio-layer cumulative basis adjustments
(5)
$
335,224
$
329,536
$
315,724
$
301,458
$
299,706
Unallocated portfolio-layer cumulative basis adjustments
$
53
$
50
$
20
$
(72)
$
65
Corporate loans, net of unearned income
(5)
$
335,277
$
329,586
$
315,744
$
301,386
$
299,771
Total loans—net of unearned income
$
733,905
$
725,345
$
702,056
$
694,488
$
688,922
Allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL)
(19,206)
(19,123)
(18,726)
(18,574)
(18,356)
Total loans—net of unearned income and ACLL
$
714,699
$
706,222
$
683,330
$
675,914
$
670,566
ACLL as a percentage of total loans—
net of unearned income
(6)
2.65
%
2.67
%
2.70
%
2.71
%
2.70
%
ACLL for consumer loan losses as a percentage of
total consumer loans—net of unearned income
(6)
4.07
%
4.07
%
4.14
%
4.08
%
4.05
%
ACLL for corporate loan losses as a percentage of
total corporate loans—net of unearned income
(6)
0.92
%
0.94
%
0.89
%
0.87
%
0.89
%
(1)
North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America. The classification of corporate loans between offices in North America and outside North America is based on the domicile of the booking unit. The difference between the domicile of the booking unit and the risk-based country view is not material for the purposes of classification of corporate loans between offices in North America and outside North America.
(2)
Loans secured primarily by real estate.
60
(3)
Consumer loans are net of unearned income of $939 million, $913 million, $893 million, $889 million and $883 million at September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025, March 31, 2025, December 31, 2024 and September 30, 2024, respectively. Unearned income on consumer loans primarily represents loan origination fees, net of certain direct origination costs, that are deferred and recognized as
Interest income
over the lives of the related loans.
(4)
Installment and other includes loans to SPEs and TTS commercial cards.
(5)
Corporate loans include Mexico SBMM loans and are net of unearned income of $(1.1) billion, $(991) million, $(1.0) billion, $(969) million and $(912) million at September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025, March 31, 2025, December 31, 2024 and September 30, 2024, respectively. Unearned income on corporate loans primarily represents loan origination fees, net of certain direct origination costs, that are deferred and recognized as
Interest income
over the lives of the related loans.
(6)
Because loans carried at fair value do not have an ACLL, they are excluded from the ACLL ratio calculation.
Details of Credit Loss Experience
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
1st Qtr.
4th Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
In millions of dollars
2025
2025
2025
2024
2024
Allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL) at beginning of period
$
19,123
$
18,726
$
18,574
$
18,356
$
18,216
Provision for credit losses on loans (PCLL)
Consumer
$
2,189
$
2,169
$
2,225
$
2,528
$
2,205
Corporate
70
308
336
35
177
Total
$
2,259
$
2,477
$
2,561
$
2,563
$
2,382
Gross credit losses on loans
Consumer
In U.S. offices
$
2,243
$
2,314
$
2,402
$
2,307
$
2,210
In offices outside the U.S.
369
346
325
300
286
Corporate
In U.S. offices
28
34
53
14
81
In offices outside the U.S.
86
29
146
59
32
Total
$
2,726
$
2,723
$
2,926
$
2,680
$
2,609
Gross recoveries on loans
Consumer
In U.S. offices
$
448
$
426
$
413
$
371
$
353
In offices outside the U.S.
42
49
37
45
45
Corporate
In U.S. offices
11
7
11
15
22
In offices outside the U.S.
11
7
6
7
17
Total
$
512
$
489
$
467
$
438
$
437
Net credit losses on loans (NCLs)
In U.S. offices
$
1,812
$
1,915
$
2,031
$
1,935
$
1,916
In offices outside the U.S.
402
319
428
307
256
Total
$
2,214
$
2,234
$
2,459
$
2,242
$
2,172
Other—net
(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)
$
38
$
154
$
50
$
(103)
$
(70)
Allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL) at end of period
$
19,206
$
19,123
$
18,726
$
18,574
$
18,356
ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans
(7)
2.65
%
2.67
%
2.70
%
2.71
%
2.70
%
Allowance for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments (ACLUC)
(8)
$
1,820
$
1,721
$
1,720
$
1,601
$
1,725
Total ACLL and ACLUC
$
21,026
$
20,844
$
20,446
$
20,175
$
20,081
Net consumer credit losses on loans
$
2,122
$
2,185
$
2,277
$
2,191
$
2,098
As a percentage of average consumer loans
2.12
%
2.25
%
2.39
%
2.24
%
2.16
%
Net corporate credit losses on loans
$
92
$
49
$
182
$
51
$
74
As a percentage of average corporate loans
0.11
%
0.06
%
0.24
%
0.07
%
0.10
%
ACLL by type at end of period
(9)
Consumer
$
16,205
$
16,100
$
16,001
$
16,018
$
15,765
Corporate
3,001
3,023
2,725
2,556
2,591
Total
$
19,206
$
19,123
$
18,726
$
18,574
$
18,356
(1)
Includes all adjustments to the allowance for credit losses, such as changes in the allowance from acquisitions, dispositions, securitizations, FX translation, purchase accounting adjustments, etc.
(2)
The third quarter of 2024 includes an increase of approximately $38 million related to FX translation.
(3)
The second quarter of 2025 includes an approximate $29 million reclass related to Citi’s agreement to sell its Poland consumer banking business. That ACLL was transferred to
Other assets
during the second quarter of 2025. The second quarter of 2025 also includes FX translation.
(4)
The first quarter of 2025 includes an increase of approximately $50 million related to FX translation.
61
(5)
The fourth quarter of 2024 includes a decrease of approximately $103 million related to FX translation.
(6)
The third quarter of 2024 includes approximately $23 million related to an acquired portfolio and a decrease of approximately $93 million related to FX translation.
(7)
September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025, March 31, 2025, December 31, 2024 and September 30, 2024 exclude $7.9 billion, $9.3 billion, $8.2 billion, $8.0 billion and $8.1 billion, respectively, of loans that are carried at fair value.
(8)
Represents additional credit reserves recorded as
Other liabilities
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(9)
See “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates” below. Attribution of the allowance is made for analytical purposes only and is available to absorb probable credit losses inherent in the overall portfolio.
Allowance for Credit Losses on Loans (ACLL)
The following tables detail information on Citi’s ACLL, loans and coverage ratios:
September 30, 2025
In billions of dollars
ACLL
EOP loans, net of
unearned income
ACLL as a
% of EOP loans
(1)
Consumer
North America cards
(2)
$
13.4
$
167.4
8.0
%
North America personal installment loans
0.4
3.8
10.5
North America mortgages
(3)
0.1
121.3
0.1
North America other
(3)
0.3
28.6
1.0
International cards
1.1
13.8
8.0
International other
(3)
0.9
63.7
1.4
Total
(1)
$
16.2
$
398.6
4.1
%
Corporate
(4)
Commercial and industrial
$
1.8
$
153.1
1.2
%
Financial institutions
0.3
90.1
0.3
Mortgage and real estate
(4)
0.8
27.6
2.9
Installment and other
0.1
56.6
0.2
Total
(1)
$
3.0
$
327.4
0.9
%
Loans at fair value
(1)
N/A
$
7.9
N/A
Total Citigroup
$
19.2
$
733.9
2.7
%
December 31, 2024
In billions of dollars
ACLL
EOP loans, net of
unearned income
ACLL as a
% of EOP loans
(1)
Consumer
North America cards
(2)
$
13.6
$
171.1
7.9
%
North America personal installment loans
0.4
3.8
10.5
North America mortgages
(3)
0.1
117.2
0.1
North America other
(3)
0.3
29.4
1.0
International cards
0.9
12.9
7.0
International other
(3)
0.7
58.4
1.2
Total
(1)
$
16.0
$
392.8
4.1
%
Corporate
(4)
Commercial and industrial
$
1.3
$
148.7
0.9
%
Financial institutions
0.4
68.4
0.6
Mortgage and real estate
(4)
0.7
26.4
2.7
Installment and other
0.2
50.1
0.4
Total
(1)
$
2.6
$
293.6
0.9
%
Loans at fair value
(1)
N/A
$
8.0
N/A
Total Citigroup
$
18.6
$
694.5
2.7
%
(1)
Excludes loans carried at fair value, since they do not have an ACLL and are excluded from the ACLL ratio calculation.
(2)
Includes both Branded Cards and Retail Services. As of September 30, 2025, the $13.4 billion of ACLL represented approximately 24 months of coincident net credit loss coverage (based on third quarter of 2025 NCLs). As of September 30, 2025, Branded Cards ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans was 6.5% and Retail Services ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans was 11.5%. As of December 31, 2024, the $13.6 billion of ACLL represented approximately 22 months of coincident net credit loss coverage (based on fourth quarter of 2024 NCLs). As of December 31, 2024, Branded Cards ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans was 6.4% and Retail Services ACLL as a percentage of EOP loans was 11.3%.
(3)
Includes residential mortgages, retail loans and personal, small business and other loans, including those extended through the Private Bank network.
62
(4)
The above corporate loan classifications are broadly based on the loan’s collateral, purpose and type of borrower, which may be different from the following industry table. For example, commercial and industrial, financial institutions, and installment and other loan classifications include various forms of loans to borrowers across multiple industries, whereas mortgage and real estate includes loans secured primarily by real estate.
N/A Not applicable
The following table details Citi’s corporate credit ACLL by industry exposure:
September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars, except percentages
Funded exposure
(1)(3)
ACLL
ACLL as a % of funded exposure
Banks and finance companies
$
68,382
$
232
0.3
%
Transportation and industrials
58,668
616
1.0
Real estate
(2)
60,364
791
1.3
Commercial
42,586
729
1.7
Residential
17,778
62
0.3
Consumer retail
35,950
290
0.8
Technology, media and telecom
33,060
313
0.9
Power, chemicals, metals and mining
19,090
327
1.7
Public sector
16,172
71
0.4
Energy and commodities
11,889
159
1.3
Healthcare
8,109
102
1.3
Asset managers and funds
9,002
36
0.4
Insurance
3,834
8
0.2
Securities firms
202
2
0.9
Financial markets infrastructure
457
—
0.1
Other industries
(4)
2,229
54
2.4
Total
(5)
$
327,408
$
3,001
0.9
%
(1) Funded exposure excludes loans carried at fair value of $7.9 billion that are not subject to the ACLL.
(2) As of September 30, 2025, the portion of the ACLL attributed to the total funded CRE exposure (including the Private Bank) was approximately 1.6%.
(3) Includes $0.7 billion of funded exposure at September 30, 2025, primarily related to commercial credit card delinquency-managed loans.
(4) Includes the impact of FX translation on the ACLL that is not allocated to individual industries.
(5) As of September 30, 2025, the ACLL above reflects coverage of 0.4% of funded investment-grade exposure and 2.5% of funded non-investment-grade exposure.
The following table details Citi’s corporate credit ACLL by industry exposure:
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars, except percentages
Funded exposure
(1)(3)
ACLL
ACLL as a % of funded exposure
Transportation and industrials
$
57,166
$
460
0.8
%
Banks and finance companies
56,716
307
0.5
Real estate
(2)
53,186
717
1.3
Commercial
36,200
645
1.8
Residential
16,986
72
0.4
Consumer retail
32,212
258
0.8
Technology, media and telecom
29,534
238
0.8
Power, chemicals, metals and mining
18,504
257
1.4
Public sector
13,209
47
0.4
Energy and commodities
11,686
136
1.2
Healthcare
8,537
77
0.9
Asset managers and funds
5,258
28
0.5
Insurance
2,115
8
0.4
Securities firms
590
9
1.5
Financial markets infrastructure
181
1
0.6
Other industries
(4)
4,733
13
0.3
Total
(5)
$
293,627
$
2,556
0.9
%
(1) Funded exposure excludes loans carried at fair value of $7.8 billion that are not subject to the ACLL.
(2) As of December 31, 2024, the portion of the ACLL attributed to the total funded CRE exposure (including the Private Bank) was approximately 1.6%.
(3) Includes $0.6 billion of funded exposure at December 31, 2024, primarily related to commercial credit card delinquency-managed loans.
63
(4) Includes the impact of FX translation on the ACLL that is not allocated to individual industries.
(5) As of December 31, 2024, the ACLL above reflects coverage of 0.4% of funded investment-grade exposure and 2% of funded non-investment-grade exposure.
Non-Accrual Loans and Assets
For additional information on Citi’s non-accrual loans and assets, see “Non-Accrual Loans and Assets” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Non-Accrual Loans
The table below summarizes Citigroup’s non-accrual loans (NAL) as of the periods indicated. Non-accrual loans may still be current on interest payments. In situations where Citi reasonably expects that none or only a portion of the principal owed will ultimately be collected, all payments received are reflected as a reduction of principal and not as interest income. For all other non-accrual loans, cash interest receipts are generally recorded as revenue.
The sequential increase in corporate non-accrual loans at September 30, 2025 was driven by the credit downgrade of a small number of clients. The year-over-year increase in consumer non-accrual loans at September 30, 2025 was driven by consumer mortgages enrolled in forbearance programs related to the California wildfires, whose loans were contractually past due at September 30, 2025.
Sep. 30,
Jun. 30,
Mar. 31,
Dec. 31,
Sep. 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2025
2025
2024
2024
Corporate non-accrual loans by region
(1)(2)(3)
North America
$
1,280
$
953
$
822
$
757
$
459
International
791
769
554
620
485
Total
$
2,071
$
1,722
$
1,376
$
1,377
$
944
International NAL by cluster
United Kingdom
$
194
$
249
$
52
$
190
$
62
Japan, Asia North and Australia (JANA)
19
19
18
22
24
LATAM
432
391
382
301
260
Asia South
24
19
26
17
49
Europe
93
63
51
58
64
Middle East and Africa (MEA)
29
28
25
32
26
Corporate non-accrual loans
(1)(2)(3)
Banking
$
820
$
502
$
510
$
498
$
348
Services
187
134
110
65
96
Markets
926
932
631
715
390
Mexico SBMM
138
154
125
99
110
Total
$
2,071
$
1,722
$
1,376
$
1,377
$
944
Consumer non-accrual loans
(1)
Wealth
$
583
$
637
$
415
$
404
$
284
USPB
325
329
305
290
292
Mexico Consumer
526
485
416
411
415
Asia Consumer
(4)
16
16
20
19
21
Legacy Holdings Assets (consumer)
157
165
172
186
210
Total
$
1,607
$
1,632
$
1,328
$
1,310
$
1,222
Total non-accrual loans
$
3,678
$
3,354
$
2,704
$
2,687
$
2,166
(1)
Corporate loans are placed on non-accrual status based on a review by Citigroup’s risk officers. Corporate non-accrual loans may still be current on interest payments. With limited exceptions, the following practices are applied for consumer loans: consumer loans, excluding credit cards and mortgages, are placed on non-accrual status at 90 days past due and are charged off at 120 days past due; residential mortgage loans are placed on non-accrual status at 90 days past due and written down to net realizable value at 180 days past due. Consistent with industry conventions, Citigroup generally accrues interest on credit card loans until such loans are charged off, which typically occurs at 180 days contractual delinquency. As such, the non-accrual loan disclosures do not include credit card loans, with the exception of certain international portfolios. The balances above represent non-accrual loans within
Corporate loans
and
Consumer loans
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(2)
Approximately 70%, 61%, 65%, 61% and 64% of Citi’s corporate non-accrual loans remain current on interest and principal payments at September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025, March 31, 2025, December 31, 2024 and September 30, 2024, respectively.
(3)
The September 30, 2025
total
corporate non-accrual loans represented 0.62% of total corporate loans.
(4)
Asia Consumer includes the three remaining consumer loan portfolios: Korea, Poland (through the first quarter of 2025) and Russia until the completion of its consumer loan portfolio wind-down in the second quarter of 2025.
64
The changes in Citigroup’s non-accrual loans were as follows:
Three Months Ended
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2025
September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
Corporate
Consumer
Total
Corporate
Consumer
Total
Non-accrual loans at beginning of quarter
$
1,722
$
1,632
$
3,354
$
998
$
1,252
$
2,250
Additions
760
633
1,393
318
482
800
Sales and transfers to HFS
(39)
(7)
(46)
(45)
(4)
(49)
Returned to performing
—
(119)
(119)
(15)
(57)
(72)
Paydowns/settlements
(267)
(175)
(442)
(208)
(153)
(361)
Charge-offs
(105)
(369)
(474)
(103)
(227)
(330)
Other
—
12
12
(1)
(71)
(72)
Ending balance
$
2,071
$
1,607
$
3,678
$
944
$
1,222
$
2,166
Nine Months Ended
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2025
September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
Corporate
Consumer
Total
Corporate
Consumer
Total
Non-accrual loans at beginning of year
$
1,377
$
1,310
$
2,687
$
1,882
$
1,315
$
3,197
Additions
1,896
2,011
3,907
768
1,377
2,145
Sales and transfers to HFS
(120)
(13)
(133)
(362)
(10)
(372)
Returned to performing
—
(274)
(274)
(261)
(164)
(425)
Paydowns/settlements
(750)
(428)
(1,178)
(769)
(409)
(1,178)
Charge-offs
(332)
(1,060)
(1,392)
(310)
(691)
(1,001)
Other
—
61
61
(4)
(196)
(200)
Ending balance
$
2,071
$
1,607
$
3,678
$
944
$
1,222
$
2,166
The table below summarizes Citigroup’s other real estate owned (OREO) assets. OREO is recorded on the Consolidated Balance Sheet within
Other assets
. This represents the carrying value of all real estate property acquired by foreclosure or other legal proceedings when Citi has taken possession of the collateral:
Sep. 30,
Jun. 30,
Mar. 31,
Dec. 31,
Sep. 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2025
2025
2024
2024
OREO
North America
$
16
$
15
$
10
$
9
$
13
International
(1)
13
11
11
9
12
Total OREO
$
29
$
26
$
21
$
18
$
25
Non-accrual assets
Corporate non-accrual loans
$
2,071
$
1,722
$
1,376
$
1,377
$
944
Consumer non-accrual loans
1,607
1,632
1,328
1,310
1,222
Non-accrual loans (NAL)
$
3,678
$
3,354
$
2,704
$
2,687
$
2,166
OREO
29
26
21
18
25
Non-accrual assets (NAA)
$
3,707
$
3,380
$
2,725
$
2,705
$
2,191
NAL as a percentage of total loans
0.50
%
0.46
%
0.39
%
0.39
%
0.31
%
NAA as a percentage of total assets
0.14
0.13
0.11
0.11
0.09
ACLL as a percentage of NAL
(2)
522
570
693
691
847
(1)
The International OREO details by cluster are not provided due to the immateriality of such amounts.
(2)
The ACLL includes the allowance for Citi’s credit card portfolios and purchased credit-deteriorated loans, while the non-accrual loans exclude credit card balances (with the exception of certain international portfolios).
65
This page intentionally left blank.
66
LIQUIDITY RISK
For additional information on funding and liquidity at Citi, including objectives and stress testing, see “Liquidity Risk” and “Risk Factors—Liquidity Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Overview
Adequate and diverse sources of funding and liquidity are essential to Citi’s businesses. Funding and liquidity risks arise from several factors, many of which are to a large extent outside of Citi’s control, such as disruptions in the financial markets, changes in key funding sources, credit spreads, changes in Citi’s credit ratings and macroeconomic, geopolitical and other conditions.
Citi’s funding and liquidity management objectives are aimed at (i) funding its existing asset base, (ii) growing its core businesses, (iii) maintaining sufficient liquidity, structured appropriately, so that Citi can operate under a variety of adverse circumstances, including potential Company-specific and/or market liquidity events in varying durations and severity, and (iv) satisfying regulatory requirements, including, but not limited to, those related to resolution planning. Citigroup’s primary liquidity objectives are established by entity, and in aggregate, across two major categories:
•
Citibank (including Citibank Europe plc, Citibank Singapore Ltd. and Citibank (Hong Kong) Ltd.); and
•
Citi’s non-bank and other entities, including the parent holding company (Citigroup Inc.), Citi’s primary intermediate holding company (Citicorp LLC), Citi’s broker-dealer subsidiaries (including Citigroup Global Markets Inc., Citigroup Global Markets Limited and Citigroup Global Markets Japan Inc.) and other bank and non-bank subsidiaries that are consolidated into Citigroup (including Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V.).
At an aggregate Citigroup level, Citi’s goal is to maintain sufficient funding in amount and tenor to fully fund customer assets and to provide an appropriate amount of cash and high-quality liquid assets (as discussed below), even in times of stress, in order to meet its payment obligations as they come due. The liquidity risk management framework provides that, in addition to the aggregate requirements, certain entities be self-sufficient or net providers of liquidity, including in conditions established under their designated stress tests.
Citi’s primary funding sources include (i) corporate and consumer deposits via Citi’s bank subsidiaries, including Citibank, N.A. (Citibank), (ii) long-term debt (primarily senior and subordinated debt) mainly issued by Citigroup Inc., as the parent, and Citibank, and (iii) stockholders’ equity. These sources may be supplemented by short-term borrowings, primarily in the form of secured funding transactions.
Citi’s funding and liquidity framework, working in concert with overall asset/liability management, helps ensure that there is sufficient liquidity and tenor in the overall liability structure (including funding products) of the Company relative to the liquidity requirements of Citi’s assets. This reduces the risk that liabilities will become due before assets mature or are monetized. The Company holds excess liquidity, primarily in the form of high-quality liquid assets (HQLA), as presented in the table below.
67
High-Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA)
Citibank
Citi non-bank and other entities
Total
In billions of dollars
Sep. 30, 2025
Jun. 30, 2025
Sep. 30, 2024
Sep. 30, 2025
Jun. 30, 2025
Sep. 30, 2024
Sep. 30, 2025
Jun. 30, 2025
Sep. 30, 2024
Available cash
$
270.1
$
239.5
$
211.6
$
8.6
$
8.8
$
6.9
$
278.7
$
248.3
$
218.5
U.S. sovereign
161.3
150.1
205.0
50.5
47.8
43.2
211.8
197.9
248.2
U.S. agency/agency MBS
32.2
32.0
28.2
1.8
1.8
2.0
34.0
33.8
30.2
Foreign government debt
(1)
53.0
73.0
38.1
10.9
15.3
16.2
63.9
88.3
54.3
Other investment grade
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Total HQLA (AVG)
$
516.6
$
494.6
$
482.9
$
71.8
$
73.7
$
68.3
$
588.4
$
568.3
$
551.2
Note: The amounts in the table above are presented on an average basis. For securities, the amounts represent the liquidity value that potentially could be realized and, therefore, exclude any securities that are encumbered and incorporate any haircuts applicable under the U.S. LCR rule. The table above incorporates various restrictions that could limit the transferability of liquidity between legal entities, including Section 23A of the Federal Reserve Act. Changes in HQLA line categories from the prior-year period were primarily driven by the reallocation of nontransferable HQLA, which did not change total average HQLA, and thus did not impact Citi’s LCR ratio.
(1) Foreign government debt includes securities issued or guaranteed by foreign sovereigns, agencies and multilateral development banks. Foreign government debt securities are held largely to support local liquidity requirements and Citi’s local franchises and principally include government bonds from Japan, Korea, the United Kingdom, Mexico and China.
The table above includes average amounts of HQLA held at Citigroup’s operating entities that are eligible for inclusion in the calculation of Citigroup’s consolidated LCR, pursuant to the U.S. LCR rules. These amounts include the HQLA needed to meet the minimum requirements at these entities as well as any amounts in excess of these minimums that are available to be transferred to other entities within Citigroup. Citigroup’s average HQLA increased quarter-over-quarter as of the third quarter of 2025, primarily driven by an increase in average corporate deposits and long-term debt.
As of September 30, 2025, Citigroup had approximately $1.0 trillion of available liquidity resources to support client and business needs, including end-of-period HQLA ($588 billion) included in Citi’s LCR calculation; additional unencumbered HQLA, including excess liquidity held at bank entities that is non-transferable to other entities within Citigroup ($293 billion); and unused borrowing capacity from available assets not already accounted for within Citi’s HQLA to support additional advances from the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) and the Federal Reserve Bank discount window ($159 billion).
Short-Term Liquidity Measurement: Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR)
In addition to internal 30-day liquidity stress testing performed for Citi’s major entities, operating subsidiaries and countries, Citi also monitors its liquidity by reference to the LCR. The table below details the components of Citi’s LCR calculation and HQLA in excess of net outflows for the periods indicated:
In billions of dollars
Sep. 30, 2025
Jun. 30, 2025
Sep. 30, 2024
HQLA
$
588.4
$
568.3
$
551.2
Net outflows
510.5
494.4
469.6
LCR
115
%
115
%
117
%
HQLA in excess of net outflows
$
77.9
$
73.9
$
81.6
Note: The amounts are presented on an average basis.
As of September 30, 2025, Citigroup’s average LCR was 115%, unchanged from the quarter ended June 30, 2025. The increase in average HQLA was offset by an increase in net outflows from unsecured and secured wholesale funding.
In addition, considering Citi’s total available liquidity resources at quarter end of $1.0 trillion, Citi maintained approximately $530 billion of excess liquidity resources above the stressed net outflows of approximately $511 billion, presented in the LCR table above.
68
Long-Term Liquidity Measurement: Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR)
The NSFR measures the availability of an institution’s stable funding against the required stable funding in accordance with U.S. LCR. The ratio of available stable funding to required stable funding must be greater than 100%.
In general, an institution’s available stable funding includes portions of equity, deposits and long-term debt, while its required stable funding is based on the liquidity characteristics of its assets, derivatives and commitments. Standardized weightings are required to be applied to the various asset and liability classes.
For the quarter ended September 30, 2025, Citigroup’s consolidated NSFR was compliant with the 100% minimum requirement of the rule. (For additional information, see the Consolidated Citigroup NSFR Disclosure for the quarterly periods ended June 30, 2025 and March 31, 2025, on Citi’s Investor Relations website. The Consolidated Citigroup NSFR Disclosure on Citi’s Investor Relations website is not incorporated by reference into, and does not form any part of, this Form 10-Q).
Select Balance Sheet Items
This section provides details of select liquidity-related assets and liabilities reported on Citigroup’s Consolidated Balance Sheet.
Cash and Investments
The table below details average and end-of-period
Cash and due from banks
,
Deposits with banks
(collectively cash) and
Investment securities
. Citi’s investment securities portfolio consists largely of highly liquid U.S. Treasury, U.S. agency and other sovereign bonds, with an aggregate duration of less than three years. EOP cash, deposits and investments increased 2% quarter-over-quarter, driven by an increase in deposits.
In billions of dollars
3Q25
2Q25
3Q24
Cash and due from banks
$
27
$
27
$
26
Deposits with banks
332
298
266
Investment securities
450
450
500
Total Citigroup cash and investment securities (AVG)
$
809
$
775
$
792
Total Citigroup cash and investment securities (EOP)
$
799
$
787
$
794
At September 30, 2025, Citi’s EOP cash and
Investment securities
comprised approximately 30% of total assets.
Deposits
The table below details the average deposits, by segment and/or business, and the total Citigroup end-of-period deposits for each of the periods indicated:
In billions of dollars
3Q25
2Q25
3Q24
Services
$
893
$
857
$
825
TTS
744
713
690
Securities Services
149
144
135
Markets
20
18
19
Banking
1
—
1
Wealth
315
308
316
USPB
90
90
85
All Other
—Legacy Franchises
40
41
45
All Other
—Corporate/Other
23
29
20
Total Citigroup deposits (AVG)
$
1,382
$
1,343
$
1,311
Total Citigroup deposits (EOP)
$
1,384
$
1,358
$
1,310
End-of-period deposits increased 6% year-over-year, driven by increases in
Services
,
Markets
,
USPB
and
Wealth
, partially offset by Legacy Franchises (continued wind-downs) and Corporate/Other within
All Other
. End-of-period deposits increased 2% sequentially, driven by
Services
,
Wealth
,
Markets
and Legacy Franchises within
All Other
,
partially offset by a reduction in Corporate/Other within
All Other
and a decline in
USPB.
On an average basis, deposits increased 5% year-over-year and 3% sequentially. In the third quarter of 2025, average deposits for:
•
Services
increased 8% year-over-year, driven by both TTS and Securities Services, reflecting growth in North America and International, largely driven by an increase in operational deposits.
•
Wealth
remained largely unchanged year-over-year, driven by outflows, including a shift from deposits to higher-yielding investments on Citi’s platform, offset by net new deposits, as well as the transfer of certain relationships and associated deposits from
USPB
.
•
USPB
increased 6% year-over-year, as net new deposits growth was partially offset by the transfer of certain relationships and the associated deposits to
Wealth
.
•
All Other
decreased 3% year-over-year, reflecting continued wind-downs in Legacy Franchises (including the impact of moving HFS deposits to
Other liabilities
), partially offset by an increase in corporate certificates of deposit in Corporate/Other.
69
The majority of Citi’s $1.4 trillion of end-of-period deposits are institutional (approximately $912 billion) and span approximately 90 countries. A large majority of these institutional deposits are within TTS, and of these, approximately 80% are from clients that use all three TTS integrated services: payments and collections, liquidity management and working capital solutions. In addition, approximately 80% of TTS deposits are from clients that have a longer than 15-year relationship with Citi.
Citi also has a strong consumer and wealth deposit base, with approximately $408 billion of
Wealth
and
USPB
deposits as of the end of the current quarter, which are diversified across the Private Bank, Citigold and Wealth at Work within
Wealth
, as well as
USPB
.
As of the end of the current quarter, approximately 67% of
Wealth
’s U.S. Citigold clients have been with Citi for more than 10 years and approximately 40% of Private Bank ultra-high net worth clients have been with Citi for more than 10 years. In addition,
USPB
’s
deposits are spread across six key metropolitan areas in the U.S.
Long-Term Debt
Long-Term Debt Outstanding
The following table presents Citi’s end-of-period total long-term debt outstanding for each of the dates indicated:
In billions of dollars
Sep. 30, 2025
Jun. 30, 2025
Sep. 30, 2024
Non-bank
(1)
Benchmark debt:
Senior debt
$
115.0
$
116.1
$
114.0
Subordinated debt
28.7
29.0
27.9
Trust preferred
1.6
1.6
1.6
Customer-related debt
(2)
116.4
115.5
108.8
Local country and other
(3)
13.6
12.1
10.3
Total non-bank
$
275.3
$
274.3
$
262.6
Bank
FHLB borrowings
$
6.0
$
6.5
$
11.5
Securitizations
(4)
6.7
7.1
5.4
Citibank benchmark senior debt
23.5
26.0
16.9
Customer-related debt
(2)
2.8
2.5
1.3
Local country and other
(3)
1.5
1.4
1.4
Total bank
$
40.5
$
43.5
$
36.5
Total long-term debt
$
315.8
$
317.8
$
299.1
Note: Amounts represent the current value of long-term debt on Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet that, for certain debt instruments, includes consideration of fair value, hedging impacts and unamortized discounts and premiums.
(1)
Non-bank includes long-term debt issued to third parties by the parent holding company (Citigroup) and Citi’s non-bank subsidiaries (including broker-dealer subsidiaries) that are consolidated into Citigroup. As of September 30, 2025, non-bank included $100.7 billion of long-term debt issued by Citi’s broker-dealer and other subsidiaries that are consolidated into Citigroup. Certain Citigroup consolidated hedging activities are also included in this line.
(2)
Primarily structured notes, which contain an embedded derivative component that adjusts each security’s risk-return profile. See Note 24 for the fair value component of these issuances.
(3)
Local country and other includes debt issued by Citi’s affiliates in support of their local operations. Within non-bank, certain secured financing is also included.
(4)
Predominantly credit card securitizations, primarily backed by Branded Cards receivables.
Citi’s total long-term debt outstanding increased 6% year-over-year, largely driven by issuances in non-bank customer-related and bank benchmark debt offset by a decrease in FHLB. Citi’s total long-term debt decreased 1% sequentially.
As part of its liability management, Citi has considered, and may continue to consider, opportunities to redeem or repurchase its long-term debt pursuant to open market purchases, tender offers or other means. Such redemptions and repurchases help reduce Citi’s overall funding costs. During the third quarter of 2025, Citi redeemed or repurchased an aggregate of $22.7 billion of its outstanding long-term debt.
70
Long-Term Debt Issuances and Maturities
The table below details Citi’s long-term debt issuances and maturities (including repurchases and redemptions) during the periods presented:
3Q25
2Q25
3Q24
In billions of dollars
Maturities
Issuances
Maturities
Issuances
Maturities
Issuances
Non-bank
Benchmark debt:
Senior debt
$
7.7
$
6.5
$
5.3
$
8.2
$
0.1
$
3.0
Subordinated debt
1.4
1.1
2.9
1.1
1.0
1.1
Trust preferred
—
—
—
—
—
—
Customer-related debt
17.4
17.6
13.1
16.9
14.2
17.8
Local country and other
1.1
2.6
0.6
1.5
1.3
3.0
Total non-bank
$
27.6
$
27.8
$
21.9
$
27.7
$
16.6
$
24.9
Bank
FHLB borrowings
$
0.5
$
—
$
1.0
$
—
$
1.0
$
1.0
Securitizations
0.4
—
—
2.0
0.2
—
Citibank benchmark senior debt
2.5
—
—
6.5
—
4.0
Customer-related debt
0.2
0.5
0.2
1.7
0.2
0.2
Local country and other
0.5
0.5
0.1
—
0.3
—
Total bank
$
4.1
$
1.0
$
1.3
$
10.2
$
1.7
$
5.2
Total
$
31.7
$
28.8
$
23.2
$
37.9
$
18.3
$
30.1
The table below details Citi’s aggregate long-term debt maturities (including repurchases and redemptions) during the
nine
months of 2025, as well as its aggregate expected remaining long-term debt maturities by year as of September 30, 2025:
Maturities
In billions of dollars
3Q25 YTD
Remaining
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
Thereafter
Total
Non-bank
Benchmark debt:
Senior debt
$
19.2
$
0.6
$
9.8
$
7.5
$
20.4
$
7.9
$
10.8
$
58.0
$
115.0
Subordinated debt
5.8
—
2.5
3.8
2.0
—
—
20.4
28.7
Trust preferred
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
1.6
1.6
Customer-related debt
43.2
4.7
19.6
13.3
11.8
9.6
8.7
48.7
116.4
Local country and other
2.2
0.6
2.9
1.8
0.8
1.2
1.5
4.8
13.6
Total non-bank
$
70.4
$
5.9
$
34.8
$
26.4
$
35.0
$
18.7
$
21.0
$
133.5
$
275.3
Bank
FHLB borrowings
$
3.5
$
3.0
$
3.0
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
6.0
Securitizations
0.4
—
0.7
1.5
—
0.8
2.2
1.5
6.7
Citibank benchmark senior debt
2.5
—
8.0
6.5
2.5
1.5
3.0
2.0
23.5
Customer-related debt
0.6
—
—
—
—
0.6
1.1
1.1
2.8
Local country and other
0.6
—
0.7
0.5
0.2
—
0.1
—
1.5
Total bank
$
7.6
$
3.0
$
12.4
$
8.5
$
2.7
$
2.9
$
6.4
$
4.6
$
40.5
Total long-term debt
$
78.0
$
8.9
$
47.2
$
34.9
$
37.7
$
21.6
$
27.4
$
138.1
$
315.8
71
Secured Funding Transactions and Short-Term Borrowings
Citi supplements its primary sources of funding with short-term financings that generally include (i) secured funding transactions consisting of securities loaned or sold under agreements to repurchase, i.e., repos, and (ii) to a lesser extent, short-term borrowings consisting of commercial paper issuances and borrowings from the FHLB and other market participants.
Secured Funding Transactions
Secured funding is primarily accessed through Citi’s broker-dealer subsidiaries, with a smaller portion executed through Citi’s bank entities to efficiently fund both (i) secured lending activity and (ii) a portion of the securities inventory held in the context of market making and customer activities. Secured funding transactions are predominantly collateralized by government debt securities. Generally, changes in the level of Citi’s secured funding are primarily due to fluctuations in secured lending activity in the matched book (as described below), and changes in securities inventory and eligible counterparty balance sheet netting. In order to maintain reliable funding under a wide range of market conditions, Citi manages risks related to its secured funding by establishing secured funding limits and conducting daily stress tests that account for risks related to capacity, tenor, haircut, collateral type, counterparty and client actions.
Secured funding of $350 billion as of September 30, 2025 increased 26% year-over-year, and increased 1% from the prior quarter, driven by additional financing to support
Markets
activities. As of the quarter ended September 30, 2025, on an average basis, secured funding was $402 billion. The portion of secured funding in the broker-dealer subsidiaries that funds secured lending is commonly referred to as “matched book” activity and is primarily secured by high-quality liquid securities such as U.S. Treasury securities, U.S. agency securities and foreign government debt securities. Other “matched book” activity is secured by less liquid securities, including equity securities, corporate bonds and asset-backed securities, the tenor of which is generally equal to or longer than the tenor of the corresponding assets. As indicated above, the remaining portion of secured funding is used to fund securities inventory held in the context of market making and customer activities.
Short-Term Borrowings
Citi’s short-term borrowings of $55 billion as of September 30, 2025 increased 32% year-over-year and decreased 1% sequentially. The year-over-year increase was mainly attributable to additional funding raised by entities to support client activities. See Note 18 for further information on Citigroup’s and its affiliates’ outstanding short-term borrowings.
72
Credit Ratings
The table below presents the current ratings for Citigroup and Citibank as of September 30, 2025. While not included in the table below, the current long-term and short-term ratings of Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. (CGMHI) were A+/F1 at Fitch Ratings, A2/P-1 at Moody’s Ratings and A/A-1 at S&P Global Ratings as of September 30, 2025.
Ratings as of September 30, 2025
Citigroup Inc.
Citibank, N.A.
Long-term
Short-term
Outlook
Long-
term
Short-
term
Outlook
Fitch Ratings (Fitch)
A
F1
Stable
A+
F1
Stable
Moody’s Ratings (Moody’s)
A3
P-2
Stable
Aa3
P-1
Stable
S&P Global Ratings (S&P)
BBB+
A-2
Stable
A+
A-1
Stable
Potential Impacts of Ratings Downgrades
Ratings downgrades by Fitch, Moody’s or S&P could negatively impact Citigroup’s and/or Citibank’s funding and liquidity due to reduced funding capacity, including derivative triggers, which could take the form of cash obligations and collateral requirements.
For additional information on the impact of credit rating changes on Citi and its applicable subsidiaries, see “Risk Factors—Liquidity Risks” and “Credit Ratings” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Citigroup Inc. and Citibank—Potential Derivative Triggers
As of September 30, 2025, Citi estimates that a hypothetical one-notch downgrade of the senior debt/long-term rating across all three major rating agencies could impact funding and liquidity due to derivative triggers by approximately $0.1 billion, unchanged from June 30, 2025, for Citigroup Inc., and $0.1 billion, unchanged from June 30, 2025, for Citibank. Other funding sources, such as secured financing transactions and other margin requirements, for which there are no explicit triggers, could also be adversely affected.
In total, as of September 30, 2025, Citi estimates that a one-notch downgrade of Citigroup Inc. and Citibank across all three major rating agencies could result in increased aggregate cash obligations and collateral requirements of approximately $0.2 billion, unchanged from June 30, 2025. As detailed under “High-Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA)” above, Citigroup has various liquidity resources available to its bank and non-bank entities in part as a contingency for the potential events described above.
Citibank—Additional Potential Impacts
In addition to the above derivative triggers, Citi believes that a potential downgrade of Citibank’s senior debt/long-term rating across any of the three major rating agencies could also have an adverse impact on the commercial paper/short-term rating of Citibank. Citibank has provided liquidity commitments to consolidated asset-backed commercial paper conduits (ABCP), primarily in the form of asset purchase agreements. As of September 30, 2025, Citibank had liquidity commitments of approximately $13 billion to consolidated asset-backed commercial paper conduits (compared to $15 billion at June 30, 2025) (see Note 21).
In addition to the above-referenced liquidity resources of certain Citibank entities, Citibank could reduce the funding and liquidity risk, if any, of the potential downgrades described above through mitigating actions, including repricing certain commitments to commercial paper conduits. In the event of the potential downgrades described above, Citi believes that certain corporate customers could re-evaluate borrowing behavior through the conduits. A reduction in client borrowing would result in a reduced amount of ABCP issuance.
73
MARKET RISK
Market risk arises from both Citi’s trading and non-trading portfolios. For additional information on market risk and market risk management at Citi, see “Market Risk—Overview” and “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
MARKET RISK OF NON-TRADING PORTFOLIOS
Market risk from non-trading portfolios stems predominantly from the potential impact of changes in interest rates and foreign exchange rates on Citi’s net interest income and on Citi’s
Accumulated
other comprehensive income (loss) (AOCI)
from its investment securities portfolios. Market risk from non-trading portfolios also includes the potential impact of changes in foreign exchange rates on Citi’s capital invested in foreign currencies.
For interest rate risk purposes, Citi’s non-trading portfolios are referred to as the Banking Book, and Citi uses multiple metrics to measure its Banking Book interest rate risk, including Interest Rate Exposure (IRE). For additional information, see “Market Risk—Market Risk of Non-Trading Portfolios—Banking Book Interest Rate Risk” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
74
Interest Rate Risk of Investment Portfolios—Impact on
AOCI
Citi measures the potential impacts of changes in interest rates on the value of its
AOCI
, which can in turn impact Citi’s common equity and tangible common equity. This will impact Citi’s CET1 and other regulatory capital ratios. Citi seeks to manage its exposure to changes in the market level of interest rates, while limiting the potential impact on its
AOCI
and regulatory capital position.
AOCI
at risk is managed as part of the Company-wide interest rate risk position.
AOCI
at risk considers potential changes in
AOCI
(and the corresponding impact on the CET1 Capital ratio) relative to Citi’s capital generation capacity.
Citi uses 100 basis point (bps) shocks in each scenario to reflect its net interest income sensitivity to unanticipated changes in market interest rates, as potential monetary policy decisions and changes in economic conditions may be reflected in current market-implied forward rates.
The following table presents the 12-month estimated impact to Citi’s net interest income,
AOCI
and the CET1 Capital ratio, each assuming an unanticipated parallel instantaneous 100 bps increase in interest rates:
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
Sep. 30, 2025
Jun. 30, 2025
Sep. 30, 2024
Parallel interest rate shock +100 bps
Interest rate exposure
(1)(2)
U.S. dollar
$
(252)
$
(313)
$
(227)
All other currencies
1,529
1,578
1,388
Total net interest income
$
1,277
$
1,265
$
1,161
As a percentage of average interest-earning assets
0.05
%
0.05
%
0.05
%
Estimated initial negative impact to
AOCI
(after-tax)
(2)
$
(2,381)
$
(1,881)
$
(1,173)
Estimated initial impact on CET1 Capital ratio (bps) from
AOCI
scenario
(3)
(18)
(18)
(14)
(1)
Excludes trading book and fair value option banking book portfolios and replaces them with the associated transfer pricing.
(2)
Includes the effect of changes in interest rates on
AOCI
related to investment securities, cash flow hedges and pension plans.
(3)
Excludes the effect of changes in interest rates on
AOCI
related to cash flow hedges, as those changes are excluded from CET1 Capital.
As presented in the table above, Citi’s balance sheet is asset sensitive (assets reprice faster than liabilities), resulting in higher net interest income in increasing interest rate scenarios. The estimated impact to Citi’s net interest income in a 100 bps upward and downward rate shock scenario as of September 30, 2025 increased year-over-year, primarily driven by higher customer deposits. At progressively higher interest rate levels, the marginal net interest income benefit is lower, as Citi assumes it will pass on a larger share of rate changes to depositors (i.e., higher betas), reducing Citi’s IRE sensitivity.
Further, at current rate levels Citi also assumes it will be unable to pass on a larger share of initial rate declines to depositors, increasing Citi’s IRE sensitivity to a 100 bps downward shock. Currency-specific interest rate changes and balance sheet factors may drive quarter-to-quarter volatility in Citi’s estimated IRE for a 100 bps upward rate shock.
In a 100 bps upward rate shock scenario, Citi expects that the approximate $2.4 billion initial negative impact to
AOCI
could potentially be offset in shareholders’ equity through the forecasted interest income and paydowns from Citi’s investment portfolio over a period of approximately 13 months.
75
Scenario Analysis
The following table presents the estimated impact to Citi’s net interest income and
AOCI
under eight different interest rate scenarios for the U.S. dollar and all other currencies as of September 30, 2025. The 100 bps and 200 bps downward rate scenarios potentially may be impacted by the low level of interest rates in several countries and the assumption that market interest rates, as well as rates paid to depositors and charged to borrowers, do not fall below zero (i.e., the “flooring assumption”). The interest rate scenarios are also impacted by convexity related to mortgage products and deposit pricing.
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
Scenario 1
Scenario 2
Scenario 3
Scenario 4
Scenario 5
Scenario 6
Scenario 7
Scenario 8
Overnight rate change (bps)
100
100
—
—
(100)
(100)
200
(200)
10-year rate change (bps)
100
—
100
(100)
—
(100)
200
(200)
Interest rate exposure
U.S. dollar
$
(252)
$
(327)
$
127
$
(96)
$
(131)
$
(310)
$
(701)
$
(310)
All other currencies
(1)
1,529
1,300
227
(214)
(1,138)
(1,338)
3,036
(2,598)
Total
$
1,277
$
973
$
354
$
(310)
$
(1,269)
$
(1,648)
$
2,335
$
(2,908)
Estimated initial impact to
AOCI
(after-tax)
(2)
$
(2,381)
$
(1,902)
$
(532)
$
142
$
1,925
$
2,078
$
(4,913)
$
3,650
Note: Each scenario assumes that the rate change will occur instantaneously. Changes in interest rates for maturities between the overnight rate and the 10-year rate are interpolated. The interest rate exposure in the table above assumes no change in deposit size or mix from the baseline forecast included in the different interest rate scenarios presented. As a result, in higher interest rate scenarios, customer activity resulting in a shift from non-interest-bearing and low interest rate deposit products to higher-yielding deposits would reduce the expected benefit to net interest income. Conversely, in lower interest rate scenarios, customer activity resulting in a shift from higher-yielding deposits to non-interest-bearing and low interest rate deposit products would reduce the expected decrease to net interest income.
(1)
The Scenario 1 impact of $1,529 million consists of the following top five non-U.S. dollar currencies as of September 30, 2025 by absolute size: approximately $(0.2) billion from the euro, approximately $0.2 billion each from the Japanese yen, British pound sterling and Swiss franc and $0.1 billion from the Indian rupee. The remaining balance is spread across more than 30 additional currencies.
(2)
Includes the effect of changes in interest rates on
AOCI
related to investment securities, cash flow hedges and pension plans.
As presented in the table above, the estimated impact to Citi’s net interest income is larger in the short end compared to the long end as Citi’s Banking Book has relatively higher interest rate exposure to the short end of the yield curve. For the U.S. dollar, exposure to downward rate shocks is larger in magnitude than to upward rate shocks. This is because of the lower benefit to net interest income from Citi’s deposit base at higher rate levels, as well as the prepayment effects on mortgage loans and mortgage-backed securities.
The magnitude of the impact to
AOCI
is greater in the short end compared to the long end. This is because Citi’s investment portfolio is more sensitive to shorter-term rates and pension liabilities are more sensitive at intermediate-term maturities.
76
Changes in Foreign Exchange Rates—Impacts on
AOCI
and Capital
As of September 30, 2025, Citi estimates that a parallel instantaneous 5% appreciation of the U.S. dollar against all of the other currencies in which Citi has invested capital could reduce Citi’s tangible common equity (TCE) by approximately $1.8 billion, or 1.0%, as a result of changes to Citi’s CTA in
AOCI
, net of hedges. This reduction in the TCE would be primarily driven by depreciation of the Mexican peso, euro and Singapore dollar.
This reduction in the TCE does not reflect any mitigating actions Citi may take, including ongoing management of its foreign currency translation exposure. TCE is used as a simplified metric to manage CET1 capital ratio volatility. Specifically, as currency movements change the value of Citi’s net investments in foreign currency-denominated
capital, these movements also change the value of Citi’s RWA denominated in those same currencies. This, coupled with Citi’s foreign currency hedging strategies, such as foreign currency borrowings, foreign currency forwards and other currency hedging instruments, lessens the impact of foreign currency movements on Citi’s CET1 Capital ratio. Changes in these hedging strategies, as well as hedging costs, divestitures and tax impacts, can further affect the actual impact of changes in foreign exchange rates on Citi’s capital compared to an unanticipated parallel shock, as described above.
The effect of Citi’s ongoing management strategies with respect to quarterly changes in foreign exchange rates (versus the U.S. dollar), and the quarterly impact of these changes on Citi’s TCE and CET1 Capital ratio, are presented in the table below. See Note 19 for additional information on the changes in
AOCI
.
For the quarter ended
In millions of dollars
Sep. 30, 2025
Jun. 30, 2025
Sep. 30, 2024
Change in FX spot rate
(1)
(0.1)
%
5.2
%
2.5
%
Change in TCE due to FX translation, net of hedges
$
156
$
1,490
$
421
As a percentage of TCE
0.1
%
0.9
%
0.2
%
(1) FX spot rate change is a weighted average based on Citi’s quarterly average GAAP capital exposure to foreign countries. A negative change in FX spot rate represents foreign currency depreciation versus the U.S. dollar.
77
Interest Income/Expense and Net Interest Margin (NIM)
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
Change
In millions of dollars, except as otherwise noted
2025
2025
2024
3Q25 vs. 3Q24
Interest income
(1)
$
36,717
$
35,887
$
36,480
1
%
Interest expense
(2)
21,750
20,684
23,094
(6)
Net interest income, taxable equivalent basis
(1)
$
14,967
$
15,203
$
13,386
12
%
Interest income—average rate
(3)
5.89
%
5.93
%
6.36
%
(47)
bps
Interest expense—average rate
4.26
4.17
4.99
(73)
bps
Net interest margin
(3)(4)
2.40
2.51
2.33
7
bps
Interest rate benchmarks
Two-year U.S. Treasury note—average rate
3.72
%
3.86
%
4.04
%
(32)
bps
10-year U.S. Treasury note—average rate
4.26
4.36
3.95
31
bps
10-year vs. two-year spread
54
bps
50
bps
(9)
bps
(1)
Interest income
and
Net interest income
include the taxable equivalent gross-up adjustments (TEGU) primarily related to the tax-exempt bond portfolio and certain tax-advantaged loan programs of $27 million, $28 million and $24 million for the three months ended September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and September 30, 2024, respectively.
(2)
Interest expense associated with certain hybrid financial instruments, which are classified as
Long-term debt
and accounted for at fair value, is reported together with any changes in fair value as part of
Principal transactions
in the Consolidated Statement of Income and is therefore not reflected in
Interest expense
in the table above.
(3)
The average rate on interest income and NIM reflects TEGU. See footnote 1 above.
(4)
Citi’s NIM is calculated by dividing net interest income (including TEGU) by average interest-earning assets.
78
Non-
Markets
Net Interest Income
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
Change
In millions of dollars
2025
2025
2024
3Q25 vs. 3Q24
Total Citi net interest income—taxable equivalent basis
(1)
per above
$
14,967
$
15,203
$
13,386
12
%
Less:
Markets
net interest income—taxable equivalent basis
(1)
2,278
2,930
1,429
59
Total Citi non-
Markets
net interest income—taxable equivalent basis
(1)
$
12,689
$
12,273
$
11,957
6
%
(1)
Interest income
and
Net interest income
include TEGU discussed in the table above.
Citi’s net interest income in the third quarter of 2025 was
$15.0 billion, on both a reported and taxable equivalent basis, an increase of 12%, or $1.6 billion, from the prior-year period. The increase was primarily driven by a 59%, or $0.8 billion, increase in
Markets
net interest income and a 6%, or $0.7 billion, increase in non
-Markets
net interest income.
Citi’s
Markets
business is primarily evaluated on a total-revenue basis. See
Markets
above for additional information.
The increase in non-
Markets
net interest income was largely due to the following:
•
higher loan spreads and interest-earning balance growth in Branded Cards in
USPB
•
higher deposit spreads and deposit growth in Retail Banking in
USPB
•
higher deposit balances in
Services
•
higher deposit spreads in
Services
and
Wealth
◦
largely offset by lower net interest income in
All Other
, driven by Corporate/Other, due to actions taken over the last few quarters to reduce Citi’s asset sensitivity in a declining interest rate environment
Citi’s net interest margin was 2.40% on a taxable equivalent basis in the third quarter of 2025, a decrease from 2.51% in the prior quarter, largely driven by lower
Markets
net interest income, asset mix and pricing, partially offset by a benefit from rates.
79
Additional Interest Rate Details
Average Balances and Interest Rates—Assets
(1)(2)(3)
Taxable Equivalent Basis
Quarterly—Assets
Average balance
Interest income
% Average rate
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
In millions of dollars, except rates
2025
2025
2024
2025
2025
2024
2025
2025
2024
Deposits with banks
(4)
$
332,245
$
298,158
$
266,300
$
3,435
$
3,043
$
3,050
4.10
%
4.09
%
4.56
%
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
(5)
In U.S. offices
$
176,255
$
195,488
$
145,422
$
4,188
$
3,751
$
3,366
9.43
%
7.70
%
9.21
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
181,549
179,717
190,179
2,815
2,870
3,927
6.15
6.41
8.21
Total
$
357,804
$
375,205
$
335,601
$
7,003
$
6,621
$
7,293
7.77
%
7.08
%
8.65
%
Trading account assets
(6)(7)
In U.S. offices
$
287,515
$
287,610
$
244,176
$
3,031
$
3,105
$
2,831
4.18
%
4.33
%
4.61
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
235,819
219,267
172,460
2,258
2,716
1,620
3.80
4.97
3.74
Total
$
523,334
$
506,877
$
416,636
$
5,289
$
5,821
$
4,451
4.01
%
4.61
%
4.25
%
Investments
In U.S. offices
Taxable
$
235,659
$
242,238
$
304,581
$
1,542
$
1,581
$
1,940
2.60
%
2.62
%
2.53
%
Exempt from U.S. income tax
10,587
10,682
11,171
99
107
126
3.71
4.02
4.49
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
203,443
196,932
184,255
2,536
2,527
2,624
4.95
5.15
5.67
Total
$
449,689
$
449,852
$
500,007
$
4,177
$
4,215
$
4,690
3.69
%
3.76
%
3.73
%
Consumer loans
(8)
In U.S. offices
$
318,585
$
314,545
$
311,306
$
8,493
$
8,185
$
8,344
10.58
%
10.44
%
10.66
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
77,748
75,804
74,849
1,657
1,586
1,707
8.46
8.39
9.07
Total
$
396,333
$
390,349
$
386,155
$
10,150
$
9,771
$
10,051
10.16
%
10.04
%
10.35
%
Corporate loans
(8)
In U.S. offices
$
157,865
$
150,979
$
136,852
$
2,319
$
2,207
$
2,320
5.83
%
5.86
%
6.74
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
170,821
170,848
163,505
2,944
3,005
3,451
6.84
7.05
8.40
Total
$
328,686
$
321,827
$
300,357
$
5,263
$
5,212
$
5,771
6.35
%
6.50
%
7.64
%
Total loans
(8)
In U.S. offices
$
476,450
$
465,524
$
448,158
$
10,812
$
10,392
$
10,664
9.00
%
8.95
%
9.47
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
248,569
246,652
238,354
4,601
4,591
5,158
7.34
7.47
8.61
Total
$
725,019
$
712,176
$
686,512
$
15,413
$
14,983
$
15,822
8.43
%
8.44
%
9.17
%
Other interest-earning assets
(9)
$
83,974
$
83,064
$
77,060
$
1,400
$
1,204
$
1,174
6.61
%
5.81
%
6.06
%
Total interest-earning assets
$
2,472,065
$
2,425,332
$
2,282,116
$
36,717
$
35,887
$
36,480
5.89
%
5.93
%
6.36
%
Non-interest-earning assets
(6)
$
216,735
$
222,473
$
209,964
Total assets
$
2,688,800
$
2,647,805
$
2,492,080
80
Nine Months—Assets
Average balance
Interest income
% Average rate
Nine Months
Nine Months
Nine Months
Nine Months
Nine Months
Nine Months
In millions of dollars, except rates
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Deposits with banks
(4)
$
303,656
$
256,298
$
9,479
$
8,407
4.17
%
4.38
%
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
(5)
In U.S. offices
$
191,926
$
145,744
$
11,531
$
9,739
8.03
%
8.93
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
173,124
204,679
8,384
12,587
6.47
8.21
Total
$
365,050
$
350,423
$
19,915
$
22,326
7.29
%
8.51
%
Trading account assets
(6)(7)
In U.S. offices
$
276,732
$
230,632
$
8,855
$
8,260
4.28
%
4.78
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
212,464
161,021
6,625
4,822
4.17
4.00
Total
$
489,196
$
391,653
$
15,480
$
13,082
4.23
%
4.46
%
Investments
In U.S. offices
Taxable
$
245,849
$
312,685
$
4,769
$
6,162
2.59
%
2.63
%
Exempt from U.S. income tax
10,678
11,217
310
341
3.88
4.06
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
196,438
184,988
7,488
7,871
5.10
5.68
Total
$
452,965
$
508,890
$
12,567
$
14,374
3.71
%
3.77
%
Consumer loans
(8)
In U.S. offices
$
315,512
$
308,135
$
24,876
$
24,392
10.54
%
10.57
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
75,612
75,587
4,803
5,237
8.49
9.25
Total
$
391,124
$
383,722
$
29,679
$
29,629
10.15
%
10.31
%
Corporate loans
(8)
In U.S. offices
$
150,268
$
136,659
$
6,594
$
6,736
5.87
%
6.58
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
167,919
161,248
8,866
10,512
7.06
8.71
Total
$
318,187
$
297,907
$
15,460
$
17,248
6.50
%
7.73
%
Total loans
(8)
In U.S. offices
$
465,780
$
444,794
$
31,470
$
31,128
9.03
%
9.35
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(4)
243,531
236,835
13,669
15,749
7.50
8.88
Total
$
709,311
$
681,629
$
45,139
$
46,877
8.51
%
9.19
%
Other interest-earning assets
(9)
$
81,007
$
74,182
$
3,716
$
3,669
6.13
%
6.61
%
Total interest-earning assets
$
2,401,185
$
2,263,075
$
106,296
$
108,735
5.92
%
6.42
%
Non-interest-earning assets
(6)
$
216,730
$
203,227
Total assets
$
2,617,915
$
2,466,302
(1)
Interest income
and
Net interest income
include TEGU of $27 million, $28 million and $24 million for the three months ended September 30, 2025, June 30, 2025 and September 30, 2024, and $81 million and $69 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
(2)
Interest rates and amounts include the effects of risk management activities associated with the respective asset categories.
(3)
Monthly or quarterly averages have been used by certain subsidiaries where daily averages are unavailable.
(4)
Average rates reflect prevailing local interest rates, including inflationary effects and monetary corrections in certain countries.
(5)
Average volumes of securities borrowed or purchased under agreements to resell are reported net pursuant to ASC 210-20-45. However,
Interest income
excludes the impact of ASC 210-20-45.
(6)
The fair value carrying amounts of derivative contracts are reported net, pursuant to ASC 815-10-45, in
Non-interest-earning assets
and
Other non-interest-bearing liabilities
.
(7)
Interest expense
on
Trading account liabilities
of
Services
,
Markets
and
Banking
is reported as a reduction of
Interest income
.
Interest income
and
Interest expense
on cash collateral positions are reported in interest on
Trading account assets
and
Trading account liabilities
, respectively.
(8)
Net of unearned income. Includes cash-basis loans.
(9)
Includes
Brokerage receivables.
81
Average Balances and Interest Rates—Liabilities and Equity, and Net Interest Income
(1)(2)(3)
Taxable Equivalent Basis
Quarterly—Liabilities
Average balance
Interest expense
% Average rate
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
2nd Qtr.
3rd Qtr.
In millions of dollars, except rates
2025
2025
2024
2025
2025
2024
2025
2025
2024
Deposits
In U.S. offices
(4)
$
596,319
$
567,842
$
558,464
$
5,210
$
4,861
$
5,804
3.47
%
3.43
%
4.13
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
584,048
571,154
550,603
3,953
3,824
4,515
2.69
2.69
3.26
Total
$
1,180,367
$
1,138,996
$
1,109,067
$
9,163
$
8,685
$
10,319
3.08
%
3.06
%
3.70
%
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
(6)
In U.S. offices
$
276,375
$
308,568
$
256,482
$
5,315
$
4,975
$
4,848
7.63
%
6.47
%
7.52
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
125,446
112,630
81,977
2,041
1,963
2,480
6.45
6.99
12.04
Total
$
401,821
$
421,198
$
338,459
$
7,356
$
6,938
$
7,328
7.26
%
6.61
%
8.61
%
Trading account liabilities
(7)(8)
In U.S. offices
$
43,431
$
37,488
$
37,309
$
421
$
437
$
445
3.85
%
4.68
%
4.75
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
64,384
66,660
59,139
334
311
347
2.06
1.87
2.33
Total
$
107,815
$
104,148
$
96,448
$
755
$
748
$
792
2.78
%
2.88
%
3.27
%
Short-term borrowings and other interest-bearing liabilities
(9)
In U.S. offices
$
95,540
$
95,789
$
84,704
$
1,691
$
1,508
$
1,715
7.02
%
6.31
%
8.05
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
51,635
44,782
37,551
242
292
294
1.86
2.62
3.11
Total
$
147,175
$
140,571
$
122,255
$
1,933
$
1,800
$
2,009
5.21
%
5.14
%
6.54
%
Long-term debt
(10)
In U.S. offices
$
185,657
$
181,070
$
173,548
$
2,537
$
2,483
$
2,604
5.42
%
5.50
%
5.97
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
1,683
1,733
2,142
6
30
42
1.41
6.94
7.80
Total
$
187,340
$
182,803
$
175,690
$
2,543
$
2,513
$
2,646
5.39
%
5.51
%
5.99
%
Total interest-bearing liabilities
$
2,024,518
$
1,987,716
$
1,841,919
$
21,750
$
20,684
$
23,094
4.26
%
4.17
%
4.99
%
Non-interest-bearing deposits
(11)
$
201,830
$
203,780
$
201,995
Other non-interest-bearing liabilities
(7)
247,768
242,966
238,781
Total liabilities
$
2,474,116
$
2,434,462
$
2,282,695
Citigroup stockholders’ equity
$
213,846
$
212,472
$
208,606
Noncontrolling interests
838
871
779
Total equity
$
214,684
$
213,343
$
209,385
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity
$
2,688,800
$
2,647,805
$
2,492,080
Net interest income as a percentage of average interest-earning assets
(12)
In U.S. offices
$
1,423,380
$
1,395,504
$
1,312,747
$
7,736
$
7,248
$
5,957
2.16
%
2.08
%
1.81
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(6)
1,048,685
1,029,828
969,369
7,231
7,955
7,429
2.74
3.10
3.05
Total
$
2,472,065
$
2,425,332
$
2,282,116
$
14,967
$
15,203
$
13,386
2.40
%
2.51
%
2.33
%
82
Nine Months—Liabilities
Average balance
Interest expense
% Average rate
Nine Months
Nine Months
Nine Months
Nine Months
Nine Months
Nine Months
In millions of dollars, except rates
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Deposits
In U.S. offices
(4)
$
574,923
$
570,831
$
14,763
$
17,452
3.43
%
4.08
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
566,121
545,835
11,523
13,513
2.72
3.31
Total
$
1,141,044
$
1,116,666
$
26,286
$
30,965
3.08
%
3.70
%
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
(6)
In U.S. offices
$
289,373
$
238,392
$
14,708
$
13,507
6.80
%
7.57
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
109,031
90,063
5,842
7,749
7.16
11.49
Total
$
398,404
$
328,455
$
20,550
$
21,256
6.90
%
8.64
%
Trading account liabilities
(7)(8)
In U.S. offices
$
38,429
$
39,821
$
1,249
$
1,317
4.35
%
4.42
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
62,615
61,402
1,011
1,100
2.16
2.39
Total
$
101,044
$
101,223
$
2,260
$
2,417
2.99
%
3.19
%
Short-term borrowings and other interest-bearing liabilities
(9)
In U.S. offices
$
94,506
$
79,155
$
4,670
$
5,043
6.61
%
8.51
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
44,961
33,556
789
830
2.35
3.30
Total
$
139,467
$
112,711
$
5,459
$
5,873
5.23
%
6.96
%
Long-term debt
(10)
In U.S. offices
$
180,023
$
168,906
$
7,460
$
7,651
5.54
%
6.05
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(5)
1,698
2,376
73
142
5.75
7.98
Total
$
181,721
$
171,282
$
7,533
$
7,793
5.54
%
6.08
%
Total interest-bearing liabilities
$
1,961,680
$
1,830,337
$
62,088
$
68,304
4.23
%
4.98
%
Non-interest-bearing deposits
(11)
$
202,267
$
199,134
Other non-interest-bearing liabilities
(7)
241,178
229,104
Total liabilities
$
2,405,125
$
2,258,575
Citigroup stockholders’ equity
$
211,946
$
206,939
Noncontrolling interests
844
788
Total equity
$
212,790
$
207,727
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity
$
2,617,915
$
2,466,302
Net interest income as a percentage of average interest-earning assets
(11)
In U.S. offices
$
1,396,448
$
1,295,198
$
22,269
$
17,709
2.13
%
1.83
%
In offices outside the U.S.
(6)
1,004,737
967,877
21,939
22,722
2.92
3.14
Total
$
2,401,185
$
2,263,075
$
44,208
$
40,431
2.46
%
2.39
%
(1)
Interest income
and
Net interest income
include TEGU discussed in the table above.
(2)
Interest rates and amounts include the effects of risk management activities associated with the respective liability categories.
(3)
Monthly or quarterly averages have been used by certain subsidiaries where daily averages are unavailable.
(4)
Consists of other time deposits and savings deposits. Savings deposits are composed of insured money market accounts and other savings deposits.
(5)
Average rates reflect prevailing local interest rates, including inflationary effects and monetary corrections in certain countries.
(6)
Average volumes of securities sold under agreements to repurchase are reported net pursuant to ASC 210-20-45. However,
Interest expense
excludes the impact of ASC 210-20-45.
(7)
The fair value carrying amounts of derivative contracts are reported net, pursuant to ASC 815-10-45, in
Non-interest-earning assets
and
Other non-interest-bearing liabilities
.
(8)
Interest expense
on
Trading account liabilities
of
Services
,
Markets
and
Banking
is reported as a reduction of
Interest income
.
Interest income
and
Interest expense
on cash collateral positions are reported in interest on
Trading account assets
and
Trading account liabilities
, respectively.
(9)
Includes
Brokerage payables
.
(10)
Excludes hybrid financial instruments and beneficial interests in consolidated VIEs that are classified as
Long-term debt
, as the changes in fair value for these obligations are recorded in
Principal transactions
.
(11)
Includes non-interest-bearing deposits in both the U.S. and outside of the U.S.
(12)
Includes allocations for capital and funding costs based on the location of the asset.
83
MARKET RISK OF TRADING PORTFOLIOS
Value at Risk (VaR)
Citi believes its VaR model is conservatively calibrated to incorporate fat-tail scaling and the greater of short-term (approximately the most recent month) and long-term (18 months for commodities and three years for others) market volatility. As of September 30, 2025, Citi estimates that the conservative features of the VaR calibration contribute an approximate 15% add-on to what would be a VaR estimated under the assumption of normally distributed markets. As of June 30, 2025, the add-on was 21%.
As presented in the table below, Citi’s average trading VaR for the third quarter of 2025 decreased slightly from the second quarter of 2025, with VaR changes across asset classes from inventory changes and volatility updates.
Total Citi—Quarter-end and Average Trading VaR and Trading and Credit Portfolio VaR
Third Quarter
Second Quarter
Third Quarter
In millions of dollars
September 30, 2025
2025 Average
June 30, 2025
2025 Average
September 30, 2024
2024 Average
Interest rate
$
100
$
104
$
102
$
93
$
75
$
80
Credit spread
75
80
87
77
77
66
Covariance adjustment
(1)
(58)
(66)
(66)
(61)
(44)
(49)
Fully diversified interest rate and credit spread
(2)
$
117
$
118
$
123
$
109
$
108
$
97
Foreign exchange
46
44
50
67
48
44
Equity
20
21
27
30
45
39
Commodity
36
42
39
32
22
25
Covariance adjustment
(1)
(109)
(106)
(116)
(115)
(115)
(96)
Total trading VaR—all market risk factors, including general and specific risk (excluding credit portfolios)
(2)
$
110
$
119
$
123
$
123
$
108
$
109
Specific risk-only component
(3)
$
—
$
(2)
$
5
$
1
$
(2)
$
(6)
Total trading VaR—general market risk factors only (excluding credit portfolios)
$
110
$
121
$
118
$
122
$
110
$
115
Incremental impact of the credit portfolio
(4)
$
3
$
9
$
5
$
7
$
9
$
10
Total trading and credit portfolio VaR
$
113
$
128
$
128
$
130
$
117
$
119
(1) Covariance adjustment (also known as diversification benefit) equals the difference between the total VaR and the sum of the VaRs tied to each risk type. The benefit reflects the fact that the risks within individual and across risk types are not perfectly correlated and, consequently, the total VaR on a given day will be lower than the sum of the VaRs relating to each risk type. The determination of the primary drivers of changes to the covariance adjustment is made by an examination of the impact of both model parameter and position changes.
(2) The total trading VaR includes mark-to-market and certain fair value option trading positions with the exception of hedges of the loan portfolio, fair value option loans and all CVA exposures. Available-for-sale and accrual exposures are not included.
(3) The specific risk-only component represents the level of equity and fixed income issuer-specific risk embedded in VaR.
(4) The credit portfolio is composed of mark-to-market positions associated with non-trading business units, with the CVA relating to derivative counterparties, all associated CVA hedges and market sensitivity FVA hedges. FVA and DVA are not included. The credit portfolio also includes hedges of the loan portfolio, fair value option loans and hedges of the leveraged finance pipeline within capital markets origination.
The table below provides the range of market factor VaRs associated with total Citi trading VaR, inclusive of specific risk:
Third Quarter
Second Quarter
Third Quarter
2025
2025
2024
In millions of dollars
Low
High
Low
High
Low
High
Interest rate
$
93
$
113
$
81
$
118
$
62
$
107
Credit spread
74
94
61
87
60
77
Fully diversified interest rate and credit spread
$
109
$
133
$
94
$
131
$
77
$
118
Foreign exchange
34
54
36
94
31
55
Equity
13
36
19
51
26
46
Commodity
36
79
24
44
17
31
Total trading
$
110
$
137
$
109
$
141
$
82
$
137
Total trading and credit portfolio
113
147
114
152
91
144
Note: No covariance adjustment can be inferred from the above table as the high and low for each market factor will be from different close-of-business dates.
84
The following table provides the VaR only for
Markets
, excluding the CVA relating to derivative counterparties, hedges of CVA, fair value option loans and hedges of the loan portfolio:
Markets VaR
In millions of dollars
September 30, 2025
Total—all market risk factors, including
general and specific risk
Average—during quarter
$
117
High—during quarter
133
Low—during quarter
107
Regulatory VaR Back-Testing
In accordance with Basel III, Citi is required to perform back-testing to evaluate the effectiveness of its Regulatory VaR model. For additional information regarding Citi’s Regulatory VaR back-testing, see “Managing Global Risk—Market Risk of Trading Portfolios—Regulatory VaR Back-Testing” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
As of September 30, 2025, there were no back-testing exceptions observed for Citi’s Regulatory VaR in the last 12 months.
OTHER RISKS
For additional information regarding other risks, including Citi’s management of other risks, see “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Country Risk
Country risk is defined as the exposure to potential loss caused by economic, financial or sociopolitical conditions or weaknesses in legal systems in a country or jurisdiction that Citi may be exposed to through its business activities. Country risk may impair the value of Citi’s franchise within a country or jurisdiction or adversely affect Citi’s ability to enforce the obligations of its obligors. Citi is exposed to country risk through its business activities such as lending, payments, investing and market-making activities, whether cross-border or locally funded, and including activity with corporations, governments and institutions in a country or jurisdiction.
Citi manages country risk through a comprehensive risk framework supported by governance committees and councils that oversee country risk exposures, including but not limited to relevant limits, concentrations, metrics and frameworks, stress testing, significant country developments and risk mitigation actions. This is supported by tools and processes designed to facilitate the objective, consistent and ongoing assessments of individual countries and jurisdictions and the risks that may arise from Citi’s business activities within them.
85
Top 25 Country Exposures
The following table presents Citi’s top 25 exposures by country (excluding the U.S.) as of September 30, 2025. (Citi’s combined top 25 exposures by country and the U.S. represent 94% of Citi’s exposure to all countries as of September 30, 2025.)
Citi’s top 25 exposures by country may fluctuate from period to period due to a variety of factors, including client activity, market flows, FX fluctuations and liquidity management activities undertaken by Citi’s businesses.
For purposes of the table, amounts are reflected based on the country of risk of the obligor.
The country of risk will generally be the same as the country of incorporation of the obligor, except in certain situations, such as where the source of repayment is concentrated in a different country or jurisdiction or where the obligor is guaranteed by a parent entity incorporated in a different country or jurisdiction (e.g., a Swiss-incorporated subsidiary that is guaranteed by a Chinese-incorporated parent would be reflected as China risk).
Investment securities and trading account assets are generally categorized based on the domicile of the issuer of the security of the underlying reference entity.
In billions of dollars
Services, Markets, Banking and Wealth loans
Legacy Franchises loans
Other funded
(1)
Unfunded
(2)
Net MTM on derivatives/repos
(3)
Total hedges (on loans and CVA)
Investment securities
(4)
Trading account assets
(5)
Total
as of
3Q25
Total
as of
4Q24
Total
as a %
of Citi
as of
3Q25
Mexico
$
11.1
$
28.5
$
0.4
$
10.8
$
6.1
$
(1.7)
$
21.5
$
1.8
$
78.5
$
69.4
4.2
%
United Kingdom
24.5
—
1.1
27.3
14.5
(4.5)
8.1
6.9
77.9
75.6
4.2
Singapore
21.3
—
0.2
5.2
1.2
(0.6)
8.9
0.7
36.9
34.4
2.0
Hong Kong
22.0
—
0.1
2.2
1.1
(0.6)
12.0
(0.2)
36.6
36.2
2.0
India
11.4
—
0.4
4.1
1.2
(0.3)
9.6
3.6
30.0
27.7
1.6
Brazil
13.4
—
0.1
2.4
5.3
(0.7)
6.1
2.2
28.8
25.9
1.6
South Korea
9.2
2.7
—
1.7
1.1
(0.5)
6.2
3.9
24.3
22.7
1.3
Canada
5.2
—
0.1
7.1
3.1
(1.4)
3.4
5.8
23.3
21.1
1.3
Luxembourg
9.4
—
—
7.2
2.0
(0.5)
4.6
0.4
23.1
16.0
1.2
Japan
2.1
—
0.1
3.3
4.0
(1.1)
6.7
6.6
21.7
12.2
1.2
Germany
3.8
—
—
14.6
7.6
(4.3)
6.4
(7.6)
20.5
19.9
1.1
France
3.0
—
0.1
12.6
4.2
(5.0)
2.3
2.8
20.0
26.1
1.1
Netherlands
5.9
0.1
—
12.4
2.1
(1.7)
1.9
(0.8)
19.9
15.0
1.1
Poland
4.3
1.7
—
3.3
0.3
(0.1)
7.8
2.5
19.8
16.4
1.1
Australia
8.3
—
—
6.1
1.9
(1.1)
1.0
2.8
19.0
16.7
1.0
China
6.3
—
0.4
1.9
0.5
(0.7)
10.9
(1.2)
18.1
19.0
1.0
Ireland
7.4
—
—
6.6
1.9
(0.6)
—
0.7
16.0
9.9
0.9
United Arab Emirates
7.2
—
0.1
2.1
0.1
(0.3)
5.9
—
15.1
14.1
0.8
Switzerland
3.8
—
0.2
7.1
2.5
(1.7)
—
(1.7)
10.2
9.5
0.6
Cayman Islands
3.3
—
0.1
4.0
1.8
(0.1)
—
0.5
9.6
7.3
0.5
Spain
3.2
—
—
3.3
0.4
(1.2)
—
2.5
8.2
6.2
0.4
Belgium
0.4
0.1
—
1.7
0.1
(0.4)
6.1
0.1
8.1
5.5
0.4
Czech Republic
0.8
—
—
0.6
4.5
—
1.4
0.1
7.4
4.6
0.4
Virgin Islands (British)
5.4
—
—
0.2
0.8
—
—
—
6.4
3.6
0.3
Italy
1.8
—
0.1
3.1
0.4
(1.1)
—
1.9
6.2
2.6
0.3
Total as a % of Citi’s total exposure
31.6
%
Total as a % of Citi’s non-U.S. total exposure
84.2
%
(1) Other funded includes other direct exposures such as loans HFS, other loans in Corporate/Other and investments accounted for under the equity method.
(2) Unfunded commitments include unfunded corporate lending commitments, letters of credit and other contingencies, including clearing house guarantee funds.
(3) Net counterparty exposure includes mark-to-market (MTM) exposures on OTC derivatives, carrying amounts of securities lending/borrowing transactions (repos) and margin loan balances. This exposure is also net of collateral and inclusive of CVA.
(4) Investment securities include debt securities AFS, recorded at fair market value, and debt securities HTM, recorded at amortized cost.
(5) Trading account assets are represented on a net basis and include issuer risk on both long and short debt and equity securities and derivative exposure.
86
Russia
Overview
Citi previously ended nearly all of the institutional banking services it offered in Russia and ceased soliciting any new business or new clients in the country, with the remaining services only those necessary to fulfill its remaining legal and regulatory obligations, as well as support its employees.
During the second quarter of 2025, Citi completed the wind-down of its
All Other
—Legacy Franchises consumer loan portfolio in Russia (reported as part of Asia Consumer). For additional information, see “Citi’s Wind-Down of Its Russia Operations” below.
Citi’s remaining operations are primarily conducted through
Services
and relate to custody services
.
Citi continues to monitor the war in Ukraine, related sanctions and economic conditions and continues to mitigate its Russia exposures and risks as appropriate.
For additional information about Citi’s risks related to its Russia exposures, see “Risk Factors—Market-Related Risks,” “—Operational Risks” and “—Other Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Impact of the Russia–Ukraine War on Citi’s Businesses
Russia-related Balance Sheet Exposures
Citi’s remaining domestic operations in Russia are conducted through a subsidiary of Citibank, AO Citibank, which uses the Russian ruble as its functional currency.
The following table summarizes Citi’s and its clients’ Russia-related exposures, excluding associated reserves:
In billions of U.S. dollars
September 30, 2025
June 30, 2025
September 30, 2024
Change 3Q25 vs. 2Q25
Investment securities
(1)
$
—
$
0.1
$
0.2
$
(0.1)
Cash on deposit and placements
(2)
1.7
1.7
1.4
—
Additional exposures to Russian counterparties that are not held by
the Russian subsidiary
0.1
0.1
0.1
—
Total Citi exposure
$
1.8
$
1.9
$
1.7
$
(0.1)
Deposit Insurance Agency (DIA)
(3)
$
11.7
$
10.5
$
5.8
$
1.2
Cash on deposit and placements
(2)
—
—
1.6
—
Total clients’ exposure
(4)
$
11.7
$
10.5
$
7.4
$
1.2
Total Citi and clients’ Russia-related exposure
(5)
$
13.5
$
12.4
$
9.1
$
1.1
(1) Investment securities include debt securities AFS, recorded at fair market value, primarily local government debt securities.
(2) Cash on deposit and placements are primarily with the Central Bank of Russia. Due to sanctions restrictions, as well as Citi being unable to enter into reverse repos beginning in the third quarter of 2024, any excess liquidity is placed with the Central Bank of Russia.
(3) Represents dividends relating to Russian securities held by Citi in its role as custodian for clients in Russia, which Citi is required by local regulation to hold at the DIA. Citi is unable to remit these funds, which are held at clients’ risk, to these clients due to restrictions imposed by the Russian government.
(4) Clients’ exposure of $11.7 billion as of September 30, 2025 consists of corporate dividends that Citi cannot remit to its clients due to restrictions imposed by the Russian government and are held with the DIA.
(5) Citigroup’s CTA loss of $1.6 billion as of September 30, 2025 included in its
AOCI
related to its indirect subsidiary, AO Citibank, and $1.3 billion of intercompany liabilities owed by AO Citibank to other Citi entities outside Russia are excluded from the above table. Citi has separately described these amounts in “Deconsolidation Risk” below.
During the third quarter of 2025, Citi’s Russia-related exposures slightly decreased $0.1 billion to $1.8 billion. Total clients’ exposures increased $1.2 billion to $11.7 billion, driven by corporate dividends received during the quarter, partially offset by depreciation of the Russian ruble.
Citi’s negative net investment was approximately $(0.2) billion as of September 30, 2025 (largely unchanged from June 30, 2025). Citi continued to be fully reserved for its net investment in Russia. The net investment became negative during the second quarter of 2025, due to an ACL build related to transfer risk associated with Russia.
In the normal course of business, Citi may hedge its Russian ruble/U.S. dollar spot FX exposure in
AOCI
through the purchase of FX derivatives. The ongoing mark-to-market of the hedging derivatives, when utilized, is also reported in
AOCI
. When the Russian ruble depreciates against the U.S. dollar, the U.S. dollar equivalent value of Citi’s investment in AO Citibank also declines. This change in value is offset by the change in value of the hedging instrument (FX derivative). Going forward, Citi may record devaluations on its net ruble-denominated assets in earnings, without the benefit from a change in the fair value of derivative positions used to economically hedge the exposures.
87
As of September 30, 2025, Citi’s ACL was less than $0.1 billion of remaining credit reserves for Citi’s direct Russian counterparties (largely unchanged from June 30, 2025). This ACL balance for Citi’s direct Russian counterparties does not include reserves for transfer risk associated with Russia, which are included in the ACL on
Other assets
. For additional information on these reserves, see “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates” below.
Citi’s Wind-Down of Its Russia Operations
In connection with Citi’s wind-down of its Russia operations, Citi has incurred approximately $85 million to date in charges, largely from restructuring, vendor termination fees and other related charges. Citi expects to incur additional estimated charges of approximately $15 million (in
All Other
,
excluding the impact from any portfolio sales). For additional information about Citi’s continued efforts to reduce its operations and exposure in Russia, see “Risk Factors” and “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Russia” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Deconsolidation Risk
Citi’s remaining operations in Russia subject it to various risks, including, among others, foreign currency volatility, including appreciation or devaluation; restrictions arising from retaliatory Russian laws and regulations on the conduct of its business; sanctions or asset freezes; or other deconsolidation events (see “Risk Factors—Other Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K).
As of September 30, 2025, Citi continued to consolidate AO Citibank because none of the deconsolidation factors were triggered. Examples of factors that may result in deconsolidation of AO Citibank include voluntary or forced sale of ownership or loss of control due to actions of relevant governmental authorities, including expropriation (i.e., the entity becomes subject to the complete control of a government, court, administrator, trustee or regulator); revocation of banking license; and loss of ability to elect a board of directors or appoint members of senior management.
In the event Citi deems there is a loss of control of AO Citibank (for example, through expropriation), Citi anticipates that it would be required to:
•
recognize a CTA loss of approximately $1.6 billion (unchanged from June 30, 2025) through earnings, which would be largely regulatory capital neutral, since the reversal of the CTA loss out of
AOCI
would improve Citi’s total
AOCI
;
•
recognize a loss of $1.3 billion (unchanged from June 30, 2025) on intercompany liabilities owed by AO Citibank to other Citi entities outside Russia. This loss may be substantially or fully offset by Citi exercising its rights to consider certain related client liabilities as extinguished by such an event; and
•
write off its fully reserved net investment, resulting in a recovery of $0.2 billion.
In the sole event of a substantial liquidation of AO Citibank, as opposed to a loss of control, Citi would be required to recognize through earnings a loss limited to the CTA loss of approximately $1.6 billion, which would be largely regulatory capital neutral since the reversal of the CTA loss out of
AOCI
would improve Citi’s total
AOCI
. Citi would also evaluate its remaining net investment as circumstances evolve.
For additional information, see “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Russia—Citi as Paying Agent for Russia-related Clients,” “—Reputational Risks” and “—Board of Directors’ Role in Overseeing Related Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Ukraine
Citi has continued to operate in Ukraine throughout the war through its
Services
,
Markets
and
Banking
businesses, serving the local subsidiaries of multinationals, along with local financial institutions and the public sector. Citi employs approximately 215 people in Ukraine and their safety is Citi’s top priority. All of Citi’s domestic operations in Ukraine are conducted through a subsidiary of Citibank, which uses the Ukrainian hryvnia as its functional currency. As of September 30, 2025, Citi had $1.7 billion of direct exposures related to Ukraine (compared to $1.6 billion at June 30, 2025).
88
Argentina
Citi operates in Argentina through its
Services
,
Markets
and
Banking
businesses. As of September 30, 2025, Citi’s net investment in its Argentine operations, inclusive of associated reserves, was approximately $1.4 billion (compared to $1.5 billion at June 30, 2025). Citi uses Argentina’s official market exchange rate to remeasure its net Argentine peso (ARS)–denominated assets into U.S. dollars (USD), with the impact of exchange rate fluctuations recorded directly in earnings. As of September 30, 2025, the official ARS exchange rate was 1,380, which devalued by 14.5% against the USD during the third quarter of 2025.
The Central Bank of Argentina (BCRA) has generally maintained certain capital and currency controls that have broadly restricted Citi’s ability to access USD in Argentina and remit earnings from its Argentine operations.
As previously disclosed, during the second quarter of 2025, Citi subscribed to approximately $340 million of par value of the latest series of certain USD-denominated bonds (BOPREALs) issued by the BCRA, which provide a mechanism for Argentine companies to pay dividends by selling the bonds and remitting the proceeds. During the third quarter of 2025, Citi remitted proceeds of approximately $80 million from its Argentine operations, and Citi intends to sell additional BOPREALs and remit the proceeds going forward, thereby reducing its net investment in the country. The timing and amount of any further remittances will depend on the liquidity and sales price of the BOPREALs.
Of the $1.4 billion net investment in Argentina as of September 30, 2025, Citi’s net ARS exposure (net of the associated reserves) was approximately $0.8 billion (compared to $1.0 billion at June 30, 2025). As of September 30, 2025, Citi hedged approximately $0.3 billion of its ARS exposure through offshore hedges and was unable to hedge its remaining exposure, due to illiquidity in the offshore derivatives market. Given the historical capital and currency controls, certain indirect foreign exchange mechanisms continue to exist that some Argentine entities may use to obtain USD, often at rates higher than the official exchange rate. To the extent that Citi is unable to hedge its ARS exposure in the future, Citi may incur additional translation losses on its net investment in Argentina.
For additional information on Citi’s emerging markets risks, including those related to its Argentina exposures, see “Managing Global Risk—Other Risks—Country Risk—Argentina” and “Risk Factors—Other Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
89
SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND SIGNIFICANT ESTIMATES
This section contains a summary of Citi’s most significant accounting policies. Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K contains a summary of all of Citigroup’s significant accounting policies. These policies, as well as estimates made by management, are integral to the presentation of Citi’s results of operations and financial condition. While all of these policies require a certain level of management judgment and estimates, this section highlights and discusses the significant accounting policies that require management to make highly difficult, complex or subjective judgments and estimates at times regarding matters that are inherently uncertain and susceptible to change (see also “Risk Factors—Operational Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K). Management has discussed each of these significant accounting policies, the related estimates and its judgments with the Audit Committee of the Citigroup Board of Directors.
Valuations of Financial Instruments
Citigroup holds debt and equity securities, derivatives, retained interests in securitizations, investments in private equity and other financial instruments. A portion of these assets and liabilities is reflected at fair value on Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet as
Trading account assets
,
Available-for-sale securities
and
Trading account liabilities
.
Citi purchases securities under agreements to resell (reverse repos or resale agreements) and sells securities under agreements to repurchase (repos), a substantial portion of which is carried at fair value. In addition, certain loans, short-term borrowings, long-term debt and deposits, as well as certain securities borrowed and loaned positions that are collateralized with cash, are carried at fair value. Citigroup holds its investments, trading assets and liabilities, and resale and repurchase agreements on Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet to meet customer needs and to manage liquidity needs, interest rate risks and private equity investing.
When available, Citi generally uses quoted market prices to determine fair value and classifies such items within Level 1 of the fair value hierarchy established under ASC 820-10,
Fair Value Measurement
. If quoted market prices are not available, fair value is based on internally developed valuation models that use, where possible, current market-based or independently sourced market parameters, such as interest rates, currency rates and option volatilities. Such models are often based on a discounted cash flow analysis. In addition, items valued using such internally generated valuation techniques are classified according to the lowest level input or value driver that is significant to the valuation. Thus, an item may be classified under the fair value hierarchy as Level 2 if the significant inputs are observable or Level 3 if there are some significant inputs that are not readily observable.
Citi is required to exercise subjective judgments relating to the applicability and functionality of internal valuation models, the significance of inputs or drivers to the valuation of an instrument and the degree of illiquidity and subsequent lack of observability in certain markets. The fair value of these instruments is reported on Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet with the changes in fair value recognized in either the Consolidated Statement of Income or in
AOCI
.
Losses on available-for-sale securities whose fair values are less than the amortized cost, where Citi intends to sell the security or could more-likely-than-not be required to sell the security prior to recovery, are recognized in earnings. Where Citi does not intend to sell the security nor could more-likely-than-not be required to sell the security, any portion of the loss that is attributable to credit is recognized as an allowance for credit losses with a corresponding provision for credit losses, and the remainder of the unrealized loss is recognized in
AOCI
. Such credit losses are capped at the difference between the fair value and amortized cost of the security.
For equity securities carried at cost or under the measurement alternative, decreases in fair value below the carrying value are recognized as impairment in the Consolidated Statement of Income. Moreover, for certain equity method investments, decreases in fair value are only recognized in earnings in the Consolidated Statement of Income if such decreases are judged to be an other-than-temporary impairment (OTTI). Assessing if the fair value impairment is temporary is also inherently judgmental.
The fair value of financial instruments incorporates the effects of Citi’s own credit risk and the market view of counterparty credit risk, the quantification of which is also complex and judgmental. For additional information on Citi’s fair value analysis, see Notes 6, 23 and 24 in this Form 10-Q and Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
90
Citi’s Allowance for Credit Losses (ACL)
The table below presents Citi’s allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL) and total ACL as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, as well as builds and releases during 2025. For information on the drivers of Citi’s ACL net build in the third quarter of 2025, see below. For additional
information on Citi’s accounting policy on accounting for credit losses under ASC Topic 326,
Financial Instruments—Credit Losses; Current Expected Credit Losses (CECL)
, see Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
ACL
In millions of dollars
Balance Dec. 31, 2024
1Q25
build
(release)
1Q25
FX/
Other
Balance Mar. 31, 2025
2Q25
build
(release)
2Q25
FX/
Other
Balance Jun. 30, 2025
3Q25 build (release)
3Q25 FX/Other
Balance Sep. 30, 2025
ACLL/EOP loans Sep. 30, 2025
Services
$
264
$
24
$
2
$
290
$
53
$
4
$
347
$
(4)
$
1
$
344
Markets
1,030
48
5
1,083
53
7
1,143
(44)
—
1,099
Banking
1,167
78
7
1,252
137
21
1,410
38
(3)
1,445
Legacy Franchises
corporate (Mexico SBMM and AFG)
(1)
95
4
1
100
16
7
123
(12)
2
113
Total corporate ACLL
$
2,556
$
154
$
15
$
2,725
$
259
$
39
$
3,023
$
(22)
$
—
$
3,001
0.92
%
U.S. cards
(2)(3)
$
13,560
$
(169)
$
1
$
13,392
$
(12)
$
2
$
13,382
$
44
$
(1)
$
13,425
8.01
%
Installment loans
(3)
425
(5)
(1)
419
7
(1)
425
11
1
437
Retail Banking
144
3
—
147
(1)
1
147
9
(1)
155
Total
USPB
$
14,129
$
(171)
$
—
$
13,958
$
(6)
$
2
$
13,954
$
64
$
(1)
$
14,017
Wealth
529
61
2
592
(64)
7
535
(25)
(2)
508
All Other
consumer—managed basis
(4)
1,360
69
22
1,451
54
106
1,611
28
41
1,680
Reconciling Items
(4)
—
(11)
11
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Total consumer ACLL
$
16,018
$
(52)
$
35
$
16,001
$
(16)
$
115
$
16,100
$
67
$
38
$
16,205
4.07
%
Total ACLL
$
18,574
$
102
$
50
$
18,726
$
243
$
154
$
19,123
$
45
$
38
$
19,206
2.65
%
Allowance for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments (ACLUC)
$
1,601
$
108
$
11
$
1,720
$
(19)
$
20
$
1,721
$
100
$
(1)
$
1,820
Total ACLL and ACLUC
$
20,175
$
210
$
61
$
20,446
$
224
$
174
$
20,844
$
145
$
37
$
21,026
Other
(5)
2,002
34
300
2,336
388
111
2,835
74
(157)
2,752
Total ACL
$
22,177
$
244
$
361
$
22,782
$
612
$
285
$
23,679
$
219
$
(120)
$
23,778
(1) Includes Legacy Franchises corporate loans activity related to Mexico SBMM and the Assets Finance Group (AFG), as well as other Legacy Holdings Assets corporate loans.
(2) As of September 30, 2025, in
USPB
, Branded Cards ACLL/EOP loans was 6.5% and Retail Services ACLL/EOP loans was 11.5%.
(3) See footnote 4 in “U.S. Personal Banking” above for the description of a change in reporting.
(4)
All Other
(managed basis) excludes divestiture-related impacts (Reconciling Items) related to (i) Citi’s divestitures of its Asia Consumer businesses and (ii) the planned IPO of Banamex, within Legacy Franchises. The Reconciling Items are reflected in Citi’s Consolidated Statement of Income. See “
All Other
—Divestiture-Related Impacts (Reconciling Items)” above.
(5) Includes ACL on
Other assets
, primarily related to transfer risk associated with exposures outside the U.S. and
Held-to-maturity debt securities.
91
Citi’s reserves for expected credit losses on funded loans and for unfunded lending commitments, standby letters of credit and financial guarantees are reflected on the Consolidated Balance Sheet in the
Allowance for credit losses on loans
(ACLL) and
Other liabilities
(for Allowance for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments (ACLUC)), respectively. In addition, Citi’s reserves for expected credit losses on other financial assets carried at amortized cost, including held-to-maturity securities, reverse repurchase agreements, securities borrowed, deposits with banks and other financial receivables, are reflected in
Other assets
,
including transfer risk associated with exposures outside the U.S. These reserves, together with the ACLL and ACLUC, are referred to as the ACL. Changes in the ACL are reflected in
Provision for credit losses
in the Consolidated Statement of Income for each reporting period. Citi’s ability to estimate expected credit losses is based on the ability to forecast economic activity over a reasonable and supportable (R&S) timeframe. The R&S forecast period is eight quarters.
The ACL is composed of quantitative and qualitative management adjustment components. The quantitative component uses three forward-looking macroeconomic forecast scenarios—base, upside and downside. The qualitative management adjustment component includes risks that are not fully captured in the quantitative component. Both the quantitative and qualitative components are further discussed below.
Quantitative Component
Citi estimates expected credit losses for its quantitative component using (i) its comprehensive internal data on loss and default history, (ii) internal credit risk ratings, (iii) external credit bureau and rating agencies information and (iv) R&S forecasts of macroeconomic conditions.
For its consumer and corporate portfolios, Citi’s expected credit losses are determined primarily by utilizing models that consider the borrowers’ probability of default (PD), loss given default (LGD) and exposure at default (EAD). The loss likelihood and severity models used for estimating expected credit losses are sensitive to changes in macroeconomic variables, including unemployment rate, real GDP and housing prices, and cover a wide range of geographic, industry, product and business segments.
In addition, Citi’s models determine expected credit losses based on portfolio characteristics, including loan delinquencies, changes in portfolio size, default frequency, risk ratings and loss recovery rates, as well as other credit trends.
Qualitative Component
The qualitative management adjustment component includes risks that are not fully captured in the quantitative component. These may include but are not limited to portfolio characteristics, idiosyncratic events, factors not within historical loss data or the economic forecast, uncertainty in the credit environment and other factors as required by banking supervisory guidance for the ACL. The primary examples of risks that are not fully captured in the quantitative component are the following:
•
Transfer risk associated with exposures outside the U.S.
•
Potential impacts on vulnerable industries and regions due to emerging macroeconomic risks and uncertainties, including those related to a potential global recession, inflation, interest rates and commodity prices.
As of the third quarter of 2025, Citi’s qualitative component of the ACL increased quarter-over-quarter. The increase was primarily driven by transfer risk associated with Russia.
Macroeconomic Variables
As further discussed below, Citi considers various global macroeconomic variables for the base, upside and downside probability-weighted macroeconomic scenario forecasts it uses to estimate the quantitative component of the ACL. The forecasts of the U.S. unemployment rate and U.S. real GDP growth rate represent the key macroeconomic variables that most significantly affect its estimate of the ACL.
The tables below present the forecasted quarterly average U.S. unemployment rate and year-over-year U.S. real GDP growth rate used in determining the base macroeconomic forecast for Citi’s ACL at each quarterly reporting period from the third quarter of 2024 to the third quarter of 2025:
Quarterly average
U.S. unemployment
4Q25
2Q26
4Q26
8-quarter average
(1)
Forecast at 3Q24
4.3
%
3.9
%
4.0
%
4.2
%
Forecast at 4Q24
4.3
4.1
4.1
4.2
Forecast at 1Q25
4.3
4.3
4.3
4.3
Forecast at 2Q25
4.6
4.7
4.6
4.6
Forecast at 3Q25
4.5
4.6
4.5
4.4
(1) Represents the average unemployment rate for the rolling, forward-looking eight quarters in the forecast horizon.
Year-over-year growth rate
(1)
Full year
U.S. real GDP
2025
2026
2027
Forecast at 3Q24
1.8
%
2.0
%
2.0
%
Forecast at 4Q24
2.2
2.1
2.2
Forecast at 1Q25
2.0
1.9
2.0
Forecast at 2Q25
1.4
1.4
2.0
Forecast at 3Q25
1.7
1.5
2.0
(1) The year-over-year growth rate is the percentage change in the real (inflation adjusted) GDP level.
92
Under the base macroeconomic forecast as of the third quarter of 2025, U.S. real GDP growth in 2025 is expected to slow from 2024 levels, while the U.S. unemployment rate is expected to increase.
Scenario Weighting
Citi’s ACL is estimated using three probability-weighted macroeconomic scenarios—base, upside and downside. The macroeconomic scenario weights are estimated using a statistical model, which, among other factors, takes into consideration (i) key macroeconomic drivers of the ACL, (ii) the severity of the scenario and (iii) other sources of macroeconomic uncertainties and risks. Citi evaluates scenario weights on a quarterly basis.
Citi’s downside scenario incorporates more adverse macroeconomic assumptions than the weighted scenario assumptions or the base scenario. For example, compared to the base scenario, Citi’s downside scenario reflects a recession, including an elevated average U.S. unemployment rate of 6.9% over the eight-quarter R&S period, with a peak difference of 3.6% in the first quarter of 2027. The weighted-average U.S. unemployment rate that considers all three probability-weighted scenarios is 5.2%. The downside scenario also reflects a year-over-year U.S. real GDP contraction in 2026 of 2.2%, with a peak quarter-over-quarter difference to the base scenario of 1.1%.
Citi’s ACL is sensitive to the various macroeconomic scenarios that drive the quantitative component of expected credit losses. Citi’s downside scenario incorporates more adverse macroeconomic assumptions than the weighted scenario assumptions. To demonstrate this sensitivity, if Citi applied 100% weight to the downside scenario as of September 30, 2025 to reflect the most severe economic deterioration forecast in the macroeconomic scenarios, there would have been a hypothetical incremental increase in the ACL of approximately $5.1 billion related to lending exposures, except for loans individually evaluated for credit losses and other financial assets carried at amortized cost.
This analysis does not incorporate any impacts or changes to the qualitative component of the ACL, which could change the outcome of the sensitivity analysis based on historical experience and current conditions at the time of the assessment. Given the uncertainty inherent in macroeconomic forecasting, Citi continues to believe that its ACL estimate based on a three probability-weighted macroeconomic scenario approach combined with the qualitative component remains appropriate as of September 30, 2025.
3Q25 Changes in the ACL
As further discussed below, Citi’s ending ACL balance for the third quarter of 2025 was $23.8 billion, an increase of $0.1 billion from June 30, 2025, driven by a net ACL build of $0.2 billion, largely offset by a $0.1 billion decrease related to FX translation on the ACL. The net ACL build of $0.2 billion in the quarter was driven by higher volume, changes in portfolio composition and transfer risk associated with Russia, partially offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook. Citi believes its analysis of the ACL reflects the forward view of the economic environment as of September 30, 2025. See Note 15 for additional information.
Consumer Allowance for Credit Losses on Loans
Citi’s consumer ACLL is primarily driven by U.S. cards (Branded Cards and Retail Services) in
USPB
. Citi’s total consumer ACLL net build was $0.1 billion in the third quarter of 2025, driven by changes in portfolio composition and higher volume in
USPB
, largely offset by changes in the macroeconomic outlook in
USPB
. This resulted in a September 30, 2025 ACLL balance of $16.2 billion, or 4.07% of total funded consumer loans.
For U.S. cards, the level of reserves relative to total funded loans increased slightly to 8.01% at September 30, 2025, compared to 8.00% at June 30, 2025. For the remaining consumer exposures, the level of reserves relative to total funded loans was 1.20% at September 30, 2025, compared to 1.19% at June 30, 2025.
Corporate Allowance for Credit Losses on Loans
Citi had a corporate ACLL net release of less than $0.1 billion in the third quarter of 2025, driven by a release from a charge-off in Spread Products in
Markets.
This resulted in a September 30, 2025 ACLL balance of $3.0 billion, or 0.92% of total funded corporate loans.
ACLUC
Citi’s ACLUC reserve balance in the third quarter of 2025, included in
Other liabilities
,
was $1.8 billion at September 30, 2025, compared to $1.7 billion at June 30, 2025. The increase was primarily driven by exposure growth.
ACL on Other Financial Assets
Citi had an ACL build of $0.1 billion on other financial assets carried at amortized cost for the third quarter of 2025, driven by transfer risk associated with Russia. Including FX/Other, the ACL reserve balance decreased by less than $0.1 billion to $2.8 billion at September 30, 2025 from June 30, 2025. See Note 15 for additional information.
See Notes 1 and 16 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K for further descriptions of the ACL and related accounts.
93
Goodwill
Citi tests for goodwill impairment annually as of October 1 (the annual test) and conducts interim assessments between annual tests if an event occurs or circumstances change that would more-likely-than-not reduce the fair value of a reporting unit below its carrying amount. These events or circumstances include, among other things, a significant adverse change in the business climate, a decision to sell or dispose of all or a significant portion of a reporting unit or a sustained decrease in Citi’s stock price.
Citi performed its annual 2024 goodwill impairment test, which resulted in no impairment of any of Citi’s consolidated reporting units’ goodwill. For each of the Company’s reporting units, fair value exceeded carrying value by at least 10% as of the fourth quarter of 2024. No additional triggering events were identified and no goodwill was impaired during 2024 and through the second quarter of 2025.
Citi performed an interim goodwill impairment test during the third quarter of 2025, in connection with the agreed-upon bid received for Banamex. The test resulted in an impairment of $726 million ($714 million after-tax) to the Mexico Consumer/SBMM reporting unit within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises. The remaining goodwill within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises is attributable to the Mexico Consumer/SBMM reporting unit, which was not deemed to be impaired. No other events or circumstances were identified to indicate that the fair values of Citi’s other reporting units were more-likely-than-not reduced below their respective carrying amounts, and no further impairment was recognized as of September 30, 2025.
Reporting units used for goodwill assessment at the Citigroup consolidated level may differ from the reporting units of its subsidiaries.
Unanticipated declines in business performance, increases in credit losses, increases in capital requirements and adverse regulatory or legislative changes, and deterioration in economic or market conditions, as well as circumstances related to Citi’s strategic refresh, are factors that could result in a material impairment loss to earnings in a future period related to some portion of the associated goodwill. See Note 16 for additional information on goodwill, including the changes in the goodwill balance in the quarter and the segments’ and
All Other
’s goodwill balances as of September 30, 2025.
Litigation Accruals
See the discussion in Note 27 for Citi’s policies on establishing accruals for litigation and regulatory contingencies.
94
INCOME TAXES
Effective Tax Rate
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars, except effective tax rate
2025
2024
2025
2024
Income from continuing operations before income tax expense
$
5,350
$
4,390
$
16,017
$
13,244
Provision for income taxes
1,559
1,116
4,085
3,299
Effective tax rate
29
%
25
%
26
%
25
%
Citi’s effective tax rate was 29% in the third quarter of 2025, compared to 25% in the third quarter of 2024, which included the impact of divestitures. The increase period-over-period was driven by the limited tax benefit of the goodwill impairment within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises.
Deferred Tax Assets
For additional information on Citi’s deferred tax assets (DTAs), see “Capital Resources,” “Risk Factors—Strategic Risks,” “Significant Accounting Policies and Significant Estimates—Income Taxes” and Notes 1 and 10 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The table below summarizes Citi’s net DTAs balance:
Jurisdiction/Component
DTAs balance
In billions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31, 2024
Total U.S.
$
26.4
$
26.6
Total foreign
3.2
3.2
Total
$
29.6
$
29.8
At September 30, 2025, Citigroup had recorded net DTAs of approximately $29.6 billion, an increase of $0.1 billion from June 30, 2025. The quarter-over-quarter increase was driven by an increase in temporary differences, offset by a net reduction in carry-forwards (foreign tax credits, net operating losses and general business credits).
Of Citi’s $29.6 billion of net DTAs, $13.0 billion was deducted in calculating Citi’s regulatory capital, and the remaining $16.6 billion was appropriately risk weighted under the Basel III rules.
The $13.0 billion of DTAs deducted from regulatory capital was composed of $10.8 billion of tax carry-forwards (foreign tax credits, net operating losses and general business credits) and $3.8 billion of temporary differences in excess of the 10% regulatory limitation, reduced by $1.6 billion of deferred tax liabilities, primarily goodwill and certain other intangible assets that were separately deducted from capital.
DTA Realizability
Citi believes that the net DTAs of $29.6 billion at September 30, 2025 are more-likely-than-not to be realized, based on management’s expectations of future taxable income generation in the jurisdictions in which the DTAs arise, as well as consideration of available tax planning strategies (as defined in ASC Topic 740,
Income Taxes
).
95
DISCLOSURE CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Citi’s disclosure controls and procedures are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the SEC’s rules and forms, including without limitation that information required to be disclosed by Citi in its SEC filings is accumulated and communicated to management, including the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Chief Financial Officer (CFO), as appropriate, to allow for timely decisions regarding required disclosure.
Citi’s Disclosure Committee assists the CEO and CFO in their responsibilities to design, establish, maintain and evaluate the effectiveness of Citi’s disclosure controls and procedures. The Disclosure Committee is responsible for, among other things, the oversight, maintenance and implementation of the disclosure controls and procedures, subject to the supervision and oversight of the CEO and CFO.
Citi’s management, with the participation of its CEO and CFO, has evaluated the effectiveness of Citigroup’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 13a-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934) as of September 30, 2025. Based on that evaluation, the CEO and CFO have concluded that at that date Citigroup’s disclosure controls and procedures were effective.
DISCLOSURE PURSUANT TO SECTION 219 OF THE IRAN THREAT REDUCTION AND SYRIA HUMAN RIGHTS ACT
Pursuant to Section 219 of the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act of 2012 (Section 219), which added Section 13(r) to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, Citi is required to disclose in its annual or quarterly reports, as applicable, whether it or any of its affiliates knowingly engaged in certain activities, transactions or dealings relating to Iran or with certain individuals or entities that are the subject of sanctions under U.S. law. Disclosure may be required even where the activities, transactions or dealings were conducted in compliance with applicable law. To the extent that transactions or dealings for its clients are permitted by U.S. law, Citi may continue to engage in such activities.
During the first quarter of 2025, Citigroup identified one transaction that was reportable pursuant to Section 219. Citi did not identify any reportable activities, transactions or dealings pursuant to Section 219 for the second quarter of 2025.
During the third quarter of 2025, Citigroup identified three transactions pursuant to Section 219. On July 28, 2025, Citibank Europe plc processed a payment from a client to the Iranian Embassy in Norway for mailing a passport. The total value of the transaction was EUR 30 (approximately USD 35.27). This transaction was permissible under the travel exemption of the Iranian Transactions and Sanctions Regulations. Citi did not realize any fees for the processing of this transaction. On August 26, 2025, Citibank, N.A. processed a payment destined for a U.S.–based law firm for legal services provided to a person designated under Executive Order 13224. The total value of the payment was USD 2,000,000 and the transaction was authorized pursuant to a general license issued by the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). Citi did not realize any fees for the processing of this transaction. On September 30, 2025, Citibank, N.A. processed a transaction between the Central Bank of Iran (the CBI) and an international organization. The CBI sent funds in Japanese yen through Citibank, N.A., Tokyo Branch, which were then converted to U.S. dollars and transferred to the international organization’s U.S. dollar account at Citibank, N.A., New York Branch. The total value of the transaction was USD 15,066,150.79. The transaction represented a payment for the Government of Iran’s membership dues to the international organization and was processed pursuant to general licenses issued by OFAC. Citibank realized approximately USD 11,864.96 for incoming and outgoing payments fees and a foreign exchange transaction fee.
96
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
Certain statements in this Form 10-Q, including but not limited to statements included within Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations, are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. In addition, Citigroup may make forward-looking statements in its other documents filed or furnished with the SEC, and its management may make forward-looking statements orally to analysts, investors, representatives of the media and others.
Generally, forward-looking statements are not based on historical facts but instead represent Citigroup’s and its management’s beliefs regarding future events. Such statements may be identified by words such as believe, expect, anticipate, intend, estimate, may increase, may fluctuate, target, outlook, guidance and illustrative, and similar expressions or future or conditional verbs such as will, should, would and could.
Such statements are based on management’s current expectations and are subject to risks, uncertainties and changes in circumstances. Actual results of operations and financial conditions, including capital and liquidity, may differ materially from those included in these statements due to a variety of factors, including without limitation (i) the precautionary statements included within the “Executive Summary,” “Citi’s Multiyear Transformation” and each business’s discussion and analysis of its results of operations above, as well as those included within Citi’s Second Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q, Citi’s First Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q, Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K and Citi’s other SEC filings; (ii) the factors described under “Risk Factors” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K; and (iii) the risks and uncertainties summarized below:
•
the potential impact to Citi from macroeconomic and geopolitical tensions, conflicts and other challenges, uncertainties and volatility, including, among others, government shutdowns; U.S. trade and tariff policies and resulting retaliatory actions; increases in unemployment rates, slowing economic growth or recessions in the U.S. and elsewhere; deterioration in consumer and corporate confidence; elevated inflation; government fiscal and monetary actions or expected actions, including changes in interest rate policy or other monetary policies; volatility or disruptions in financial markets; the Russia–Ukraine war and Middle East and other conflicts; and economic and geopolitical challenges related to China;
•
the potential impact on Citi’s ability to return capital to common shareholders, whether through its stock repurchase program or common stock dividend, consistent with its capital planning efforts and targets, due to, among other things, regulatory capital requirements, including annual recalibration of the Stress Capital Buffer, recalibration of the GSIB surcharge and supervisory expectations and assessments, including any negative findings regarding absolute capital levels or other aspects of Citi’s operations; changes in regulatory capital rules, requirements or interpretations; Citi’s results of operations and financial condition, including the capital
impact related to Citi’s remaining divestitures; Citi’s effectiveness in planning, managing and calculating its level of regulatory capital and risk-weighted assets under both the Advanced Approaches and the Standardized Approach and Supplementary Leverage ratio; Citi’s implementation and maintenance of an effective capital planning process and management framework; forecasts of macroeconomic conditions; and Citi’s DTA utilization;
•
the ongoing regulatory and legislative uncertainties and changes faced by financial institutions, including Citi, in the U.S. and globally, such as potential changes to various aspects of the U.S. regulatory capital framework and requirements applicable to Citi; potential fiscal, monetary, tax, sanctions, human capital and other changes from the U.S. federal government and other governments; and the potential impact these uncertainties and changes could have on Citi’s competitive position, businesses, revenues, results of operations and financial condition and compliance risks and costs;
•
Citi’s ability to achieve its objectives, including those related to revenue, net interest income, expense and capital expectations, from its simplification, transformation and enhanced business performance priorities, including the divestiture of Banamex, as well as its planned IPO, which involve significant complexities, execution challenges and uncertainties, may not be as productive or effective as Citi expects or at all, and/or may result in higher-than-expected expenses or lower expense savings or revenue growth than expected, litigation and regulatory scrutiny, CTA and other losses or other negative financial or strategic impacts, which could be material, and depend, in part, on factors that Citi cannot control or be able to mitigate, including, among others, macroeconomic challenges and uncertainties, customer, client and competitor actions, regulatory requirements or changes and heightened regulatory and supervisory expectations and scrutiny;
•
the potential impact to Citi from climate change due to both physical risks and transition risks;
•
Citi’s ability to utilize its DTAs and thus reduce the negative impact of the DTAs on Citi’s regulatory capital, including as a result of its ability to generate U.S. taxable income in the relevant reversal periods;
•
the potential impact to Citi if its interpretation or application of the complex income-based and non- income-based (such as withholding, stamp, service and other non-income taxes) tax laws to which it is subject in the U.S. and in non-U.S. jurisdictions differs from those of the relevant governmental taxing authorities, including as a result of litigation or examinations regarding non- income-based tax matters, and the resulting payment of additional taxes, penalties or interest, the reduction of certain tax benefits or the requirement to make adjustments to amounts recorded;
•
the potential impact from a deterioration in or failure to maintain Citi’s co-branding or private label credit card relationships;
•
Citi’s ability to address shortcomings or deficiencies or guidance provided by the FRB or FDIC on its resolution plan submissions;
97
•
the potential impact on Citi’s performance and the performance of its individual businesses, including its competitive position and ability to effectively manage its businesses, and its ability to effectively execute its simplification, transformation and enhanced business performance priorities, if Citi is unable to hire and retain qualified employees;
•
Citi’s ability to compete effectively in the U.S. and globally with both financial and non-financial services firms;
•
the potential impact to Citi from a prior or future failure or disruption of its operational processes or systems, including as a result of, among other things, operational or execution failures or deficiencies by third parties, including third parties that provide products or services to Citi or other market participants or those that otherwise have an ongoing partnership or business relationship with Citi; deficiencies in processes or controls; inadequate management of data governance practices, data controls and monitoring mechanisms that may adversely impact internal or external reporting and decision-making; cyber or information security incidents; human error, such as manual transaction processing errors, which can be exacerbated by staffing challenges and processing backlogs; fraud or malice on the part of employees or third parties; insufficient (or limited) straight-through processing between legacy or bespoke systems and any failure to design and effectively operate controls that mitigate operational risks associated with those legacy or bespoke systems, leading to potential risk of errors and operating losses; accidental system or technological failure; electrical or telecommunication outages; failure of or cyber incidents involving computer servers or infrastructure, including software updates and cloud services; and other similar losses or damage to Citi’s property or assets;
•
the increasing risk to Citi’s and third parties’ computer systems, software and networks from ongoing, continually evolving, sophisticated cybersecurity incidents that could result in, among other things, the theft, loss, non-availability, misuse or disclosure of personal, confidential or proprietary Citi, client, customer or employee information or assets and a disruption of computer, software or network systems; and the potential impact from such risks, including reputational damage, loss of revenues, deposit outflows, additional costs (including repair, replacement, remediation and other costs), exposure to litigation and regulatory action and other financial losses;
•
risks to Citi from the development and use of AI, including unintended consequences from ineffective, inadequate or faulty Generative AI development or deployment by Citi or third parties, such as AI algorithms that produce inaccurate or incomplete output or output based on biased, incomplete and/or inaccurate datasets; increased fraud risk, including identity theft and bypassing of verification controls, from the use of increasingly sophisticated AI technologies by malicious actors; competition risks if competitors are more timely and successful in developing and deploying AI
technologies; and operational risks and costs from compliance with new or changing laws, regulations or industry standards relating to AI;
•
the potential impact of changes or errors in accounting assumptions, judgments or estimates, or the application of certain accounting principles, related to the preparation of Citi’s financial statements, including the estimate of Citi’s ACL, which is subject to judgments and depends on its CECL models and assumptions, forecasted macroeconomic conditions, which can be more challenging to forecast during times of significant market volatility and uncertainty, and characteristics of Citi’s loan portfolios and other applicable financial assets; reserves related to litigation, regulatory and tax matters; valuation of DTAs; the fair values of certain assets and liabilities and the assessment of goodwill and other assets for impairment; and the financial impact from reclassification of any CTA component of
AOCI
into Citi’s earnings due to a sale, substantial liquidation, expropriation or other deconsolidation event, such as those related to Citi’s remaining consumer banking divestitures or other legacy businesses;
•
the impact of changes to financial accounting and reporting standards or interpretations of how Citi records and reports its financial condition and results of operations;
•
the potential impact to Citi’s results of operations and/or regulatory capital and capital ratios if Citi’s risk management and other processes, strategies or models are deficient or ineffective;
•
the potential impact of credit risk and concentrations of risk on Citi’s results of operations, including due to higher-than-expected defaults by or a significant downgrade in credit ratings of consumer, corporate or public sector borrowers or other counterparties in the U.S. or in various countries and jurisdictions globally, such as from indemnification obligations in connection with various transactions, including hedging or reinsurance arrangements related to those obligations, or Citi’s inability to liquidate or realize the fair value of its collateral, which risks can be heightened for vulnerable sectors, industries or countries impacted by macroeconomic, geopolitical, market and other challenges, uncertainties and volatilities;
•
the potential impact on Citi’s liquidity, sources of funding and costs of funding if it does not effectively manage its liquidity whether due to factors it cannot control or otherwise;
•
the impact of a credit ratings downgrade of Citi or certain of its subsidiaries or issuing entities, or from negative actions on U.S. sovereign ratings, on Citi’s funding and liquidity as well as on the results of operations of certain of its businesses;
•
the potential impact to Citi of regulatory and supervisory expectations and scrutiny in the U.S. and globally and ongoing interpretation and implementation of regulatory and legislative requirements and changes, with respect to, among other things, governance, infrastructure, data, risk management practices and controls, customer and client protection, market practices, anti-money laundering,
98
increasingly complex sanctions and disclosure regimes and various regulatory reporting requirements, including the impact on Citi’s compliance, regulatory and other risks and costs, such as regulatory oversight, material restrictions, including, among others, imposition of additional capital buffers and limitations on capital distributions, enforcement proceedings, penalties and fines;
•
the potential outcomes of the extensive legal and regulatory proceedings, examinations, investigations, consent orders and related compliance efforts and other inquiries to which Citi is or may be subject at any given time, such as the 2020 consent orders with the FRB and OCC and the amendment to the 2020 OCC consent order, particularly given the focus by regulators on risk and controls, such as enterprise-wide risk management, compliance, data quality management and governance and internal controls, and policies and procedures; Citi’s ability to implement extensive targeted action plans and submit quarterly progress reports on a timely and sufficient basis detailing the results and status of improvements to comply with the consent orders, which will continue to require significant investments to meet regulatory expectations; and the heightened scrutiny and expectations generally from regulators, and the severity of the remedies that may be sought by regulators; and
•
the various risks faced by Citi as a result of its presence in the emerging markets, including, among others, those resulting from the impact of policies and actions from the U.S. administration; limitations or unavailability of hedges on foreign investments; foreign currency volatility and devaluations; central bank interest rate and other monetary policies; unemployment, recessions or weak or slowing economic growth; elevated inflation and hyperinflation; foreign exchange controls; macroeconomic, geopolitical and domestic political challenges, uncertainties and volatility; cyberattacks; restrictions arising from retaliatory laws and regulations; sanctions or asset freezes; sovereign debt volatility; fluctuations in commodity prices; regulatory changes, including potential conflicts among regulations with other jurisdictions where Citi does business; limitations on foreign investment; sociopolitical instability; nationalization or loss of licenses; closure of branches or subsidiaries; any substantial liquidation, expropriation or other deconsolidation event related to Citi’s remaining consumer banking divestitures or other legacy businesses; and the need to record CTA and other losses, as well as additional reserves for expected losses for credit exposures based on transfer risk.
Any forward-looking statements made by or on behalf of Citigroup speak only as to the date they are made, and Citi does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect the impact of circumstances or events that arise after the date that the forward-looking statements were made.
99
This page intentionally left blank.
100
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND NOTES—TABLE OF CONTENTS
CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Consolidated Statement of Income (Unaudited)—
For the Three and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025 and 2024
102
Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income (Unaudited)—For the Three and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025 and 2024
103
Consolidated Balance Sheet—September 30, 2025 (Unaudited) and December 31, 2024
104
Consolidated Statement of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity (Unaudited)—For the Three and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025 and 2024
106
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows (Unaudited)—
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025 and 2024
108
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED)
Note 1—Basis of Presentation, Updated Accounting Policies
and Accounting Changes
110
Note 2—Discontinued Operations, Significant Disposals
and Other Business Exits
112
Note 3—Reportable Business Segments and All Other
113
Note 4—Interest Income and Expense
117
Note 5—Commissions and Fees; Administration and Other
Fiduciary Fees
118
Note 6—Principal Transactions
119
Note 7—Incentive Plans
120
Note 8—Retirement Benefits
120
Note 9—Restructuring
121
Note 10—Earnings per Share
122
Note 11—Securities Borrowed, Loaned and Subject to
Repurchase Agreements
123
Note 12—Brokerage Receivables and Brokerage Payables
126
Note 13—Investments
127
Note 14—Loans
134
Note 15—Allowance for Credit Losses
154
Note 16—Goodwill and Intangible Assets
159
Note 17—Deposits
160
Note 18—Debt
161
Note 19—Changes in Accumulated Other Comprehensive
Income (Loss) (AOCI)
162
Note 20—Preferred Stock
166
Note 21—Securitizations and Variable Interest Entities
168
Note 22—Derivatives
175
Note 23—Fair Value Measurement
185
Note 24—Fair Value Elections
205
Note 25—Guarantees and Commitments
209
Note 26—Leases
212
Note 27—Contingencies
213
Note 28—Subsidiary Guarantees
215
101
CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF INCOME (UNAUDITED)
Citigroup Inc. and Subsidiaries
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars, except per share amounts
2025
2024
2025
2024
Revenues
(1)
Interest income
$
36,690
$
36,456
$
106,215
$
108,666
Interest expense
21,750
23,094
62,088
68,304
Net interest income
$
14,940
$
13,362
$
44,127
$
40,362
Commissions and fees
(1)
$
2,888
$
2,589
$
8,340
$
7,780
Principal transactions
(2)
2,772
2,835
8,785
8,656
Administration and other fiduciary fees
1,117
1,059
3,285
3,142
Realized gains on sales of investments, net
105
72
364
210
Net impairment losses on investments recognized in earnings
(
25
)
(
41
)
(
118
)
(
92
)
Other revenue
(2)
293
333
571
1,199
Total non-interest revenues
$
7,150
$
6,847
$
21,227
$
20,895
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
22,090
$
20,209
$
65,354
$
61,257
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
Provision for credit losses on loans
$
2,259
$
2,382
$
7,297
$
7,163
Provision (release) for credit losses on HTM debt securities
(
5
)
50
(
3
)
55
Provision for credit losses on other assets
79
110
499
226
Policyholder benefits and claims
17
28
63
73
Provision (release) for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
100
105
189
(
1
)
Total provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
$
2,450
$
2,675
$
8,045
$
7,516
Operating expenses
(1)
Compensation and benefits
$
7,474
$
7,058
$
22,571
$
21,619
Technology/communication
2,325
2,273
6,994
6,757
Transactional and product servicing
(3)
1,110
1,103
3,396
3,336
Premises and equipment
607
606
1,796
1,788
Professional services
514
491
1,500
1,366
Advertising and marketing
260
282
779
790
Restructuring
(
5
)
9
(
10
)
270
Other operating
(1)(3)
2,005
1,322
4,266
4,571
Total operating expenses
$
14,290
$
13,144
$
41,292
$
40,497
Income from continuing operations before income taxes
$
5,350
$
4,390
$
16,017
$
13,244
Provision for income taxes
1,559
1,116
4,085
3,299
Income from continuing operations
$
3,791
$
3,274
$
11,932
$
9,945
Discontinued operations
Income (loss) from discontinued operations
$
(
1
)
$
(
1
)
$
(
2
)
$
(
2
)
Benefit for income taxes
—
—
—
—
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes
$
(
1
)
$
(
1
)
$
(
2
)
$
(
2
)
Net income before attribution to noncontrolling interests
$
3,790
$
3,273
$
11,930
$
9,943
Noncontrolling interests
38
35
95
117
Citigroup’s net income
$
3,752
$
3,238
$
11,835
$
9,826
Statement continues on the next page.
102
Basic earnings per share
(4)
Income from continuing operations
$
1.89
$
1.53
$
5.87
$
4.67
Income from discontinued operations, net of taxes
—
—
—
—
Net income
$
1.89
$
1.53
$
5.87
$
4.67
Weighted-average common shares outstanding
(in millions)
1,820.3
1,899.9
1,851.7
1,906.0
Diluted earnings per share
(4)
Income from continuing operations
$
1.86
$
1.51
$
5.78
$
4.61
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes
—
—
—
—
Net income
$
1.86
$
1.51
$
5.78
$
4.61
Adjusted weighted-average diluted common shares outstanding
(in millions)
1,862.6
1,940.3
1,891.8
1,943.1
(1)
Effective January 1, 2025, certain transaction processing fees paid by Citi, primarily to credit card networks, which were previously presented within
Other operating
expenses, are presented as contra-revenue within
Commissions and fees
reported in
Non-interest revenue
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
(2)
Effective July 1, 2025, gains and losses on certain economic and qualifying hedging derivatives and foreign currency transaction gains and losses related to non-U.S. dollar debt and certain foreign operations in countries with highly inflationary economies with the U.S. dollar as their functional currency, which were previously presented within
Other revenue
, are presented within
Principal transactions
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
(3)
Effective July 1, 2025, certain expenses incurred in ongoing support of products and services that are predominantly variable costs, which were previously presented within
Other operating
expenses and
Transactional and tax charges
, are aggregated and presented within a new expenses category,
Transactional and product servicing
(see “Glossary” below for definition). Moreover, certain non-income tax charges incurred, which were previously presented within
Transactional and tax charges
and do not align with the redefined
Transactional and product servicing
,
are presented within
Other operating
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
(4)
Due to rounding, earnings per share on continuing operations and discontinued operations may not sum to earnings per share on net income.
The Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
Citigroup Inc. and Subsidiaries
(UNAUDITED)
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Citigroup’s net income
$
3,752
$
3,238
$
11,835
$
9,826
Net changes, net of taxes in Citigroup’s other comprehensive income (loss)
Unrealized gains and losses on AFS debt securities
$
450
$
1,335
$
1,243
$
1,397
Debt valuation adjustment (DVA)
(
1,021
)
(
150
)
(
584
)
(
457
)
Cash flow hedges
25
(
144
)
104
633
Benefit plans liability adjustment
26
49
(
37
)
305
Currency translation adjustments (CTA), net of hedges
135
416
2,950
(
2,272
)
Excluded component of fair value hedges
11
(
9
)
18
(
8
)
Long-duration insurance contracts
(
10
)
(
17
)
(
12
)
5
Citigroup’s total other comprehensive income (loss)
$
(
384
)
$
1,480
$
3,682
$
(
397
)
Citigroup’s total comprehensive income
$
3,368
$
4,718
$
15,517
$
9,429
Add: Other comprehensive income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests
$
5
$
40
$
112
$
7
Add: Net income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests
38
35
95
117
Total comprehensive income
$
3,411
$
4,793
$
15,724
$
9,553
The Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements.
103
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
Citigroup Inc. and Subsidiaries
September 30,
2025
December 31,
In millions of dollars
(Unaudited)
2024
Assets
Cash and due from banks (including segregated cash and other deposits)
$
23,545
$
22,782
Deposits with banks, net of allowance
324,515
253,750
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell (including $
164,778
and $
140,855
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value), net of allowance
321,347
274,062
Brokerage receivables, net of allowance
75,992
50,841
Trading account assets (including $
245,069
and $
193,291
pledged to creditors as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively)
562,254
442,747
Investments:
Available-for-sale debt securities (including $
8,563
and $
5,389
pledged to creditors as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively)
246,227
226,876
Held-to-maturity debt securities, net of allowance (fair value of which is $
185,346
and $
224,410
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively) (includes $
74
and $
0
pledged to creditors as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively)
197,092
242,382
Equity securities (including $
684
and $
578
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
7,413
7,399
Total investments
$
450,732
$
476,657
Loans:
Consumer (including $
26
and $
281
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
398,628
393,102
Corporate (including $
7,870
and $
7,759
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
335,277
301,386
Loans, net of unearned income
$
733,905
$
694,488
Allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL)
(
19,206
)
(
18,574
)
Total loans, net
$
714,699
$
675,914
Goodwill
19,126
19,300
Intangible assets (including MSRs of $
748
and $
760
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively)
4,330
4,494
Premises and equipment, net of depreciation and amortization
32,819
30,192
Other assets (including $
15,584
and $
13,703
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value), net of allowance
113,116
102,206
Total assets
$
2,642,475
$
2,352,945
Statement continues on the next page.
104
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
Citigroup Inc. and Subsidiaries
(Continued)
September 30,
2025
December 31,
In millions of dollars, except shares and par value per share amounts
(Unaudited)
2024
Liabilities
Deposits (including $
3,684
and $
3,608
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively,
at fair value)
$
1,383,929
$
1,284,458
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase (including $
202,192
and $
49,154
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
349,726
254,755
Brokerage payables (including $
4,900
and $
5,207
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024,
respectively, at fair value)
89,596
66,601
Trading account liabilities
160,243
133,846
Short-term borrowings (including $
25,023
and $
12,484
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
54,760
48,505
Long-term debt (including $
129,817
and $
112,719
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
315,846
287,300
Other liabilities, plus allowances
74,498
68,114
Total liabilities
$
2,428,598
$
2,143,579
Stockholders’ equity
Preferred stock ($
1.00
par value; authorized shares:
30
million), issued shares: as of September 30, 2025—
762,000
and as of December 31, 2024—
714,000
, at aggregate liquidation value
$
19,050
$
17,850
Common stock ($
0.01
par value; authorized shares:
6
billion), issued shares: as of September 30, 2025—
3,099,751,185
and as of December 31, 2024—
3,099,719,006
31
31
Additional paid-in capital
109,010
109,117
Retained earnings
214,034
206,294
Treasury stock, at cost: September 30, 2025—
1,310,485,026
shares and December 31, 2024—
1,222,647,540
shares
(
84,932
)
(
76,842
)
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (
AOCI
)
(
44,170
)
(
47,852
)
Total Citigroup stockholders’ equity
$
213,023
$
208,598
Noncontrolling interests
854
768
Total equity
$
213,877
$
209,366
Total liabilities and equity
$
2,642,475
$
2,352,945
The Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these Consolidated Financial Statements.
105
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Citigroup Inc. and Subsidiaries
(UNAUDITED)
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Preferred stock at aggregate liquidation value
Balance, beginning of period
$
16,350
$
18,100
$
17,850
$
17,600
Issuance of new preferred stock
2,700
1,500
4,700
3,800
Redemption of preferred stock
—
(
3,250
)
(
3,500
)
(
5,050
)
Balance, end of period
$
19,050
$
16,350
$
19,050
$
16,350
Common stock and additional paid-in capital (APIC)
Balance, beginning of period
$
108,870
$
108,816
$
109,148
$
108,986
Employee benefit plans
175
174
(
110
)
37
Other
(
4
)
10
3
(
23
)
Balance, end of period
$
109,041
$
109,000
$
109,041
$
109,000
Retained earnings
Balance, beginning of period
$
211,674
$
202,913
$
206,294
$
198,905
Citigroup’s net income
3,752
3,238
11,835
9,826
Common dividends
(1)
(
1,118
)
(
1,089
)
(
3,253
)
(
3,143
)
Preferred dividends
(
274
)
(
277
)
(
830
)
(
798
)
Other (primarily reclassifications from APIC for preferred issuance costs on redemptions)
—
(
15
)
(
12
)
(
20
)
Balance, end of period
$
214,034
$
204,770
$
214,034
$
204,770
Treasury stock, at cost
Balance, beginning of period
$
(
79,886
)
$
(
74,842
)
$
(
76,842
)
$
(
75,238
)
Employee benefit plans
(2)
4
2
736
898
Excise tax on share repurchases
(3)
(
50
)
—
(
76
)
—
Treasury stock acquired
(
5,000
)
(
1,000
)
(
8,750
)
(
1,500
)
Balance, end of period
$
(
84,932
)
$
(
75,840
)
$
(
84,932
)
$
(
75,840
)
Citigroup’s accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
Balance, beginning of period
$
(
43,786
)
$
(
46,677
)
$
(
47,852
)
$
(
44,800
)
Citigroup’s total other comprehensive income (loss)
(
384
)
1,480
3,682
(
397
)
Balance, end of period
$
(
44,170
)
$
(
45,197
)
$
(
44,170
)
$
(
45,197
)
Total Citigroup common stockholders’ equity
$
193,973
$
192,733
$
193,973
$
192,733
Total Citigroup stockholders’ equity
$
213,023
$
209,083
$
213,023
$
209,083
Noncontrolling interests
Balance, beginning of period
$
908
$
834
$
768
$
798
Transactions between Citigroup and the noncontrolling interests
—
—
(
10
)
(
9
)
Net income attributable to noncontrolling interests
38
35
95
117
Distributions paid to noncontrolling interests
(
92
)
(
90
)
(
106
)
(
94
)
Other comprehensive income (loss)
attributable to noncontrolling interests
5
40
112
7
Other
(
5
)
—
(
5
)
—
Net change in noncontrolling interests
$
(
54
)
$
(
15
)
$
86
$
21
Balance, end of period
$
854
$
819
$
854
$
819
Total equity
$
213,877
$
209,902
$
213,877
$
209,902
(1)
Common dividends declared were $
0.60
per share for 3Q25, $
0.56
per share for both 1Q25 and 2Q25, $
0.56
per share for 3Q24 and $
0.53
per share for both 1Q24 and 2Q24.
(2)
Includes treasury stock related to certain activity under Citi’s employee restricted or deferred stock programs where shares are withheld to satisfy employees’ tax requirements.
(3)
The 1% excise tax on the fair market value of common stock repurchased in the taxable year, reduced by the fair market value of any common stock issued during the same year.
The Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements.
106
This page intentionally left blank.
107
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
Citigroup Inc. and Subsidiaries
(UNAUDITED)
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
Cash flows from operating activities of continuing operations
Net income before attribution of noncontrolling interests
$
11,930
$
9,943
Net income attributable to noncontrolling interests
95
117
Citigroup’s net income
$
11,835
$
9,826
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes
(
2
)
(
2
)
Income from continuing operations—excluding noncontrolling interests
$
11,837
$
9,828
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities
of continuing operations
Net loss (gain) on sale of significant disposals
(1)
184
—
Depreciation and amortization
3,270
3,292
Deferred income taxes
227
(
1,574
)
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
8,045
7,516
Goodwill impairment
726
—
Realized gains from sales of investments
(
364
)
(
210
)
Impairment losses on investments and other assets
120
92
Change in trading account assets
(
119,637
)
(
46,456
)
Change in trading account liabilities
26,397
(
12,811
)
Change in brokerage receivables net of brokerage payables
(
2,156
)
7,909
Change in loans held-for-sale (HFS)
312
(
3,211
)
Change in other assets
(
10,345
)
(
4,327
)
Change in other liabilities
(2)
44
(
7,663
)
Other, net
(
12,847
)
3,150
Total adjustments
$
(
106,024
)
$
(
54,293
)
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities of continuing operations
$
(
94,187
)
$
(
44,465
)
Cash flows from investing activities of continuing operations
Change in securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
(
47,285
)
$
59,772
Change in loans
(
53,268
)
(
10,257
)
Purchase of portfolio of consumer loans
—
(
700
)
Proceeds from sales and securitizations of loans
3,743
3,368
Available-for-sale (AFS) debt securities
Purchases of investments
(
209,028
)
(
181,245
)
Proceeds from sales of investments
70,604
40,839
Proceeds from maturities of investments
133,729
164,025
Held-to-maturity (HTM) debt securities
Purchases of investments
(
5,134
)
(
11,878
)
Proceeds from maturities of investments
50,468
17,340
Capital expenditures on premises and equipment and capitalized software
(
4,889
)
(
4,812
)
Proceeds from sales of premises and equipment and repossessed assets
24
201
Other, net
2,084
1,848
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities of continuing operations
$
(
58,952
)
$
78,501
Statement continues on the next page.
108
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
(UNAUDITED) (Continued)
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
Cash flows from financing activities of continuing operations
Dividends paid
$
(
4,021
)
$
(
3,885
)
Issuance of preferred stock
4,690
3,786
Redemption of preferred stock
(
3,500
)
(
5,050
)
Treasury stock acquired
(3)
(
8,750
)
(
1,506
)
Stock tendered for payment of withholding taxes
(
775
)
(
448
)
Change in securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
94,971
270
Issuance of long-term debt
96,296
78,163
Payments and redemptions of long-term debt
(
77,975
)
(
67,529
)
Change in deposits
105,559
1,318
Change in short-term borrowings
6,255
3,883
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities of continuing operations
$
212,750
$
9,002
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash, due from banks and deposits with banks
$
11,917
$
(
876
)
Change in cash, due from banks and deposits with banks
71,528
42,162
Cash, due from banks and deposits with banks at beginning of period
276,532
260,932
Cash, due from banks and deposits with banks at end of period
$
348,060
$
303,094
Cash and due from banks (including segregated cash and other deposits)
$
23,545
$
25,266
Deposits with banks, net of allowance
324,515
277,828
Cash, due from banks and deposits with banks at end of period
$
348,060
$
303,094
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information for continuing operations
Cash paid during the period for income taxes
(4)
$
4,716
$
4,464
Cash paid during the period for interest
60,667
67,152
Non-cash investing activities
(1)(5)
Decrease in net loans associated with divestitures reclassified to HFS
$
1,680
$
—
Transfers to loans HFS (
Other assets
) from loans HFI
3,254
3,861
Non-cash financing activities
(1)
Decrease in deposits associated with divestitures reclassified to HFS
$
6,088
$
—
(1)
See Note 2.
(2)
Includes balances related to the FDIC special assessment (see Note 18 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 10-K) and restructuring charges (see Note 9).
(3)
Balances based on transaction date.
(4)
Includes net cash paid (received) for purchases and sales of nonrefundable, transferable tax credits.
(5)
Operating and finance lease right-of-use assets and lease liabilities represent non-cash investing and financing activities, respectively, and are not included in the non-cash investing activities presented here. See Note 26 for more information and balances as of September 30, 2025.
The Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of these Unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements.
109
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (UNAUDITED)
1.
BASIS OF PRESENTATION, UPDATED ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND ACCOUNTING CHANGES
Basis of Presentation
The accompanying unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements as of September 30, 2025 and for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024 include the accounts of Citigroup Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries.
In the opinion of management, all adjustments, consisting of normal recurring adjustments, necessary for a fair presentation have been reflected. The accompanying unaudited Consolidated Financial Statements should be read in conjunction with the Consolidated Financial Statements and related notes included within Citigroup’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 (2024 Form 10-K), Citigroup’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2025 (First Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q) and Citigroup’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2025 (Second Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q).
Certain financial information that is usually included in annual financial statements prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), but is not required for interim reporting purposes, has been condensed or omitted.
Management must make estimates and assumptions that affect the Consolidated Financial Statements and the related footnote disclosures. While management uses its best judgment, actual results could differ from those estimates.
As noted above, the Notes to these Consolidated Financial Statements are unaudited.
Throughout these Notes, “Citigroup,” “Citi” and “the Company” refer to Citigroup Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries.
Certain reclassifications and updates have been made to the prior periods’ financial statements and notes to conform to the current period’s presentation.
Cash equivalents are defined as those amounts included in
Cash and due from banks
and predominately all of
Deposits with banks
. Cash flows from risk management activities are classified in the same category as the related assets and liabilities. Amounts included in
Cash and due from banks
and
Deposits with banks
approximate fair value.
ACCOUNTING CHANGES
Income Taxes (Topic 740): Improvements to Income Tax Disclosures
In December 2023, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) No. 2023-09,
Income Taxes (Topic 740): Improvements to Income Tax Disclosures
, intended to enhance the transparency and decision usefulness of income tax disclosures. This guidance requires that public business entities disclose on an annual basis a tabular rate reconciliation in eight specific categories disaggregated by nature and for foreign tax effects by each jurisdiction that meets a 5% of pretax income multiplied by the applicable statutory tax rate or greater threshold annually. The eight categories include state and local income taxes, net of federal income tax effect; foreign tax effects; enactment of new tax laws; enactment of new tax credits; effect of cross-border tax laws; valuation allowances; nontaxable items and nondeductible items; and changes in unrecognized tax benefits. Additional disclosures include qualitative description of the state and local jurisdictions that contribute to the majority (greater than 50%) of the effect of the state and local income tax category and explanation of the nature and effect of changes in individual reconciling items. The guidance also requires entities annually to disclose income taxes paid (net of refunds received) disaggregated by federal, state and foreign taxes and by jurisdiction identified based on the same 5% quantitative threshold.
The standard is effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2024. The transition method is prospective with the retrospective method permitted. Citi plans to adopt the ASU for the year ending December 31, 2025.
See Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K for a discussion of 2024 accounting changes.
110
FUTURE ACCOUNTING CHANGES
Accounting for Internal-Use Software Costs
In September 2025, the FASB issued ASU No. 2025-06,
Intangibles—Goodwill and Other—Internal-Use Software (Subtopic 350-40):
Targeted Improvements to the Accounting for Internal-Use Software
, intended to modernize the internal-use software guidance, primarily by eliminating accounting consideration of software project development stages and enhancing the guidance around the “probable-to-complete” threshold in determining when capitalization of internal-use software costs begins. The ASU will be effective for all entities for interim and annual periods beginning after December 15, 2027, with early adoption permitted. Citi is currently assessing the impact and approach toward adopting this ASU.
Derivatives Scope Refinements and Scope Clarification for Share-Based Non-Cash Consideration from a Customer in a Revenue Contract
In September 2025, the FASB issued ASU No. 2025-07,
Derivatives and Hedging (Topic 815) and Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606)
. The amendments in the ASU exclude from derivative accounting certain non-exchange-traded contracts with underlyings that are based on operations or activities specific to one of the parties to the contract. The amendments also clarify that an entity should apply the guidance in Topic 606, including the guidance on non-cash consideration, to a contract with share-based non-cash consideration from a customer for the transfer of goods or services. The transition method is prospective with the modified retrospective method permitted. The amendments will be effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2026, with early adoption permitted. Citi is currently evaluating the impact of the amendments.
Identifying the Acquirer in a Business Combination
In May 2025, the FASB issued ASU No. 2025-03,
Business Combinations (Topic 805) and Consolidation (Topic 810): Determining the Accounting Acquirer in the Acquisition of a Variable Interest Entity
, intended to clarify the guidance for identifying the accounting acquirer when the legal acquiree is a variable interest entity that meets the definition of a business. The revised guidance requires entities to consider the factors in Topic 805 when a business combination involving a VIE is effected primarily by exchanging equity interests in which a VIE is acquired.
The ASU will be effective for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2026, and interim periods within those fiscal years. Citi is currently evaluating the impact of the ASU. Adoption of the ASU is not expected to have a material impact on Citi’s operating results or financial position.
Disaggregation of Income Statement Expenses
In November 2024, the FASB issued ASU No. 2024-03,
Income Statement—Reporting Comprehensive Income—Expense Disaggregation Disclosures (Subtopic 220-40)
,
to improve the disclosures of expenses by requiring public business entities to provide further disaggregation of relevant expense captions (i.e., employee compensation, depreciation, intangible asset amortization) in a separate note to the financial statements, a qualitative description of the amounts remaining in relevant expense captions that are not separately disaggregated quantitatively, and the total amount of selling expenses and, in an annual reporting period, an entity’s definition of selling expenses.
The transition method is prospective with the retrospective method permitted, and the ASU will be effective for Citi for its annual period ending December 31, 2027 and interim periods for the interim period beginning January 1, 2028. Citi is currently evaluating the impact on its disclosures.
111
2.
DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS, SIGNIFICANT DISPOSALS AND OTHER BUSINESS EXITS
Summary of Discontinued Operations
Citi’s results from
Discontinued operations
consisted of residual activities related to the sales of the Egg Banking plc credit card business in 2011 and the German retail banking business in 2008. All
Discontinued operations
results are recorded within
All Other
.
Citi’s
Income (loss) from discontinued operations, net of taxes
,
as well as cash flows from
Discontinued operations
, were not material for the periods presented.
Significant Disposals
As of September 30, 2025, Citi had closed the sales of
nine
consumer banking businesses within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises: Australia closed in the second quarter of 2022, the Philippines closed in the third quarter of 2022, Bahrain, Malaysia and Thailand closed in the fourth quarter of 2022, India and Vietnam closed in the first quarter of 2023, Taiwan closed in the third quarter of 2023 and Indonesia closed in the fourth quarter of 2023.
In the second quarter of 2025, the following transaction was identified as a significant disposal that was recorded within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises, including the assets and liabilities that were reclassified to held-for-sale (HFS) within
Other assets
and
Other liabilities
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet and the
Income (loss) before taxes (benefits)
related to the business.
Agreement to Sell Poland Consumer Banking Business
On May 27, 2025, Citi entered into an agreement to sell its Poland consumer banking business, which is part of
All Other
—Legacy Franchises. The sale, which is subject to regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions, is expected to close by mid-2026. Beginning in the second quarter of 2025, Citi reported the business as HFS. In the second and third quarters of 2025, Citi recognized a pretax loss on sale of approximately $
184
million recorded in
Other revenue
($
155
million after-tax), subject to closing adjustments.
Income before taxes, excluding the pretax loss on sale, for the Poland consumer banking business was as follows:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Income before taxes
$
28
$
41
$
97
$
111
The following assets and liabilities related to the Poland consumer banking business were reclassified to HFS within
Other assets
and
Other liabilities
,
respectively, on the Consolidated Balance Sheet at September 30, 2025:
In millions of dollars
September 30, 2025
Assets
Cash and deposits with banks
(1)
$
4,671
Loans (net of allowance of $
25
at September 30, 2025)
1,679
Other assets
50
Total assets
$
6,400
Liabilities
Deposits
$
6,085
Other liabilities
64
Total liabilities
$
6,149
(1) Includes liquidity resources currently composed of approximately $
4.6
billion of
Deposits with bank
s. This may transfer as cash and securities at time of closing and is primarily recorded in
Markets
.
Citi did not have any other significant disposals as of September 30, 2025.
For a description of the Company’s significant disposal transactions in prior periods and financial impact, see Note 2 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Other Business Exits
Other significant transactions during 2025 included the following:
Agreement to Sell
25
% Equity Stake in Banamex
On September 24, 2025, Citi entered into an agreement to sell an equity stake in Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V. (Banamex), which is part of
All Other
—Legacy Franchises. Under the transaction, a company wholly owned by Fernando Chico Pardo and members of his immediate family will acquire
25
% (approximately
520
million shares) of Banamex’s outstanding common shares at a fixed price-to-book value of
0.80
times the local GAAP book value of the shares at closing. The transaction is subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals in Mexico.
112
3.
REPORTABLE BUSINESS SEGMENTS AND ALL OTHER
The reportable business segments (segments) and
All Other
reflect how the CEO, who is the chief operating decision maker (CODM), manages the Company, including allocating resources and measuring performance.
Citi is organized into
five
reportable business segments:
Services
,
Markets
,
Banking
,
Wealth
and
U.S. Personal Banking (USPB)
, with the remaining operations recorded in
All Other
, which includes activities not assigned to a specific segment, as well as discontinued operations. See segment details in Note 3 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Revenues and expenses directly associated with each segment or line of business are included in determining respective operating results. Other revenues and expenses that are attributable to a particular segment or
All Other
are generally allocated from Corporate/Other within
All Other
based on respective net revenues, non-interest expenses or other relevant measures.
Revenues and expenses from transactions with other segments and
All Other
are treated as transactions with external parties for purposes of segment disclosures, while funding charges paid by segments and funding credits received by Corporate Treasury within
All Other
are included in net interest income. The Company includes intersegment eliminations from Corporate/Other within
All Other
to reconcile the segment results to Citi’s consolidated results.
The accounting policies of these segments and
All Other
are the same as those disclosed in Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
113
The following tables present certain information regarding the Company’s continuing operations by reportable business segment and
All Other
on a managed basis that excludes divestiture-related impacts. The CODM uses
Income (loss) from continuing operations
as the performance measure, to evaluate the results of each reportable business segment and
All Other
by comparing to and monitoring against budget and prior-year results. This information is used to allocate resources to each of the segments and
All Other
and to make operational decisions when managing the Company, such as whether to reinvest profits or to return capital to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases.
Three Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars, except identifiable assets,
average loans and average deposits in billions
Services
Markets
Banking
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Net interest income
$
3,823
$
3,435
$
2,251
$
1,405
$
562
$
527
Non-interest revenue
1,540
1,580
3,312
3,412
1,570
1,070
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
5,363
$
5,015
$
5,563
$
4,817
$
2,132
$
1,597
Compensation expense
(2)
$
647
$
584
$
972
$
854
$
691
$
676
Non-compensation expense
(1)(3)
2,060
1,991
2,519
2,485
448
440
Total operating expense
(1)
$
2,707
$
2,575
$
3,491
$
3,339
$
1,139
$
1,116
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
$
61
$
127
$
32
$
141
$
157
$
177
Provision (benefits) for income taxes
776
630
457
248
201
68
Income (loss) from continuing operations
1,819
1,683
1,583
1,089
635
236
Identifiable assets
(September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024)
$
627
$
584
$
1,182
$
949
$
141
$
143
Average loans
94
87
147
119
81
88
Average deposits
893
825
20
19
1
1
In millions of dollars, except identifiable assets,
average loans and average deposits in billions
Wealth
USPB
2025
2024
2025
2024
Net interest income
$
1,332
$
1,233
$
5,694
$
5,293
Non-interest revenue
832
762
(
363
)
(
329
)
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
2,164
$
1,995
$
5,331
$
4,964
Compensation expense
(2)
$
633
$
634
$
531
$
544
Non-compensation expense
(1)(3)
1,021
960
1,834
1,832
Total operating expense
(1)
$
1,654
$
1,594
$
2,365
$
2,376
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
$
30
$
33
$
1,842
$
1,909
Provision (benefits) for income taxes
106
85
266
157
Income (loss) from continuing operations
374
283
858
522
Identifiable assets
(September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024)
$
232
$
224
$
252
$
252
Average loans
151
150
220
210
Average deposits
315
316
90
85
In millions of dollars, except identifiable assets,
average loans and average deposits in billions
All Other
(4)
Reconciling Items
(4)
Total Citi
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Net interest income
$
1,278
$
1,469
$
—
$
—
$
14,940
$
13,362
Non-interest revenue
257
351
2
1
7,150
6,847
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
1,535
$
1,820
$
2
$
1
$
22,090
$
20,209
Total operating expense
(1)
$
2,168
$
2,077
$
766
$
67
$
14,290
$
13,144
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
$
331
$
289
$
(
3
)
$
(
1
)
$
2,450
$
2,675
Provision (benefits) for income taxes
(
263
)
(
52
)
16
(
20
)
1,559
1,116
Income (loss) from continuing operations
(
701
)
(
494
)
(
777
)
(
45
)
3,791
3,274
Identifiable assets
(September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024)
$
208
$
201
$
2,642
$
2,353
Average loans
32
33
725
687
Average deposits
63
65
1,382
1,311
114
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars, except average loans and average deposits in billions
Services
Markets
Banking
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Net interest income
$
10,951
$
9,977
$
7,166
$
5,149
$
1,583
$
1,636
Non-interest revenue
4,363
4,476
10,262
10,111
4,422
3,324
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
15,314
$
14,453
$
17,428
$
15,260
$
6,005
$
4,960
Compensation expense
(2)
$
1,920
$
1,780
$
2,982
$
2,728
$
2,018
$
2,095
Non-compensation expense
(1)(3)
6,050
6,187
7,486
7,300
1,292
1,331
Total operating expense
(1)
$
7,970
$
7,967
$
10,468
$
10,028
$
3,310
$
3,426
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
$
465
$
164
$
341
$
329
$
544
$
16
Provision (benefits) for income taxes
2,002
1,626
1,492
924
513
346
Income (loss) from continuing operations
4,877
4,696
5,127
3,979
1,638
1,172
Average loans
$
92
$
84
$
137
$
119
$
82
$
89
Average deposits
859
812
18
23
—
1
In millions of dollars, except average loans and average deposits in billions
Wealth
USPB
2025
2024
2025
2024
Net interest income
$
3,884
$
3,261
$
16,706
$
15,622
Non-interest revenue
2,542
2,228
(
1,028
)
(
717
)
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
6,426
$
5,489
$
15,678
$
14,905
Compensation expense
(2)
$
1,921
$
1,907
$
1,622
$
1,661
Non-compensation expense
(1)(3)
2,930
2,858
5,566
5,520
Total operating expense
(1)
$
4,851
$
4,765
$
7,188
$
7,181
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
$
102
$
(
146
)
$
5,538
$
6,428
Provision (benefits) for income taxes
321
202
700
306
Income (loss) from continuing operations
1,152
668
2,252
990
Average loans
$
149
$
150
$
218
$
207
Average deposits
311
316
90
93
In millions of dollars, except average loans and average deposits in billions
All Other
(4)
Reconciling Items
(4)
Total Citi
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Net interest income
$
3,837
$
4,717
$
—
$
—
$
44,127
$
40,362
Non-interest revenue
841
1,451
(
175
)
22
21,227
20,895
Total revenues, net of interest expense
(1)
$
4,678
$
6,168
$
(
175
)
$
22
$
65,354
$
61,257
Total operating expense
(1)
$
6,668
$
6,868
$
837
$
262
$
41,292
$
40,497
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims
$
1,064
$
718
$
(
9
)
$
7
$
8,045
$
7,516
Provision (benefits) for income taxes
(
912
)
(
29
)
(
31
)
(
76
)
4,085
3,299
Income (loss) from continuing operations
(
2,142
)
(
1,389
)
(
972
)
(
171
)
11,932
9,945
Average loans
$
31
$
33
$
709
$
682
Average deposits
65
71
1,343
1,316
(1) Effective January 1, 2025, certain transaction processing fees paid by Citi, primarily to credit card networks, reported within
USPB
,
Services
,
Wealth
and
All Other
—Legacy Franchises (Mexico Consumer/SBMM and Asia Consumer), which were previously presented within
Other operating
expenses, are presented as contra-revenue within
Commissions and fees
reported in
Non-interest revenue
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
(2) Excludes allocations of
Compensation and benefits
expense related to services provided by Corporate/Other within
All Other
, which are allocated from
All Other
to each segment, as applicable, through the non-compensation expense line.
(3) Non-compensation expense for each segment includes allocated compensation and benefits-related costs from Corporate/Other within
All Other
to the respective segments, and expenses related to
Technology/communication
,
Transactional and product servicing
,
Premises and equipment
,
Professional services
,
Advertising and marketing
and
Other operating
(all of which include certain overhead expenses).
(4) Segment results are presented on a managed basis that excludes divestiture-related impacts related to (i) Citi’s divestitures of its Asia Consumer businesses and (ii) the planned IPO of Banamex, within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises. Adjustments are included in Legacy Franchises within
All Other
and are reflected in the reconciliations above to arrive at Citi’s reported results in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
115
The following table presents a reconciliation of total Citigroup income from continuing operations as reported:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
(1)
2024
(2)
2025
(3)
2024
(4)
Total reportable business segments and
All Other
—income from continuing operations
(5)
$
4,568
$
3,319
$
12,904
$
10,116
Divestiture-related impact on:
Total revenues, net of interest expense
2
1
(
175
)
22
Total operating expenses
766
67
837
262
Provision (release) for credit losses
(
3
)
(
1
)
(
9
)
7
Provision (benefits) for income taxes
16
(
20
)
(
31
)
(
76
)
Income from continuing operations
$
3,791
$
3,274
$
11,932
$
9,945
(1) The three months ended September 30, 2025 includes approximately $
766
million in operating expenses (approximately $
744
million after-tax), driven by a goodwill impairment charge in Mexico ($
726
million ($
714
million after-tax)) and separation costs in Mexico.
(2) The three months ended September 30, 2024 includes approximately $
67
million in operating expenses (approximately $
46
million after-tax), primarily driven by separation costs in Mexico and severance costs in the Asia exit markets. For additional information, see Citi’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2024.
(3) The nine months ended September 30, 2025 includes (i) an approximate $
186
million loss recorded in revenue (approximately $
157
million after-tax), driven by the announced sale of the Poland consumer banking business; and (ii) approximately $
837
million in operating expenses (approximately $
793
million after-tax), driven by a goodwill impairment charge in Mexico ($
726
million ($
714
million after-tax)) and separation costs in Mexico and severance costs in the Asia exit markets (approximately $
89
million (approximately $
62
million after-tax)).
(4) The nine months ended September 30, 2024 includes approximately $
262
million in operating expenses (approximately $
181
million after-tax), primarily related to separation costs in Mexico and severance costs in the Asia exit markets. For additional information, see Citi’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2024.
(5) Reportable business segment results are presented on a managed basis that excludes divestiture-related impacts related to (i) Citi’s divestitures of its Asia Consumer businesses and (ii) the planned IPO of Banamex, within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises. Adjustments are included in Legacy Franchises within
All Other
and are reflected in the reconciliations above to arrive at Citi’s reported results in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
116
4.
INTEREST INCOME AND EXPENSE
Interest income
and
Interest expense
consisted of the following:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Interest income
Consumer loans
$
10,150
$
10,051
$
29,679
$
29,629
Corporate loans
5,243
5,754
15,404
17,200
Loan interest, including fees
$
15,393
$
15,805
$
45,083
$
46,829
Deposits with banks
3,435
3,050
9,479
8,407
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
7,003
7,293
19,915
22,326
Investments, including dividends
4,170
4,683
12,542
14,353
Trading account assets
(1)
5,289
4,451
15,480
13,082
Other interest-bearing assets
(2)
1,400
1,174
3,716
3,669
Total interest income
$
36,690
$
36,456
$
106,215
$
108,666
Interest expense
Deposits
$
9,163
$
10,319
$
26,286
$
30,965
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
7,356
7,328
20,550
21,256
Trading account liabilities
(1)
755
792
2,260
2,417
Short-term borrowings and other interest-bearing liabilities
(3)
1,933
2,009
5,459
5,873
Long-term debt
2,543
2,646
7,533
7,793
Total interest expense
$
21,750
$
23,094
$
62,088
$
68,304
Net interest income
$
14,940
$
13,362
$
44,127
$
40,362
Provision for credit losses on loans
2,259
2,382
7,297
7,163
Net interest income after provision for credit losses on loans
$
12,681
$
10,980
$
36,830
$
33,199
(1)
Interest expense on
Trading account liabilities
of
Services
,
Markets
and
Banking
is reported as a reduction of
Interest income
.
Interest income
and
Interest expense
on cash collateral positions are reported in interest on
Trading account assets
and
Trading account liabilities
, respectively.
(2)
Includes assets from businesses held-for-sale (see Note 2) and
Brokerage receivables
.
(3)
Includes liabilities from businesses held-for-sale (see Note 2) and
Brokerage payables
.
117
5.
COMMISSIONS AND FEES; ADMINISTRATION AND OTHER FIDUCIARY FEES
Commissions and Fees
The primary components of
Commissions and fees
revenue are investment banking fees, brokerage commissions, credit card and bank card income, deposit-related fees and transactional service fees. See Note 3 for segment results and Note 5 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K for additional information on Citi’s commissions and fees.
The following table presents
Commissions and fees
revenue:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Investment banking
(1)
$
1,128
$
944
$
3,171
$
2,692
Brokerage commissions
(2)
730
653
2,135
1,895
Credit and bank card income
(3)
Interchange fees
(4)
3,055
2,946
8,930
8,772
Card-related loan fees
187
162
529
439
Card rewards and partner payments
(
3,384
)
(
3,187
)
(
9,845
)
(
9,292
)
Deposit-related fees
(5)
352
324
1,018
1,005
Transactional service fees
(6)
377
344
1,112
1,043
Corporate finance
(7)
177
164
521
512
Insurance distribution revenue
(8)
80
76
240
238
Insurance premiums
(9)
23
23
76
72
Loan servicing
21
19
68
54
Other
142
121
385
350
Total
(10)
$
2,888
$
2,589
$
8,340
$
7,780
(1) Investment banking fees are earned primarily by
Banking
and
Markets.
For the periods presented, the contract liability amount was negligible.
(2) Brokerage commissions are earned primarily by
Markets
and
Wealth
. The Company recognized $
46
million and $
137
million of revenue related to variable consideration for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, and $
43
million and $
129
million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, respectively. These amounts primarily relate to performance obligations satisfied in prior periods.
(3) Credit card and bank card income is earned primarily by
USPB
and
Services
.
(4) See footnote 1 to the Consolidated Statement of Income above for the description of a change in presentation. Interchange fees are presented net of certain transaction processing fees paid by Citi, primarily to credit card networks, for the periods presented.
(5) Deposit-related fees are earned primarily by
Services
and
USPB
.
(6) Transactional service fees are earned primarily by
Services.
(7) Consists primarily of fees earned from structuring and underwriting loan syndications or related financing activity earned primarily by
Banking
. This activity is accounted for under ASC 310.
(8) Insurance distribution revenue is earned primarily by
Wealth
and Legacy Franchises within
All Other.
(9)
Insurance premiums are earned primarily by Legacy Franchises within
All Other
.
(10)
Commissions and fees
include $(
3.0
) billion and $(
8.6
) billion not accounted for under ASC 606,
Revenue from Contracts with Customers
, for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, and $(
2.8
) billion and $(
8.2
) billion for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, respectively. Amounts reported in
Commissions and fees
accounted for under other guidance primarily include card-related loan fees, card reward programs and certain partner payments, corporate finance fees, insurance premiums and loan servicing fees.
Administration and Other Fiduciary Fees
Administration and other fiduciary fees
revenue is primarily composed of custody fees and fiduciary fees. See Note 3 for segment results and Note 5 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K for additional information on Citi’s administration and other fiduciary fees.
The following table presents
Administration and other fiduciary fees
revenue:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Custody fees
(1)
$
551
$
520
$
1,597
$
1,562
Fiduciary fees
(2)
431
403
1,286
1,183
Guarantee fees
135
136
402
397
Total administration and other fiduciary fees
(3)
$
1,117
$
1,059
$
3,285
$
3,142
(1) Custody fees are earned primarily by
Services
.
(2) Fiduciary fees are earned primarily by
Wealth
and Legacy Franchises within
All Other
.
(3)
Administration and other fiduciary fees
include $
135
million and $
136
million for the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, and $
402
million and $
397
million for the nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively, that are not accounted for under ASC 606,
Revenue from Contracts with Customers.
These generally include guarantee fees.
118
6.
PRINCIPAL TRANSACTIONS
The table below consists of realized and unrealized gains and losses presented in
Principal transactions
. Activities include revenues from fixed income, equities, credit and commodities products and foreign exchange transactions that are managed on a portfolio basis and characterized below based on the primary risk managed by each trading desk (as such, the trading desks can be periodically reorganized and thus the risk categories).
Principal transactions
include CVA (credit valuation adjustments) and FVA (funding valuation adjustments) on over-the-counter derivatives. These adjustments are discussed further in Note 23.
For transactions that are denominated in a currency other than the functional currency, including transactions denominated in the local currencies of foreign operations that use the U.S. dollar as their functional currency, the effects of changes in exchange rates are included in
Principal transactions
, along with the related effects of any qualifying and economic hedges.
In certain transactions, Citi incurs fees and presents these fees paid to third parties in operating expenses, while others are presented net in
Principal transactions
.
Not included in the table below is the impact of net interest income related to trading activities, which is an integral part of the profitability of trading activities (see Note 4 for information about net interest income related to trading activities).
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Interest rate risks
(1)(2)
$
322
$
615
$
1,465
$
1,625
Foreign exchange risks
(2)(3)
1,545
1,238
4,572
3,877
Equity risks
(4)(5)
807
596
1,997
1,840
Commodity and other risks
(6)
219
383
850
1,007
Credit products and risks
(7)
(
121
)
3
(
99
)
307
Total
$
2,772
$
2,835
$
8,785
$
8,656
(1) Includes revenues from government securities, municipal securities, mortgage securities and other debt instruments. Also includes spot and forward trading of currencies and exchange-traded and over-the-counter (OTC) currency options, options on fixed income securities, interest rate swaps, currency swaps, swap options, caps and floors, financial futures, OTC options and forward contracts on fixed income securities.
(2) Effective July 1, 2025, gains and losses on certain
economic and qualifying hedging derivatives and foreign currency transaction
s
, which were previously presented within
Other revenue
, are presented within
Principal transactions
. Prior periods were conformed to reflect this change in presentation.
(3) Includes revenues from foreign exchange spot, forward, option and swap contracts, as well as foreign currency translation gains and losses.
(4) Includes revenues from common, preferred and convertible preferred stock, convertible corporate debt, equity-linked notes and exchange-traded and OTC equity options and warrants.
(5) The nine months ended September 30, 2024 include an approximate $
400
million episodic gain related to the Visa B exchange.
(6) Primarily includes revenues from crude oil, refined oil products, natural gas, metals and other commodities trades.
(7) Includes revenues from corporate debt, secondary trading loans, mortgage securities, single name and index credit default swaps, and structured credit products.
119
7.
INCENTIVE PLANS
For information on Citi’s incentive plans, see Note 7 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
8.
RETIREMENT BENEFITS
For additional information on Citi’s retirement benefits, see Note 8 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Citigroup remeasures its significant pension and postretirement benefits plans’ obligations and assets by updating plan actuarial assumptions when certain conditions are met to trigger interim remeasurement. No interim remeasurement occurred for the first, second and third quarters of 2025.
Net Expense (Benefit)
The following table summarizes the components of net expense (benefit) recognized in the Consolidated Statement of Income for the Company’s pension and postretirement benefit plans for Significant Plans and All Other Plans. Service cost is reported in
Compensation and benefits
expenses and all other components of the net periodic benefit cost are reported in
Other operating
expenses in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
Three Months Ended September 30,
Pension plans
Postretirement benefit plans
U.S. plans
Non-U.S. plans
U.S. plans
Non-U.S. plans
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Service cost
$
—
$
—
$
28
$
28
$
—
$
—
$
1
$
—
Interest cost on benefit obligation
119
119
108
105
4
4
30
25
Expected return on assets
(
150
)
(
150
)
(
96
)
(
80
)
(
3
)
(
3
)
(
19
)
(
19
)
Amortization of unrecognized:
Prior service cost (benefit)
—
—
(
1
)
(
1
)
(
2
)
(
2
)
(
2
)
(
1
)
Net actuarial loss (gain)
49
43
17
18
(
3
)
(
2
)
3
3
Settlement loss
(1)
—
—
—
4
—
—
—
—
Total net expense (benefit)
$
18
$
12
$
56
$
74
$
(
4
)
$
(
3
)
$
13
$
8
Nine Months Ended September 30,
Pension plans
Postretirement benefit plans
U.S. plans
Non-U.S. plans
U.S. plans
Non-U.S. plans
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Service cost
$
—
$
—
$
82
$
87
$
—
$
—
$
1
$
1
Interest cost on benefit obligation
356
355
314
323
11
12
87
82
Expected return on assets
(
451
)
(
453
)
(
278
)
(
249
)
(
8
)
(
8
)
(
54
)
(
61
)
Amortization of unrecognized:
Prior service cost (benefit)
1
1
(
3
)
(
3
)
(
7
)
(
7
)
(
5
)
(
5
)
Net actuarial loss (gain)
147
134
49
61
(
9
)
(
7
)
8
8
Settlement loss
(1)
—
—
—
6
—
—
—
—
Total net expense (benefit)
$
53
$
37
$
164
$
225
$
(
13
)
$
(
10
)
$
37
$
25
(1)
Settlement loss relates to divestiture activities.
Contributions
The following table summarizes the Company’s expected contributions for 2025 and the actual contributions made in 2024:
Pension plans
Postretirement benefit plans
U.S. plans
(1)
Non-U.S. plans
(2)
U.S. plans
Non-U.S. plans
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Company contributions
(3)
expected to be made during the year, and made during the prior year
$
63
$
59
$
93
$
763
$
5
$
8
$
11
$
9
(1)
The U.S. plans include benefits paid directly by the Company for the nonqualified pension plans.
(2)
The Company made a discretionary contribution of approximately $
600
million to a pension plan in Mexico Consumer/SBMM during the fourth quarter of 2024.
(3)
Company contributions are composed of cash contributions made to the plans and benefits paid directly by the Company.
120
9.
RESTRUCTURING
As previously disclosed, Citi is pursuing various initiatives to simplify the Company and further align its organizational structure with its business strategy. As part of its overall simplification initiatives, in the fourth quarter of 2023, Citi eliminated the previous
Institutional Clients Group
and
Personal Banking and Wealth Management
layers, exited certain institutional business lines, and consolidated its regional structure, creating
one
international group, while centralizing client capabilities and streamlining its global staff functions.
Citi has recorded net restructuring charges of approximately $
1.030
billion program to date.
Restructuring charges are recorded as a separate line item within
Operating expenses
in the Company’s Consolidated Statement of Income. These charges were included within
All Other
—Corporate/Other.
The following costs associated with these initiatives are included in restructuring charges:
•
Personnel costs: severance costs associated with actual headcount reductions (as well as those that were probable and could be reasonably estimated)
•
Other: costs associated with contract terminations and other direct costs associated with the restructuring, including asset write-downs (non-cash write-downs of capitalized software, which are included in
Premises and equipment
related to exited businesses)
The following table is a rollforward of the liability related to the restructuring charges:
In millions of dollars
Personnel costs
Other
Total
Beginning balance at January 1, 2023
$
—
$
—
$
—
Restructuring charges
$
687
$
94
$
781
Change in estimate
(1)
—
—
—
Net restructuring charges
$
687
$
94
$
781
Payments and utilization
$
—
$
(
69
)
$
(
69
)
Foreign exchange
—
—
—
Balance at December 31, 2023
$
687
$
25
$
712
Restructuring charges
$
354
$
54
$
408
Change in estimate
(1)(2)
(
146
)
(
3
)
(
149
)
Net restructuring charges
$
208
$
51
$
259
Payments and utilization
$
(
860
)
$
(
76
)
$
(
936
)
Foreign exchange
7
—
7
Balance at December 31, 2024
$
42
$
—
$
42
Restructuring charges
$
1
$
—
$
1
Change in estimate
(1)
(
4
)
—
(
4
)
Net restructuring charges
$
(
3
)
$
—
$
(
3
)
Payments and utilization
$
(
13
)
$
—
$
(
13
)
Foreign exchange
(
6
)
—
(
6
)
Balance at March 31, 2025
$
20
$
—
$
20
Restructuring charges
$
—
$
—
$
—
Change in estimate
(1)
(
2
)
—
(
2
)
Net restructuring charges
$
(
2
)
$
—
$
(
2
)
Payments and utilization
$
(
8
)
$
—
$
(
8
)
Foreign exchange
1
—
1
Balance at June 30, 2025
$
11
$
—
$
11
Restructuring charges
$
—
$
—
$
—
Change in estimate
(1)
(
5
)
—
(
5
)
Net restructuring charges
$
(
5
)
$
—
$
(
5
)
Payments and utilization
$
(
2
)
$
—
$
(
2
)
Foreign exchange
—
—
—
Balance at September 30, 2025
$
4
$
—
$
4
(1) Revisions primarily relate to higher-than-anticipated redeployments of displaced employees to other positions within the Company, job function releveling and employee attrition.
(2) Revisions primarily relate to lower-than-anticipated costs associated with contract terminations.
121
10.
EARNINGS PER SHARE
The following table reconciles the income and share data used in the basic and diluted earnings per share (EPS) computations:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars, except per share amounts
2025
2024
2025
2024
Earnings per common share
Income from continuing operations before attribution of noncontrolling interests
$
3,791
$
3,274
$
11,932
$
9,945
Less: Noncontrolling interests from continuing operations
38
35
95
117
Net income from continuing operations (for EPS purposes)
$
3,753
$
3,239
$
11,837
$
9,828
Loss from discontinued operations, net of taxes
(
1
)
(
1
)
(
2
)
(
2
)
Citigroup’s net income
$
3,752
$
3,238
$
11,835
$
9,826
Less: Preferred dividends
274
277
830
798
Net income available to common shareholders
$
3,478
$
2,961
$
11,005
$
9,028
Less: Dividends and undistributed earnings allocated to employee restricted and deferred shares with rights to dividends, and other relevant items
(1)
, applicable to basic EPS
40
56
133
133
Net income allocated to common shareholders for basic EPS
$
3,438
$
2,905
$
10,872
$
8,895
Weighted-average common shares outstanding applicable to basic EPS
(in millions)
1,820.3
1,899.9
1,851.7
1,906.0
Basic earnings per share
Income from continuing operations
$
1.89
$
1.53
$
5.87
$
4.67
Discontinued operations
—
—
—
—
Net income per share—basic
(2)
$
1.89
$
1.53
$
5.87
$
4.67
Diluted earnings per share
Net income allocated to common shareholders for basic EPS
$
3,438
$
2,905
$
10,872
$
8,895
Add back: Dividends allocated to employee restricted and deferred shares with rights to dividends that are forfeitable
20
20
56
54
Net income allocated to common shareholders for diluted EPS
$
3,458
$
2,925
$
10,928
$
8,949
Weighted-average common shares outstanding applicable to basic EPS
(in millions)
1,820.3
1,899.9
1,851.7
1,906.0
Effect of dilutive securities
(3)
Other employee plans
42.3
40.4
40.1
37.1
Adjusted weighted-average common shares outstanding applicable to diluted EPS
(in millions)
1,862.6
1,940.3
1,891.8
1,943.1
Diluted earnings per share
Income from continuing operations
$
1.86
$
1.51
$
5.78
$
4.61
Discontinued operations
—
—
—
—
Net income per share—diluted
(2)
$
1.86
$
1.51
$
5.78
$
4.61
(1)
The total for this line includes dividends and undistributed earnings ($
40
million combined for 3Q25) allocated to employee restricted and deferred shares with rights to dividends.
(2)
Due to rounding, earnings per share on continuing operations and discontinued operations may not sum to earnings per share on net income.
(3) During the nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, there were no weighted-average options outstanding.
122
11.
SECURITIES BORROWED, LOANED AND SUBJECT TO REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS
For additional information on the Company’s resale and repurchase agreements and securities borrowing and lending agreements, see Note 12 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
, at their respective carrying values, consisted of the following:
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31, 2024
Securities purchased under agreements to resell
$
242,379
$
192,950
Securities borrowed
78,976
81,115
Total, net
(1)
$
321,355
$
274,065
Allowance for credit losses on securities purchased and borrowed
(2)
(
8
)
(
3
)
Total, net of allowance
$
321,347
$
274,062
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
, at their respective carrying values, consisted of the following:
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31, 2024
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase
$
327,517
$
239,767
Securities loaned
22,209
14,988
Total, net
(1)
$
349,726
$
254,755
(1) The above tables do not include securities-for-securities lending transactions of $
4.9
billion and $
5.2
billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, where the Company acts as lender and receives securities that can be sold or pledged as collateral. In these transactions, the Company recognizes the securities received at fair value within
Other assets
and the obligation to return those securities as a liability within
Brokerage payables
.
(2) See Note 15.
123
The following tables present the gross and net resale and repurchase agreements and securities borrowing and lending agreements and the related offsetting amounts permitted under ASC 210-20-45. The tables also include amounts related to financial instruments that are not permitted to be offset under ASC 210-20-45, but would be eligible for offsetting to the extent that an event of default has occurred and a legal opinion supporting enforceability of the offsetting rights has been obtained. Remaining exposures continue to be secured by financial collateral, but the Company may not have sought or been able to obtain a legal opinion evidencing enforceability of the offsetting right.
As of September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Gross amounts
of recognized
assets
Gross amounts
offset on the
Consolidated
Balance Sheet
(1)(2)
Net amounts of
assets included on
the Consolidated
Balance Sheet
Amounts not offset on the Consolidated Balance
Sheet but eligible for
offsetting upon
counterparty default
(2)(3)
Net
amounts
(4)
Securities purchased under agreements to resell
$
644,654
$
402,275
$
242,379
$
236,767
$
5,612
Securities borrowed
109,103
30,127
78,976
30,011
48,965
Total
$
753,757
$
432,402
$
321,355
$
266,778
$
54,577
In millions of dollars
Gross amounts
of recognized
liabilities
Gross amounts
offset on the
Consolidated
Balance Sheet
(1)(2)
Net amounts of
liabilities included on
the Consolidated
Balance Sheet
Amounts not offset on the
Consolidated Balance
Sheet but eligible for
offsetting upon
counterparty default
(2)(3)
Net amounts
(4)
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase
$
729,792
$
402,275
$
327,517
$
274,754
$
52,763
Securities loaned
52,336
30,127
22,209
19,368
2,841
Total
$
782,128
$
432,402
$
349,726
$
294,122
$
55,604
As of December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Gross amounts
of recognized
assets
Gross amounts
offset on the
Consolidated
Balance Sheet
(1)
Net amounts of
assets included on
the Consolidated
Balance Sheet
Amounts not offset on the
Consolidated Balance
Sheet but eligible for
offsetting upon
counterparty default
(3)
Net
amounts
(4)
Securities purchased under agreements to resell
$
516,722
$
323,772
$
192,950
$
186,121
$
6,829
Securities borrowed
100,442
19,327
81,115
22,228
58,887
Total
$
617,164
$
343,099
$
274,065
$
208,349
$
65,716
In millions of dollars
Gross amounts
of recognized
liabilities
Gross amounts
offset on the
Consolidated
Balance Sheet
(1)
Net amounts of
liabilities included on
the Consolidated
Balance Sheet
Amounts not offset on the
Consolidated Balance
Sheet but eligible for
offsetting upon
counterparty default
(3)
Net
amounts
(4)
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase
$
563,539
$
323,772
$
239,767
$
193,714
$
46,053
Securities loaned
34,315
19,327
14,988
12,317
2,671
Total
$
597,854
$
343,099
$
254,755
$
206,031
$
48,724
(1)
Includes financial instruments subject to enforceable master netting agreements that are permitted to be offset under ASC 210-20-45.
(2)
Beginning January 1, 2025, excludes amounts relating to accrued interest. Accrued interest receivable on Securities purchased under agreements to resell (reverse repos) is presented in
Other assets
and accrued interest payable on Securities sold under agreements to repurchase (repos) is presented in
Other liabilities
.
(3)
Includes financial instruments subject to enforceable master netting agreements that are not permitted to be offset under ASC 210-20-45, but would be eligible for offsetting to the extent that an event of default has occurred and a legal opinion supporting enforceability of the offsetting right has been obtained.
(4)
Remaining exposures continue to be secured by financial collateral, but the Company may not have sought or been able to obtain a legal opinion evidencing enforceability of the offsetting right.
124
The following tables present the gross amounts of liabilities associated with repurchase agreements and securities lending agreements by remaining contractual maturity:
As of September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Open and overnight
Up to 30 days
31–90 days
Greater than 90 days
Total
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase
$
385,121
$
201,773
$
68,688
$
74,210
$
729,792
Securities loaned
40,317
525
2,143
9,351
52,336
Total
$
425,438
$
202,298
$
70,831
$
83,561
$
782,128
As of December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Open and overnight
Up to 30 days
31–90 days
Greater than 90 days
Total
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase
$
299,527
$
154,036
$
46,635
$
63,341
$
563,539
Securities loaned
25,898
213
1,007
7,197
34,315
Total
$
325,425
$
154,249
$
47,642
$
70,538
$
597,854
The following tables present the gross amounts of liabilities associated with repurchase agreements and securities lending agreements by class of underlying collateral:
As of September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Repurchase agreements
Securities lending agreements
Total
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
356,299
$
—
$
356,299
State and municipal securities
171
26
197
Foreign government securities
204,406
319
204,725
Corporate bonds
24,963
652
25,615
Equity securities
28,664
51,137
79,801
Mortgage-backed securities
108,490
—
108,490
Asset-backed securities
5,470
—
5,470
Other
1,329
202
1,531
Total
$
729,792
$
52,336
$
782,128
As of December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Repurchase agreements
Securities lending agreements
Total
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
324,233
$
40
$
324,273
State and municipal securities
183
—
183
Foreign government securities
132,123
1,069
133,192
Corporate bonds
17,467
330
17,797
Equity securities
18,498
32,837
51,335
Mortgage-backed securities
65,279
—
65,279
Asset-backed securities
2,609
23
2,632
Other
3,147
16
3,163
Total
$
563,539
$
34,315
$
597,854
125
12.
BROKERAGE RECEIVABLES AND BROKERAGE PAYABLES
The Company has receivables and payables for financial instruments sold to and purchased from brokers, dealers and customers, which arise in the ordinary course of business.
For additional information on these receivables and payables, see Note 13 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Brokerage receivables
and
Brokerage payables
consisted of the following:
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31, 2024
Receivables from customers
$
23,747
$
18,512
Receivables from brokers, dealers and clearing organizations
52,245
32,329
Total brokerage receivables
(1)
$
75,992
$
50,841
Payables to customers
$
65,342
$
51,993
Payables to brokers, dealers and clearing organizations
24,254
14,608
Total brokerage payables
(1)
$
89,596
$
66,601
(1) Includes brokerage receivables and payables recorded by Citi’s broker-dealer entities that are accounted for in accordance with the AICPA Accounting Guide for Brokers and Dealers in Securities as codified in ASC 940-320.
126
13.
INVESTMENTS
For additional information regarding Citi’s investment portfolios, including evaluating investments for impairment, see Note 14 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The following table presents Citi’s investments by category:
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31, 2024
Debt securities available-for-sale (AFS)
$
246,227
$
226,876
Debt securities held-to-maturity (HTM)
(1)
197,092
242,382
Marketable equity securities carried at fair value
(2)
202
151
Non-marketable equity securities carried at fair value
(2)(3)
482
427
Non-marketable equity securities measured using the measurement alternative
(4)
1,545
1,574
Non-marketable equity securities carried at cost
(5)
5,184
5,247
Total investments
(6)
$
450,732
$
476,657
(1)
Carried at adjusted amortized cost basis, net of any ACL.
(2)
Unrealized gains and losses are recognized in earnings.
(3)
Includes $
34
million and $
23
million of investments in funds for which the fair values are estimated using the net asset value of the Company’s ownership interest in the funds at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(4)
Impairment losses and adjustments to the carrying value as a result of observable price changes are recognized in earnings. See “Non-Marketable Equity Securities Not Carried at Fair Value” below.
(5) Represents shares issued by the Federal Reserve Bank, Federal Home Loan Banks and certain exchanges of which Citigroup is a member.
(6) Not included in the balances above is approximately $
2
billion of accrued interest receivable at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, which is included in
Other assets
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. The Company does not recognize an allowance for credit losses on accrued interest receivable for AFS and HTM debt securities, consistent with its non-accrual policy, which results in timely write-off of accrued interest. The Company did not reverse through interest income any accrued interest receivables for the quarters ended September 30, 2025 and 2024.
The following table presents interest and dividend income on investments:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Taxable interest
$
4,033
$
4,513
$
12,076
$
13,841
Interest exempt from U.S. federal income tax
65
78
220
239
Dividend income
72
92
246
273
Total interest and dividend income on investments
$
4,170
$
4,683
$
12,542
$
14,353
The following table presents realized gains and losses on the sales of investments, which exclude impairment losses:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Gross realized investment gains
$
120
$
108
$
406
$
394
Gross realized investment losses
(
15
)
(
36
)
(
42
)
(
184
)
Net realized gains on sales of investments
$
105
$
72
$
364
$
210
127
Debt Securities Available-for-Sale
The amortized cost and fair value of AFS debt securities were as follows:
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Amortized
cost
Gross
unrealized
gains
Gross
unrealized
losses
Allowance for credit losses
Fair
value
Amortized
cost
Gross
unrealized
gains
Gross
unrealized
losses
Allowance for credit losses
Fair
value
Debt securities AFS
Mortgage-backed securities
(1)
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
(2)
$
36,360
$
76
$
763
$
—
$
35,673
$
30,208
$
40
$
942
$
—
$
29,306
Residential
974
1
1
—
974
626
—
2
—
624
Commercial
1
—
—
—
1
1
—
—
—
1
Total mortgage-backed securities
$
37,335
$
77
$
764
$
—
$
36,648
$
30,835
$
40
$
944
$
—
$
29,931
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
U.S. Treasury
$
37,063
$
69
$
114
$
—
$
37,018
$
52,630
$
13
$
264
$
—
$
52,379
Total U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
37,063
$
69
$
114
$
—
$
37,018
$
52,630
$
13
$
264
$
—
$
52,379
State and municipal
$
1,758
$
6
$
73
$
—
$
1,691
$
1,749
$
12
$
103
$
—
$
1,658
Foreign government
161,199
1,018
576
—
161,641
134,002
444
1,087
—
133,359
Corporate
5,412
34
70
4
5,372
4,923
19
122
6
4,814
Asset-backed securities
(1)
860
4
2
—
862
856
3
11
—
848
Other debt securities
2,994
1
—
—
2,995
3,887
1
1
—
3,887
Total debt securities AFS
$
246,621
$
1,209
$
1,599
$
4
$
246,227
$
228,882
$
532
$
2,532
$
6
$
226,876
(1)
The Company invests in mortgage- and asset-backed securities, which are typically issued by VIEs through securitization transactions. The Company’s maximum exposure to loss from these VIEs is equal to the carrying amount of the securities, which is reflected in the table above. See Note 21 for mortgage- and asset-backed securitizations in which the Company has other involvement.
(2)
Amortized cost includes unallocated portfolio-layer cumulative basis adjustments of $
0.3
billion and $(
0.2
) billion as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively. Gross unrealized gains and gross unrealized (losses) on mortgage-backed securities excluding the effect of unallocated portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments were $
161
million and $(
555
) million, respectively, as of September 30, 2025. Gross unrealized gains and gross unrealized (losses) on mortgage-backed securities excluding the effect of unallocated portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments were $
35
million and $(
1,129
) million, respectively, as of December 31, 2024.
128
The following table presents the fair value of AFS debt securities that have been in an unrealized loss position:
Less than 12 months
12 months or longer
Total
In millions of dollars
Fair
value
Gross
unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Gross
unrealized
losses
Fair
value
Gross
unrealized
losses
September 30, 2025
Debt securities AFS
Mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
17,579
$
219
$
9,345
$
544
$
26,924
$
763
Residential
31
—
481
1
512
1
Commercial
—
—
1
—
1
—
Total mortgage-backed securities
$
17,610
$
219
$
9,827
$
545
$
27,437
$
764
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
U.S. Treasury
$
14,391
$
58
$
1,507
$
56
$
15,898
$
114
Total U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
14,391
$
58
$
1,507
$
56
$
15,898
$
114
State and municipal
$
644
$
25
$
582
$
48
$
1,226
$
73
Foreign government
45,850
223
13,947
353
59,797
576
Corporate
416
28
1,557
42
1,973
70
Asset-backed securities
299
2
—
—
299
2
Other debt securities
460
—
120
—
580
—
Total debt securities AFS
$
79,670
$
555
$
27,540
$
1,044
$
107,210
$
1,599
December 31, 2024
Debt securities AFS
Mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
16,690
$
255
$
8,484
$
687
$
25,174
$
942
Residential
375
1
216
1
591
2
Commercial
—
—
1
—
1
—
Total mortgage-backed securities
$
17,065
$
256
$
8,701
$
688
$
25,766
$
944
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
U.S. Treasury
$
13,660
$
166
$
1,710
$
98
$
15,370
$
264
Total U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
13,660
$
166
$
1,710
$
98
$
15,370
$
264
State and municipal
$
855
$
72
$
335
$
31
$
1,190
$
103
Foreign government
49,384
487
19,719
600
69,103
1,087
Corporate
455
45
2,444
77
2,899
122
Asset-backed securities
388
11
—
—
388
11
Other debt securities
1,098
—
939
1
2,037
1
Total debt securities AFS
$
82,905
$
1,037
$
33,848
$
1,495
$
116,753
$
2,532
129
The following table presents the amortized cost and fair value of AFS debt securities by contractual maturity dates:
September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Amortized cost
Fair value
Mortgage-backed securities
(1)
Due within 1 year
$
7
$
7
After 1 but within 5 years
1,229
1,225
After 5 but within 10 years
684
670
After 10 years
35,122
34,746
Total
(2)
$
37,042
$
36,648
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
Due within 1 year
$
19,042
$
18,990
After 1 but within 5 years
17,777
17,803
After 5 but within 10 years
244
225
After 10 years
—
—
Total
$
37,063
$
37,018
State and municipal
Due within 1 year
$
72
$
72
After 1 but within 5 years
98
94
After 5 but within 10 years
382
375
After 10 years
1,206
1,150
Total
$
1,758
$
1,691
Foreign government
Due within 1 year
$
69,045
$
68,935
After 1 but within 5 years
87,276
87,919
After 5 but within 10 years
4,297
4,264
After 10 years
581
523
Total
$
161,199
$
161,641
All other
(3)
Due within 1 year
$
4,064
$
4,057
After 1 but within 5 years
4,592
4,580
After 5 but within 10 years
561
564
After 10 years
49
28
Total
$
9,266
$
9,229
Total debt securities AFS
(2)
$
246,328
$
246,227
(1)
Includes mortgage-backed securities of U.S. government-sponsored agencies. The Company invests in mortgage- and asset-backed securities, which are typically issued by VIEs through securitization transactions. See Note 21 for additional information about mortgage- and asset-backed securitizations in which the Company has other involvement.
(2)
Amortized cost excludes unallocated portfolio-layer cumulative basis adjustments of $
0.3
billion as of September 30, 2025.
(3)
Includes corporate, asset-backed and other debt securities.
130
Debt Securities Held-to-Maturity
The carrying value and fair value of debt securities HTM were as follows:
In millions of dollars
Amortized
cost, net
(1)
Gross
unrealized
gains
Gross
unrealized
losses
Fair
value
September 30, 2025
Debt securities HTM
Mortgage-backed securities
(2)
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
67,355
$
2
$
7,449
$
59,908
Non-U.S. residential
—
—
—
—
Commercial
1,221
23
117
1,127
Total mortgage-backed securities
$
68,576
$
25
$
7,566
$
61,035
U.S. Treasury securities
$
92,790
$
—
$
3,738
$
89,052
State and municipal
8,651
29
568
8,112
Foreign government
771
23
—
794
Asset-backed securities
(2)
26,304
88
39
26,353
Total debt securities HTM, net
$
197,092
$
165
$
11,911
$
185,346
December 31, 2024
Debt securities HTM
Mortgage-backed securities
(2)
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
72,542
$
—
$
10,291
$
62,251
Non-U.S. residential
—
—
—
—
Commercial
1,247
12
151
1,108
Total mortgage-backed securities
$
73,789
$
12
$
10,442
$
63,359
U.S. Treasury securities
$
126,142
$
—
$
6,934
$
119,208
State and municipal
8,903
27
668
8,262
Foreign government
988
3
—
991
Asset-backed securities
(2)
32,560
91
61
32,590
Total debt securities HTM, net
$
242,382
$
133
$
18,105
$
224,410
(1)
Amortized cost is reported net of ACL of $
131
million and $
137
million at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(2)
The Company invests in mortgage- and asset-backed securities. These securitizations are generally considered VIEs. The Company’s maximum exposure to loss from these VIEs is equal to the carrying amount of the securities, which is reflected in the table above. See Note 21 for mortgage- and asset-backed securitizations in which the Company has other involvement.
131
The following table presents the carrying value and fair value of HTM debt securities by contractual maturity dates:
September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Amortized cost
(1)
Fair value
Mortgage-backed securities
Due within 1 year
$
166
$
166
After 1 but within 5 years
954
931
After 5 but within 10 years
1,167
1,105
After 10 years
66,289
58,833
Total
$
68,576
$
61,035
U.S. Treasury securities
Due within 1 year
$
21,941
$
21,564
After 1 but within 5 years
70,849
67,488
After 5 but within 10 years
—
—
After 10 years
—
—
Total
$
92,790
$
89,052
State and municipal
Due within 1 year
$
23
$
20
After 1 but within 5 years
191
190
After 5 but within 10 years
2,211
2,137
After 10 years
6,226
5,765
Total
$
8,651
$
8,112
Foreign government
Due within 1 year
$
173
$
175
After 1 but within 5 years
598
619
After 5 but within 10 years
—
—
After 10 years
—
—
Total
$
771
$
794
All other
(2)
Due within 1 year
$
—
$
—
After 1 but within 5 years
—
—
After 5 but within 10 years
5,159
5,165
After 10 years
21,145
21,188
Total
$
26,304
$
26,353
Total debt securities HTM
$
197,092
$
185,346
(1)
Amortized cost is reported net of ACL of $
131
million at September 30, 2025.
(2)
Includes corporate and asset-backed securities.
HTM Debt Securities Delinquency and Non-Accrual Details
The total amounts of HTM debt securities that were delinquent or on non-accrual status were not significant at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024.
There were no purchased credit-deteriorated HTM debt securities held by the Company as of
September 30, 2025
and December 31, 2024.
132
Evaluating Investments for Impairment—AFS Debt Securities
The Company conducts periodic reviews of all AFS debt securities with unrealized losses to evaluate whether the impairment resulted from expected credit losses or from other factors and to evaluate the Company’s intent to sell such securities.
For more information on evaluating investments for impairment, see Note 14 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Recognition and Measurement of Impairment
The following table presents total impairment on AFS investments recognized in earnings:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Impairment losses recognized in earnings for debt securities that the Company intends to sell, would more-likely-than-not be required to sell or will be subject to an issuer call deemed probable of exercise
$
9
$
13
$
14
$
36
Total impairment losses recognized in earnings
$
9
$
13
$
14
$
36
Allowance for Credit Losses on AFS Debt Securities
The allowance for credit losses on AFS debt securities held that the Company does not intend to sell nor will likely be required to sell was immaterial as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024.
Non-Marketable Equity Securities Not Carried at
Fair Value
Non-marketable equity securities are required to be measured at fair value with changes in fair value recognized in earnings unless (i) the measurement alternative is elected or (ii) the investment represents Federal Reserve Bank and Federal Home Loan Bank stock or certain exchange seats that continue to be carried at cost.
The election to measure a non-marketable equity security using the measurement alternative is made on an instrument-by-instrument basis. Under the measurement alternative, an equity security is carried at cost plus or minus changes resulting from observable prices in orderly transactions for the identical or a similar investment of the same issuer. The carrying value of the equity security is adjusted to fair value on the date of an observed transaction. Fair value may differ from the observed transaction price due to a number of factors, including marketability adjustments and differences in rights and obligations when the observed transaction is not for the identical investment held by Citi.
Equity securities under the measurement alternative, which are composed of private equity investments, are also assessed for impairment. On a quarterly basis, management qualitatively assesses whether each equity security under the measurement alternative is impaired. For details on impairment indicators that are considered, see Note 14 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
When the qualitative assessment indicates that the equity security is impaired, its fair value is determined. If the fair value of the investment is less than its carrying value, the investment is written down to fair value through earnings.
Below is the carrying value of non-marketable equity securities measured using the measurement alternative:
In millions of dollars
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Measurement alternative:
Carrying value
$
1,545
$
1,574
Below are amounts recognized in earnings and life-to-date amounts for non-marketable equity securities measured using the measurement alternative:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Measurement alternative
(1)
:
Impairment losses
$
14
$
32
$
103
$
56
Downward changes for observable prices
2
1
2
2
Upward changes for observable prices
8
25
54
77
(1) See Note 23 for additional information on these nonrecurring fair value measurements.
Life-to-date amounts on securities still held
In millions of dollars
September 30, 2025
Measurement alternative:
Impairment losses
$
511
Downward changes for observable prices
40
Upward changes for observable prices
1,084
A similar impairment analysis is performed for non-marketable equity securities carried at cost. For the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, there was no impairment loss recognized in earnings for non-marketable equity securities carried at cost.
133
14.
LOANS
Citigroup loans are reported in
two
categories: corporate and consumer. These categories are classified primarily according to the segment that manages the loans (or, if applicable,
All Other
—Legacy Franchises), in addition to the nature of the obligor, with corporate loans generally made for corporate, institutional and public sector clients and consumer loans to retail and small business customers. For additional information regarding Citi’s corporate and consumer loans, including related accounting policies, see Notes 1 and 15 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
CORPORATE LOANS
Corporate loans represent loans and leases managed by
Services
,
Markets
,
Banking
and the Mexico SBMM portion of
All Other
—Legacy Franchises
.
The following table presents information by corporate loan type:
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
In North America offices
(1)
Commercial and industrial
$
59,062
$
57,730
Financial institutions
65,116
41,815
Mortgage and real estate
(2)
17,885
18,411
Installment and other
(3)
22,824
25,529
Lease financing
129
235
Total
$
165,016
$
143,720
In offices outside North America
(1)
Commercial and industrial
$
96,624
$
92,856
Financial institutions
26,694
27,276
Mortgage and real estate
(2)
9,746
8,136
Installment and other
(3)
32,349
25,800
Lease financing
44
40
Governments and official institutions
4,751
3,630
Total
$
170,208
$
157,738
Corporate loans, net of unearned income, excluding portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments
(4)(5)(6)
$
335,224
$
301,458
Unallocated portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments
(7)
$
53
$
(
72
)
Corporate loans, net of unearned income
(4)(5)(6)
$
335,277
$
301,386
(1)
North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America. The classification between offices in North America and outside North America is based on the domicile of the booking unit. The difference between the domicile of the booking unit and the risk-based country view is not material for the purposes of classification of corporate loans between offices in North America and outside North America.
(2)
Loans secured primarily by real estate.
(3)
Installment and other includes loans to SPEs and TTS commercial cards.
(4)
Corporate loans are net of unearned income of $(
1,050
) million and $(
969
) million at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024,
respectively. Unearned income on corporate loans primarily represents loan origination fees, net of certain direct origination costs, that are deferred and recognized as
Interest income
over the lives of the related loans.
(5)
Not included in the balances above is approximately $
2
billion of accrued interest receivable at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, which is included in
Other assets
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(6)
Accrued interest receivable considered to be uncollectible is reversed through interest income. Amounts reversed were not material for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024.
(7)
Represents fair value hedge basis adjustments related to portfolio-layer method hedges of mortgage and real estate loans, which are not allocated to individual loans in the portfolio. See Note 22.
The Company sold and/or reclassified to held-for-sale $
1.3
billion and $
3.2
billion of corporate loans during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, and $
1.5
billion and $
3.8
billion of corporate loans during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, respectively. The Company did not have significant purchases of corporate loans classified as held-for-investment for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 or 2024.
134
Corporate Loan Delinquencies and Non-Accrual Details at September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
30–89 days
past due
and accruing
(1)
≥ 90 days
past due and
accruing
(1)
Total past due
and accruing
Total
non-accrual
(2)
Total
current
(3)
Total
loans
(4)
Commercial and industrial
$
191
$
38
$
229
$
903
$
151,982
$
153,114
Financial institutions
2
—
2
77
90,061
90,140
Mortgage and real estate
111
160
271
924
26,356
27,551
Lease financing
—
1
1
—
172
173
Other
33
17
50
167
56,159
56,376
Loans at fair value
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
7,870
Total
(5)
$
337
$
216
$
553
$
2,071
$
324,730
$
335,224
Corporate Loan Delinquencies and Non-Accrual Details at December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
30–89 days
past due
and accruing
(1)
≥ 90 days
past due and
accruing
(1)
Total past due
and accruing
Total
non-accrual
(2)
Total
current
(3)
Total
loans
(4)
Commercial and industrial
$
183
$
35
$
218
$
542
$
147,914
$
148,674
Financial institutions
8
—
8
73
68,297
68,378
Mortgage and real estate
6
2
8
567
25,971
26,546
Lease financing
—
1
1
—
275
276
Other
62
16
78
195
49,552
49,825
Loans at fair value
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
7,759
Total
(5)
$
259
$
54
$
313
$
1,377
$
292,009
$
301,458
(1)
Corporate loans that are 90 days or more past due are generally classified as non-accrual. Corporate loans are considered past due when principal or interest is contractually due but unpaid.
(2)
Non-accrual loans generally include those loans that are 90 days or more past due or those loans for which Citi believes, based on actual experience and a forward-looking assessment of the collectibility of the loan in full, that the payment of interest and/or principal is doubtful.
(3)
Loans less than 30 days past due are presented as current.
(4)
The Total loans column includes loans at fair value, which are not included in the various delinquency columns and, therefore, the tables’ total rows will not cross-foot.
(5)
Excludes $
53
million and $(
72
) million of unallocated portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
N/A Not applicable
135
Corporate Loan Credit Quality Indicators
Recorded investment in loans
(1)
Term loans by year of origination
Revolving line
of credit arrangements
(2)
September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2023
2022
2021
Prior
Investment grade
(3)
Commercial and industrial
(4)
$
36,056
$
10,143
$
6,083
$
4,389
$
1,780
$
4,292
$
29,446
$
92,189
Financial institutions
(
4)
20,658
5,912
2,311
1,375
546
2,074
46,114
78,990
Mortgage and real estate
3,760
4,942
3,635
2,431
1,678
1,960
418
18,824
Other
(5)
11,970
4,052
2,591
2,631
628
2,461
25,755
50,088
Total investment grade
$
72,444
$
25,049
$
14,620
$
10,826
$
4,632
$
10,787
$
101,733
$
240,091
Non-investment grade
(3)
Accrual
Commercial and industrial
(4)
$
24,142
$
5,546
$
3,925
$
2,418
$
762
$
2,573
$
20,656
$
60,022
Financial institutions
(4)
3,475
1,377
791
130
432
205
4,663
11,073
Mortgage and real estate
760
901
1,482
1,317
1,091
1,681
571
7,803
Other
(5)
2,051
916
593
214
115
381
2,024
6,294
Non-accrual
Commercial and industrial
(4)
72
35
98
54
44
59
541
903
Financial institutions
8
—
—
—
45
—
24
77
Mortgage and real estate
33
10
46
237
203
328
67
924
Other
(5)
43
15
20
—
63
5
21
167
Total non-investment grade
$
30,584
$
8,800
$
6,955
$
4,370
$
2,755
$
5,232
$
28,567
$
87,263
Loans at fair value
(6)
$
7,870
Corporate loans, net of unearned income
(7)
$
103,028
$
33,849
$
21,575
$
15,196
$
7,387
$
16,019
$
130,300
$
335,224
136
Recorded investment in loans
(1)
Term loans by year of origination
Revolving line
of credit arrangements
(2)
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
Prior
Investment grade
(3)
Commercial and industrial
(4)
$
36,039
$
8,101
$
5,035
$
2,492
$
1,225
$
4,853
$
32,862
$
90,607
Financial institutions
(4)
13,074
2,136
1,162
326
265
1,500
41,415
59,878
Mortgage and real estate
5,325
3,927
3,269
2,537
1,460
1,533
248
18,299
Other
(5)
5,773
2,643
4,036
822
1,156
5,578
24,623
44,631
Total investment grade
$
60,211
$
16,807
$
13,502
$
6,177
$
4,106
$
13,464
$
99,148
$
213,415
Non-investment grade
(3)
Accrual
Commercial and industrial
(4)
$
24,937
$
5,082
$
3,576
$
1,583
$
318
$
2,560
$
19,468
$
57,524
Financial institutions
(4)
4,103
529
255
655
41
355
2,489
8,427
Mortgage and real estate
801
1,112
1,936
1,400
770
1,190
472
7,681
Other
(5)
1,227
592
427
261
190
274
2,304
5,275
Non-accrual
Commercial and industrial
43
78
48
17
7
44
305
542
Financial institutions
(4)
—
—
—
55
—
—
18
73
Mortgage and real estate
16
2
104
107
28
279
31
567
Other
(5)
1
—
1
18
—
19
156
195
Total non-investment grade
$
31,128
$
7,395
$
6,347
$
4,096
$
1,354
$
4,721
$
25,243
$
80,284
Loans at fair value
(6)
$
7,759
Corporate loans, net of unearned income
(7)
$
91,339
$
24,201
$
19,849
$
10,274
$
5,460
$
18,185
$
124,391
$
301,458
(1)
Recorded investment in a loan includes net deferred loan fees and costs, unamortized premium or discount, less any direct write-downs.
(2)
There were no significant revolving line of credit arrangements that converted to term loans during the period.
(3)
Held-for-investment loans are accounted for on an amortized cost basis.
(4)
Includes certain short-term loans with less than one year in tenor.
(5)
Other includes installment and other, lease financing and loans to governments and official institutions.
(6)
Loans at fair value include loans to commercial and industrial, financial institutions, mortgage and real estate and other.
(7)
Excludes $
53
million and $(
72
) million of unallocated portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
137
Corporate Gross Credit Losses
The table below details gross credit losses recognized during the nine months ended September 30, 2025, by year of loan origination:
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2023
2022
2021
Prior
Revolving line of credit arrangement
Total
Commercial and industrial
$
12
$
4
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
6
$
97
$
119
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
—
—
9
9
Mortgage and real estate
—
—
—
—
—
9
7
16
Other
(1)
6
—
141
—
62
2
21
232
Total
$
18
$
4
$
141
$
—
$
62
$
17
$
134
$
376
The table below details gross credit losses recognized during the nine months ended September 30, 2024, by year of loan origination:
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
Prior
Revolving
line of credit arrangement
Total
Commercial and industrial
$
10
$
2
$
3
$
9
$
4
$
15
$
167
$
210
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
—
1
9
10
Mortgage and real estate
1
37
11
—
—
84
22
155
Other
(1)
—
—
—
—
—
16
29
45
Total
$
11
$
39
$
14
$
9
$
4
$
116
$
227
$
420
(1) Other includes installment and other, lease financing and loans to governments and official institutions.
Non-Accrual Corporate Loans
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Recorded
investment
(1)(2)
Related specific
allowance
Recorded
investment
(1)(2)
Related specific
allowance
Non-accrual corporate loans with specific allowances
Commercial and industrial
$
486
$
123
$
199
$
86
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
Mortgage and real estate
417
29
276
42
Other
31
75
185
174
Total non-accrual corporate loans with specific allowances
$
934
$
227
$
660
$
302
Non-accrual corporate loans without specific allowances
Commercial and industrial
$
417
$
343
Financial institutions
77
73
Mortgage and real estate
507
291
Lease financing
—
—
Other
136
10
Total non-accrual corporate loans without specific allowances
$
1,137
N/A
$
717
N/A
(1)
Recorded investment in a loan includes net deferred loan fees and costs, unamortized premium or discount, less any direct write-downs.
(2)
Interest income recognized for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 was $
3
million and $
17
million, and for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024 was $
28
million and $
58
million, respectively.
N/A Not applicable
138
Corporate Loan Modifications to Borrowers Experiencing Financial Difficulty
Citi seeks to modify certain corporate loans to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty to reduce Citi’s exposure to loss, often providing the borrower with an opportunity to work through financial difficulties. Each modification is unique to the borrower’s individual circumstances.
The following tables detail corporate loan modifications granted during the three
and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024 to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty by type of modification granted and the financial effect of those modifications. Citi defines a corporate loan modification to a borrower experiencing financial difficulty as a modification of a loan classified as substandard or worse at the time of modification.
For the Three and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars, except weighted-average
term extension
Total modifications balance at
September 30, 2025
(1)(2)(3)
Term
extension
Combination:
Term extension and payment delay
(4)
Weighted-average term extension
(months)
Three Months Ended September 30, 2025
Commercial and industrial
$
76
$
76
$
—
12
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
Mortgage and real estate
—
—
—
—
Other
(5)
—
—
—
—
Total
$
76
$
76
$
—
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
Commercial and industrial
$
141
$
141
$
—
10
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
Mortgage and real estate
—
—
—
—
Other
(5)
—
—
—
—
Total
$
141
$
141
$
—
For the Three and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars, except weighted-average
term extension
Total modifications balance at
September 30, 2024
(1)(2)(3)
Term
extension
Combination:
Term extension and payment delay
(4)
Weighted-average term extension
(months)
Three Months Ended September 30, 2024
Commercial and industrial
$
4
$
4
$
—
6
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
Mortgage and real estate
49
49
—
6
Other
(5)
—
—
—
—
Total
$
53
$
53
$
—
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
Commercial and industrial
$
107
$
107
$
—
11
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
Mortgage and real estate
130
130
—
7
Other
(5)
—
—
—
—
Total
$
237
$
237
$
—
(1)
The above table reflects activity for loans outstanding as of the end of the reporting period. The balances are not significant as a percentage of the total carrying values of loans by class of receivable as of September 30, 2025 and 2024.
(2)
Commitments to lend to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty that were granted modifications totaled $
105
million and $
924
million as of September 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
(3)
The allowance for corporate loans, including modified loans, is based on the borrower’s overall financial performance. Charge-offs for amounts deemed uncollectible may be recorded at the time of the modification or may have already been recorded in prior periods such that no charge-off is required at the time of modification.
(4)
Payment delays either for principal or interest payments had an immaterial financial impact.
(5)
Other includes installment and other, lease financing and loans to governments and official institutions.
139
Performance of Modified Corporate Loans
The following tables present the delinquencies of modified corporate loans to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty. It includes loans that were modified during the 12 months ended September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024:
As of September 30, 2025
(1)
In millions of dollars
Total
Current
30–89 days
past due
90+ days
past due
Commercial and industrial
$
251
$
250
$
1
$
—
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
Mortgage and real estate
14
14
—
—
Other
(2)
—
—
—
—
Total
$
265
$
264
$
1
$
—
As of December 31, 2024
(1)
In millions of dollars
Total
Current
30–89 days
past due
90+ days
past due
Commercial and industrial
$
251
$
251
$
—
$
—
Financial institutions
—
—
—
—
Mortgage and real estate
105
105
—
—
Other
(2)
—
—
—
—
Total
$
356
$
356
$
—
$
—
(1)
Corporate loans are generally not modified as a result of their delinquency status; rather, they are modified because of events that have impacted the overall financial performance of the borrower. Corporate loans, if past due, are re-aged to current status upon modification.
(2)
Other includes installment and other, lease financing and loans to governments and official institutions.
Defaults of Modified Corporate Loans
No modified corporate loans to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty defaulted during the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024. Default is defined as 60 days past due, except for classifiably managed commercial banking loans, where default is defined as 90 days past due. For a modified corporate loan that is not collateral dependent, expected default rates are considered in the loan’s individually assessed ACL.
CONSUMER LOANS
Consumer loans represent loans and leases managed by
USPB
,
Wealth
and
All Other
—Legacy Franchises (except Mexico SBMM).
Citi has established a risk management process to monitor, evaluate and manage the principal risks associated with its consumer loan portfolio. Credit quality indicators that are actively monitored include delinquency status, consumer credit scores under Fair Isaac Corporation (FICO) and loan-to-value (LTV) ratios, each as discussed in more detail below.
For Citi’s policies related to consumer loans, including non-accrual and charge-off policies, see Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
140
The following tables provide Citi’s consumer loans by type:
Consumer Loans, Delinquencies and Non-Accrual Status at September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Total
current
(1)(2)
30–89
days past
due
(3)
≥ 90 days
past
due
(3)
Past due
government
guaranteed
(4)
Total loans
Non-accrual loans for which there is no ACLL
Non-accrual loans for which there is an ACLL
Total
non-accrual
90 days
past due
and accruing
In North America offices
(5)
Residential first mortgages
(6)
$
116,633
$
413
$
548
$
205
$
117,799
$
134
$
589
$
723
$
110
Home equity loans
(7)(8)
2,848
28
40
—
2,916
22
89
111
—
Credit cards
162,786
2,283
2,377
—
167,446
—
—
—
2,377
Personal, small business and other
(9)
32,308
95
31
—
32,434
5
167
172
—
Total
$
314,575
$
2,819
$
2,996
$
205
$
320,595
$
161
$
845
$
1,006
$
2,487
In offices outside North America
(5)
Residential mortgages
(6)
$
23,959
$
46
$
73
$
—
$
24,078
$
—
$
177
$
177
$
—
Credit cards
13,230
238
286
—
13,754
—
283
283
91
Personal, small business and other
(9)
39,450
119
40
—
39,609
—
141
141
—
Total
$
76,639
$
403
$
399
$
—
$
77,441
$
—
$
601
$
601
$
91
Total excluding portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments
$
391,214
$
3,222
$
3,395
$
205
$
398,036
$
161
$
1,446
$
1,607
$
2,578
Unallocated portfolio-layer hedges
cumulative basis adjustments
(10)
$
592
Total Citigroup
(11)(12)
$
398,628
Consumer Loans, Delinquencies and Non-Accrual Status at December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Total
current
(1)(2)
30–89
days past
due
(3)
≥ 90 days
past
due
(3)
Past due
government
guaranteed
(4)
Total
loans
Non-accrual loans for which there is no ACLL
Non-accrual loans for which there is an ACLL
Total
non-accrual
90 days
past due
and accruing
In North America offices
(5)
Residential first mortgages
(6)
$
113,613
$
397
$
349
$
234
$
114,593
$
114
$
409
$
523
$
128
Home equity loans
(7)(8)
3,060
23
58
—
3,141
25
114
139
—
Credit cards
166,021
2,333
2,705
—
171,059
—
—
—
2,705
Personal, small business and other
(9)
33,010
94
50
1
33,155
7
154
161
2
Total
$
315,704
$
2,847
$
3,162
$
235
$
321,948
$
146
$
677
$
823
$
2,835
In offices outside North America
(5)
Residential mortgages
(6)
$
24,358
$
38
$
60
$
—
$
24,456
$
—
$
155
$
155
$
—
Credit cards
12,523
190
214
—
12,927
—
211
211
72
Personal, small business and other
(9)
33,859
100
36
—
33,995
—
121
121
—
Total
$
70,740
$
328
$
310
$
—
$
71,378
$
—
$
487
$
487
$
72
Total excluding portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments
$
386,444
$
3,175
$
3,472
$
235
$
393,326
$
146
$
1,164
$
1,310
$
2,907
Unallocated portfolio-layer hedges
cumulative basis adjustments
(10)
$
(
224
)
Total Citigroup
(11)(12)
$
393,102
(1)
Loans less than 30 days past due are presented as current.
(2)
Includes $
26
million and $
281
million at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, of residential first mortgages recorded at fair value.
(3)
Excludes loans guaranteed by U.S. government-sponsored agencies. Excludes delinquencies on $
25.2
billion and $
21.6
billion of classifiably managed Private Bank loans in North America and outside North America, respectively, at September 30, 2025. Excludes delinquencies on $
25.9
billion and $
17.6
billion of classifiably managed Private Bank loans in North America and outside North America, respectively, at December 31, 2024.
(4)
Consists of loans that are guaranteed by U.S. government-sponsored agencies that are 30–89 days past due of $
0.1
billion and $
0.1
billion and 90 days or more past due of $
0.1
billion and $
0.1
billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(5)
North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America.
141
(6)
Includes approximately $
0.1
billion and less than $
0.1
billion of residential first mortgage loans in process of foreclosure in North America and outside North America, respectively, and $
18.7
billion of residential mortgages outside North America related to
Wealth
at September 30, 2025. Includes approximately $
0.2
billion and less than $
0.1
billion of residential first mortgage loans in process of foreclosure in North America and outside North America, respectively, and $
19.1
billion of residential mortgages outside North America related to
Wealth
at December 31, 2024.
(7)
Includes less than $
0.1
billion and less than $
0.1
billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, of home equity loans in process of foreclosure.
(8)
Fixed-rate home equity loans and loans extended under home equity lines of credit, which are typically in junior lien positions.
(9)
As of September 30, 2025,
Wealth
in North America includes $
27.4
billion of loans, of which $
25.2
billion are classifiably managed with
80
% rated investment grade, and
Wealth
outside North America includes $
30.0
billion of loans, of which $
21.6
billion are classifiably managed with
54
% rated investment grade. As of December 31, 2024,
Wealth
in North America includes $
28.1
billion of loans, of which $
25.9
billion are classifiably managed with
83
% rated investment grade, and
Wealth
outside North America includes $
25.4
billion of loans, of which $
17.6
billion are classifiably managed with
56
% rated investment grade. Such loans are presented as “current” above.
(10)
Represents fair value hedge basis adjustments related to portfolio-layer method hedges of mortgage and real estate loans, which are not allocated to individual loans in the portfolio. See Note 22.
(11)
Consumer loans were net of unearned income of $
939
million and $
889
million at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively. Unearned income on consumer loans primarily represents loan origination fees, net of certain direct origination costs, that are deferred and recognized as
Interest income
over the lives of the related loans.
(12)
Not included in the balances above is approximately $
1
billion and $
1
billion of accrued interest receivable at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, which is included in
Other assets
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet, except for credit card loans (which include accrued interest and fees).
During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, the Company reversed accrued interest (primarily related to credit cards) of approximately $
0.4
billion and $
1.4
billion, respectively. During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, the Company reversed accrued interest (primarily related to credit cards) of approximately $
0.4
billion and $
1.2
billion, respectively. These reversals of accrued interest are reflected as a reduction to
Interest income
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
Interest Income Recognized for Non-Accrual Consumer Loans
In millions of dollars
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2025
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2024
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
In North America offices
(1)
Residential first mortgages
$
3
$
2
$
7
$
7
Home equity loans
1
1
3
4
Personal, small business and other
—
1
1
1
Total
$
4
$
4
$
11
$
12
In offices outside North America
(1)
Residential mortgages
$
3
$
2
$
7
$
7
Personal, small business and other
—
—
1
1
Total
$
3
$
2
$
8
$
8
Total Citigroup
$
7
$
6
$
19
$
20
(1)
North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America.
Sales and Purchases of Consumer Loans
During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, the Company sold and/or reclassified to held-for-sale (HFS) $
12
million and $
54
million of consumer loans, respectively. During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, the Company sold and/or reclassified to HFS $
2
million and $
61
million of consumer loans, respectively. Accordingly, there were immaterial releases of the associated allowance for credit losses for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024. The transfers exclude certain consumer mortgage loans for which Citi has elected the fair value option (see Note 24), which do not have an associated allowance for credit losses. The transfers also exclude consumer loans held by businesses HFS (see Note 2).
Except for the acquisition of an approximate $
700
million credit card portfolio during the three months ended September 30, 2024, the Company did not have significant purchases of consumer loans classified as held-for-investment for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 or 2024.
142
Consumer Credit Scores (FICO)
The following tables provide details on the Fair Isaac Corporation (FICO) scores for Citi’s U.S. consumer loan portfolio based on end-of-period receivables by year of origination. FICO scores are updated monthly for substantially all of the portfolio or, otherwise, on a quarterly basis for the remaining portfolio. Loans that did not have FICO scores as of the prior period have been updated with FICO scores as they become available.
With respect to Citi’s consumer loan portfolio outside of the U.S. as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024 ($
79.4
billion and $
72.5
billion, respectively), various country-specific or regional credit risk metrics and acquisition and behavior scoring models are leveraged as one of the factors to evaluate the credit quality of customers (see “Consumer Loans and Ratios Outside of North America” below). As a result, details of relevant credit quality indicators for those loans are not comparable to the below FICO score distribution for the U.S. portfolio.
FICO score distribution
—
U.S. portfolio
September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Less than
660
660
to 739
Greater
than or equal to 740
Classifiably managed
(1)
FICO not available
(2)
Total
loans
Residential first mortgages
2025
$
91
$
1,603
$
9,348
2024
151
1,770
8,988
2023
210
2,111
11,884
2022
344
3,022
15,372
2021
346
2,488
14,117
Prior
1,715
6,264
30,830
Total residential first mortgages
$
2,857
$
17,258
$
90,539
$
—
$
7,145
$
117,799
Home equity line of credit (pre-reset)
$
240
$
702
$
1,512
Home equity line of credit (post-reset)
60
76
70
Home equity term loans
40
75
97
2025
—
—
—
2024
—
—
—
2023
—
—
—
2022
—
—
—
2021
—
—
1
Prior
40
75
96
Total home equity loans
$
340
$
853
$
1,679
$
—
$
44
$
2,916
Credit cards
$
22,826
$
58,363
$
81,063
Revolving loans converted to term loans
(3)
1,660
805
155
Total credit cards
(4)
$
24,486
$
59,168
$
81,218
$
—
$
2,002
$
166,874
Personal, small business and other
2025
$
47
$
219
$
754
2024
146
349
789
2023
101
173
307
2022
79
95
133
2021
13
17
21
Prior
90
138
136
Total personal, small business and other
(5)(6)
$
476
$
991
$
2,140
$
25,223
$
2,772
$
31,602
Total
(7)
$
28,159
$
78,270
$
175,576
$
25,223
$
11,963
$
319,191
143
FICO score distribution—U.S. portfolio
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Less than
660
660
to 739
Greater
than or equal to 740
Classifiably managed
(1)
FICO not available
(2)
Total
loans
Residential first mortgages
2024
$
123
$
2,213
$
10,308
2023
223
2,451
12,936
2022
354
3,272
16,034
2021
312
2,745
14,651
2020
298
1,990
12,245
Prior
1,473
5,034
20,573
Total residential first mortgages
$
2,783
$
17,705
$
86,747
$
—
$
7,358
$
114,593
Home equity line of credit (pre-reset)
$
266
$
764
$
1,597
Home equity line of credit (post-reset)
58
80
75
Home equity term loans
45
87
114
2024
—
—
—
2023
—
—
—
2022
—
—
—
2021
—
—
1
2020
—
1
2
Prior
45
86
111
Total home equity loans
$
369
$
931
$
1,786
$
—
$
55
$
3,141
Credit cards
$
22,855
$
59,574
$
83,935
Revolving loans converted to term loans
(3)
1,462
668
129
Total credit cards
(4)
$
24,317
$
60,242
$
84,064
$
—
$
1,874
$
170,497
Personal, small business and other
2024
$
96
$
398
$
1,219
2023
132
282
577
2022
131
180
271
2021
28
38
54
2020
2
2
4
Prior
94
152
150
Total personal, small business and other
(5)(6)
$
483
$
1,052
$
2,275
$
25,860
$
2,730
$
32,400
Total
(7)
$
27,952
$
79,930
$
174,872
$
25,860
$
12,017
$
320,631
(1) These personal, small business and other loans without a FICO score available include $
25.2
billion and $
25.9
billion of Private Bank loans as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, which are classifiably managed within
Wealth
and are primarily evaluated for credit risk based on their internal risk ratings. As of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, approximately
80
% and
83
% of these loans, respectively, were rated investment grade.
(2) FICO scores not available are primarily driven by loans associated with clients whose underlying properties are held in trusts or LLCs, for non-U.S. citizens, and loans guaranteed by government-sponsored entities, for which FICO scores are generally not considered by Citi.
(3) Not included in the tables above are $
50
million and $
33
million of revolving credit card loans outside of the U.S. that were converted to term loans as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(4) Excludes $
572
million and $
562
million of balances related to Canada for September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(5) Excludes $
833
million and $
755
million of balances related to Canada for September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(6) Includes approximately $
16
million and $
22
million of personal revolving loans that were converted to term loans for September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(7) Excludes $
592
million and $(
224
) million of unallocated portfolio-layer hedges cumulative basis adjustments at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
144
Consumer Gross Credit Losses
The following tables provide details on gross credit losses recognized during the nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, by year of loan origination:
In millions of dollars
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
Residential first mortgages
2025
$
—
2024
5
2023
3
2022
12
2021
4
Prior
43
Total residential first mortgages
$
67
Home equity line of credit (pre-reset)
$
4
Home equity line of credit (post-reset)
1
Home equity term loans
—
Total home equity loans
$
5
Credit cards
$
7,034
Revolving loans converted to term loans
230
Total credit cards
$
7,264
Personal, small business and other
2025
$
129
2024
190
2023
129
2022
73
2021
29
Prior
113
Total personal, small business and other
$
663
Total Citigroup
$
7,999
In millions of dollars
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
Residential first mortgages
2024
$
—
2023
1
2022
—
2021
—
2020
—
Prior
27
Total residential first mortgages
$
28
Home equity line of credit (pre-reset)
$
5
Home equity line of credit (post-reset)
1
Home equity term loans
1
Total home equity loans
$
7
Credit cards
$
6,787
Revolving loans converted to term loans
188
Total credit cards
$
6,975
Personal, small business and other
2024
$
101
2023
152
2022
131
2021
51
2020
20
Prior
129
Total personal, small business and other
$
584
Total Citigroup
$
7,594
145
Loan-to-Value (LTV) Ratios—U.S. Consumer Mortgages
LTV ratios (loan balance divided by appraised value) are calculated at origination and updated by applying market price data.
The following tables provide details on the LTV ratios for Citi’s U.S. consumer mortgage portfolios by year of origination. LTV ratios are updated monthly using the most recent Core Logic Home Price Index data available for substantially all of the portfolio, applied at the Metropolitan Statistical Area level, if available, or the state level if not. The remainder of the portfolio is updated in a similar manner using the Federal Housing Finance Agency indices.
LTV distribution
—
U.S. portfolio
(1)
September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Less than
or equal
to 80%
> 80% but less
than or equal to 100%
Greater
than
100%
LTV not available
(1)
Total
Residential first mortgages
2025
$
8,458
$
2,741
$
—
2024
9,059
2,166
1
2023
13,389
1,289
3
2022
18,429
1,397
24
2021
17,742
281
6
Prior
41,403
402
28
Total residential first mortgages
$
108,480
$
8,276
$
62
$
981
$
117,799
Home equity loans (pre-reset)
$
2,380
$
42
$
34
Home equity loans (post-reset)
383
13
22
Total home equity loans
$
2,763
$
55
$
56
$
42
$
2,916
Total
(2)
$
111,243
$
8,331
$
118
$
1,023
$
120,715
LTV distribution
—
U.S. portfolio
(1)
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Less than
or equal
to 80%
> 80% but less
than or equal to 100%
Greater
than
100%
LTV not available
(1)
Total
Residential first mortgages
2024
$
9,196
$
3,550
$
1
2023
13,973
2,036
2
2022
18,546
2,078
42
2021
18,247
472
33
2020
15,434
226
1
Prior
28,797
351
25
Total residential first mortgages
$
104,193
$
8,713
$
104
$
1,583
$
114,593
Home equity loans (pre-reset)
$
2,514
$
26
$
45
Home equity loans (post-reset)
435
3
9
Total home equity loans
$
2,949
$
29
$
54
$
109
$
3,141
Total
(2)
$
107,142
$
8,742
$
158
$
1,692
$
117,734
(1)
Residential first mortgages with no LTV information available include government-guaranteed loans that do not require LTV information for credit risk assessment and fair value loans.
(2)
Excludes $
592
million and $(
224
) million of unallocated portfolio-layer cumulative basis adjustments at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
146
Loan-to-Value (LTV) Ratios—Outside of U.S. Consumer Mortgages
The following tables provide details on the LTV ratios for Citi’s consumer mortgage portfolio outside of the U.S. by year of origination:
LTV distribution
—
outside of U.S. portfolio
(1)
September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Less than
or equal
to 80%
> 80% but less
than or equal to 100%
Greater
than
100%
LTV not available
Total
Residential mortgages
2025
$
1,847
$
165
$
—
2024
2,805
341
—
2023
2,100
598
346
2022
2,337
556
539
2021
2,244
534
499
Prior
8,107
449
127
Total
$
19,440
$
2,643
$
1,511
$
484
$
24,078
LTV distribution
—
outside of U.S. portfolio
(1)
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Less than
or equal
to 80%
> 80% but less
than or equal to 100%
Greater
than
100%
LTV not available
Total
Residential mortgages
2024
$
2,808
$
421
$
—
2023
2,406
654
412
2022
2,579
462
698
2021
2,505
426
657
2020
1,739
326
176
Prior
7,642
148
8
Total
$
19,679
$
2,437
$
1,951
$
389
$
24,456
(1)
Mortgage portfolios outside of the U.S. are primarily in
Wealth
. As of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, mortgage portfolios outside of the U.S. had an average LTV of approximately
57
% and
58
%, respectively.
147
Consumer Loans and Ratios Outside of North America
Delinquency-managed loans and ratios
In millions of dollars at September 30, 2025
Total
loans outside of North America
(1)
Classifiably managed loans
(2)
Delinquency-managed loans
30–89
days past
due ratio
≥ 90 days
past
due ratio
3Q25 NCL ratio
3Q24 NCL ratio
Residential mortgages
(3)
$
24,078
$
—
$
24,078
0.19
%
0.30
%
0.10
%
0.03
%
Credit cards
13,754
—
13,754
1.73
2.08
5.98
4.68
Personal, small business and other
(4)
39,609
21,562
18,047
0.66
0.22
1.09
0.95
Total
$
77,441
$
21,562
$
55,879
0.72
%
0.71
%
1.67
%
1.29
%
Delinquency-managed loans and ratios
In millions of dollars at December 31, 2024
Total
loans outside
of North America
(1)
Classifiably managed loans
(2)
Delinquency-managed loans
30–89
days past
due ratio
≥ 90 days
past
due ratio
Residential mortgages
(3)
$
24,456
$
—
$
24,456
0.16
%
0.25
%
Credit cards
12,927
—
12,927
1.47
1.66
Personal, small business and other
(4)
33,995
17,553
16,442
0.61
0.22
Total
$
71,378
$
17,553
$
53,825
0.61
%
0.58
%
(1) Mexico is included in offices outside of North America.
(2) Classifiably managed loans are primarily evaluated for credit risk based on their internal risk classification. As of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, approximately
54
% and
56
% of these loans, respectively, were rated investment grade.
(3) Includes $
18.7
billion and $
19.1
billion as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, of residential mortgages related to
Wealth
.
(4) Includes $
30.0
billion and $
25.4
billion as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, of loans related to
Wealth
.
Consumer Loan Modifications to Borrowers Experiencing Financial Difficulty
Citi’s significant consumer modification programs are described below.
Credit Cards
Citi seeks to assist credit card borrowers who are experiencing financial difficulty by offering long-term loan modification programs. These modifications generally involve reducing the interest rate on the credit card, placing the customer on a fixed payment plan not to exceed 60 months and canceling the customer’s available line of credit. Citi also grants modifications to credit card borrowers working with third-party renegotiation agencies that seek to restructure customers’ entire unsecured debt. In certain situations, Citi may forgive a portion of an outstanding balance if the borrower pays a required amount.
Residential Mortgages
Citi utilizes a third-party subservicer for the servicing of its residential mortgage loans. Through this third-party subservicer, Citi seeks to assist residential mortgage borrowers who are experiencing financial difficulty primarily by offering interest rate reductions, principal and/or interest forbearance, term extensions or combinations thereof. Borrowers enrolled in forbearance programs typically have payments suspended until the end of the forbearance period. In the U.S., before permanently modifying the contractual payment terms of a mortgage loan, Citi enters into a trial modification with the borrower, generally a
three-month
period during which the borrower makes monthly payments under the anticipated modified payment terms. Upon successful completion of the trial period, and the borrower’s formal acceptance of the modified terms, Citi and the borrower enter into a permanent modification. Citi expects the majority of loans entering trial modifications to ultimately be enrolled in a permanent modification. During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, $
40
million and $
59
million, respectively, of mortgage loans were enrolled in trial programs. During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, $
8
million and $
22
million, respectively, of mortgage loans were enrolled in trial programs. Mortgage loans of $
4
million and $
8
million had gone through Chapter 7 bankruptcy during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, and $
2
million and $
5
million during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, respectively.
148
Types of Consumer Loan Modifications and Their Financial Effect
The following tables provide details on permanent consumer loan modifications granted during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024 to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty by type of modification granted and the financial effect of those modifications:
For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars, except weighted averages
Modifications as % of loans
Total modifications balance at September 30, 2025
(1)(2)(3)
Interest rate reduction
Term extension
Payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction and term extension
Combination: term extension and payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction, term extension and payment delay
Weighted-average interest rate reduction %
Weighted-average term extension (months)
Weighted-average delay in payments (months)
In North America offices
(4)
Residential first mortgages
(5)
0.03
%
$
35
$
—
$
15
$
14
$
6
$
—
$
—
—
%
113
10
Home equity loans
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Credit cards
0.28
467
467
—
—
—
—
—
24
—
—
Personal, small business and other
0.02
8
—
—
—
8
—
—
8
19
—
Total
0.16
%
$
510
$
467
$
15
$
14
$
14
$
—
$
—
In offices outside North America
(4)
Residential mortgages
0.04
%
$
10
$
—
$
—
$
8
$
2
$
—
$
—
1
%
171
12
Credit cards
0.06
8
7
—
—
1
—
—
26
21
—
Personal, small business and other
0.03
13
4
—
—
9
—
—
7
21
—
Total
0.04
%
$
31
$
11
$
—
$
8
$
12
$
—
$
—
For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars, except weighted averages
Modifications as % of loans
Total modifications balance at September 30, 2024
(1)(2)(3)
Interest rate reduction
Term extension
Payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction and term extension
Combination: term extension and payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction, term extension and payment delay
Weighted-average interest rate reduction %
Weighted-average term extension (months)
Weighted-average delay in payments (months)
In North America offices
(4)
Residential first mortgages
(5)
0.03
%
$
29
$
1
$
13
$
11
$
4
$
—
$
—
1
%
145
10
Home equity loans
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Credit cards
0.29
471
471
—
—
—
—
—
25
—
—
Personal, small business and other
0.02
7
—
—
—
7
—
—
8
19
—
Total
0.16
%
$
507
$
472
$
13
$
11
$
11
$
—
$
—
In offices outside North America
(4)
Residential mortgages
0.05
%
$
13
$
—
$
—
$
13
$
—
$
—
$
—
—
%
—
12
Credit cards
0.05
6
6
—
—
—
—
—
24
—
—
Personal, small business and other
0.02
8
2
1
—
5
—
—
7
25
—
Total
0.04
%
$
27
$
8
$
1
$
13
$
5
$
—
$
—
(1) The above tables reflect activity for loans outstanding as of the end of the reporting period. During the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, Citi granted forgiveness of less than $
1
million and less than $
1
million in residential first mortgage loans, $
38
million and $
30
million in credit card loans and $
3
million and $
1
million in personal, small business and other loans, respectively. As a result, there were no outstanding balances as of September 30, 2025 and 2024.
(2) Commitments to lend to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty that were granted modifications included in the tables above were immaterial at September 30, 2025 and 2024.
(3) For major consumer portfolios, the ACLL is based on macroeconomic-sensitive models that rely on historical performance and macroeconomic scenarios to forecast expected credit losses. Modifications of consumer loans impact expected credit losses by affecting the likelihood of default.
(4) North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America.
(5) Excludes residential first mortgages discharged in Chapter 7 bankruptcy in the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024.
149
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars, except weighted averages
Modifications as % of loans
Total modifications balance at September 30, 2025
(1)(2)(3)
Interest rate reduction
Term extension
Payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction and term extension
Combination: term extension and payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction, term extension and payment delay
Weighted-average interest rate reduction %
Weighted-average term extension (months)
Weighted-average delay in payments (months)
In North America offices
(4)
Residential first mortgages
(5)
0.30
%
$
355
$
1
$
39
$
299
$
16
$
—
$
—
—
%
139
9
Home equity loans
0.10
3
—
—
3
—
—
—
—
—
8
Credit cards
0.71
1,196
1,195
—
1
—
—
—
25
—
4
Personal, small business and other
0.08
25
1
—
—
24
—
—
8
19
—
Total
0.49
%
$
1,579
$
1,197
$
39
$
303
$
40
$
—
$
—
In offices outside North America
(4)
Residential mortgages
0.13
%
$
31
$
—
$
—
$
27
$
4
$
—
$
—
2
%
183
12
Credit cards
0.15
20
19
—
—
1
—
—
24
21
—
Personal, small business and other
0.07
28
7
—
—
21
—
—
6
25
—
Total
0.10
%
$
79
$
26
$
—
$
27
$
26
$
—
$
—
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars, except weighted averages
Modifications as % of loans
Total modifications balance at September 30, 2024
(1)(2)(3)
Interest rate reduction
Term extension
Payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction and term extension
Combination: term extension and payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction, term extension and payment delay
Weighted-average interest rate reduction %
Weighted-average term extension (months)
Weighted-average delay in payments (months)
In North America offices
(4)
Residential first mortgages
(5)
0.07
%
$
77
$
1
$
47
$
22
$
7
$
—
$
—
1
%
171
9
Home equity loans
0.06
2
—
—
1
1
—
—
1
151
9
Credit cards
0.69
1,122
1,122
—
—
—
—
—
24
—
—
Personal, small business and other
0.05
18
1
—
1
16
—
—
8
18
7
Total
0.39
%
$
1,219
$
1,124
$
47
$
24
$
24
$
—
$
—
In offices outside North America
(4)
Residential mortgages
0.16
%
$
41
$
—
$
—
$
39
$
2
$
—
$
—
2
%
188
12
Credit cards
0.11
14
14
—
—
—
—
—
24
—
—
Personal, small business and other
0.06
21
4
4
—
13
—
—
7
24
—
Total
0.10
%
$
76
$
18
$
4
$
39
$
15
$
—
$
—
(1) The above tables reflect activity for loans outstanding as of the end of the reporting period. During the nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, Citi granted forgiveness of $
1
million and $
2
million in residential first mortgage loans, $
93
million and $
58
million in credit card loans and $
3
million and $
2
million in personal, small business and other loans, respectively. As a result, there were no outstanding balances as of September 30, 2025 and 2024.
(2) Commitments to lend to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty that were granted modifications included in the tables above were immaterial at September 30, 2025 and 2024.
(3) For major consumer portfolios, the ACLL is based on macroeconomic-sensitive models that rely on historical performance and macroeconomic scenarios to forecast expected credit losses. Modifications of consumer loans impact expected credit losses by affecting the likelihood of default.
(4) North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America.
(5) Excludes residential first mortgages discharged in Chapter 7 bankruptcy in the nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024.
150
Performance of Modified Consumer Loans
The following tables present the delinquencies and gross credit losses of permanently modified consumer loans to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty, including loans that were modified during the 12 months ended September 30, 2025 and the year ended December 31, 2024:
As of September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Total
Current
30
–
89 days
past due
90+ days
past due
Gross
credit losses
In North America offices
(1)
Residential first mortgages
$
378
$
97
$
24
$
257
$
—
Home equity loans
4
—
1
3
—
Credit cards
1,492
1,189
200
103
283
Personal, small business and other
32
28
3
1
2
Total
(2)
$
1,906
$
1,314
$
228
$
364
$
285
In offices outside North America
(1)
Residential mortgages
$
38
$
34
$
3
$
1
$
1
Credit cards
29
25
3
1
1
Personal, small business and other
30
26
4
—
1
Total
(2)
$
97
$
85
$
10
$
2
$
3
As of December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Total
Current
30
–
89 days
past due
90+ days
past due
Gross
credit losses
In North America offices
(1)
Residential first mortgages
$
99
$
40
$
19
$
40
$
—
Home equity loans
3
1
—
2
—
Credit cards
1,432
1,081
211
140
291
Personal, small business and other
25
22
2
1
2
Total
(2)
$
1,559
$
1,144
$
232
$
183
$
293
In offices outside North America
(1)
Residential mortgages
$
37
$
34
$
2
$
1
$
—
Credit cards
17
16
1
—
—
Personal, small business and other
30
24
4
2
1
Total
(2)
$
84
$
74
$
7
$
3
$
1
(1) North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America.
(2) Typically, upon modification a loan re-ages to current. However, FFIEC guidelines for re-aging certain loans require that at least three consecutive minimum monthly payments, or the equivalent amount, be received. In these cases, the loan will remain delinquent until the payment criteria for re-aging have been satisfied.
151
Defaults of Modified Consumer Loans
The following tables present default activity for permanently modified consumer loans to borrowers experiencing financial difficulty by type of modification granted, including loans that were modified and subsequently defaulted during the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024. Default is defined as 60 days past due:
For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Total
(1)(2)
Interest rate reduction
Term
extension
Payment
delay
Combination: interest rate reduction and term extension
Combination: term extension and payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction, term extension and payment delay
In North America offices
(3)
Residential first mortgages
$
8
$
—
$
4
$
—
$
4
$
—
$
—
Home equity loans
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Credit cards
(4)
92
92
—
—
—
—
—
Personal, small business and other
1
—
—
—
1
—
—
Total
$
101
$
92
$
4
$
—
$
5
$
—
$
—
In offices outside North America
(3)
Residential mortgages
$
1
$
—
$
—
$
1
$
—
$
—
$
—
Credit cards
(4)
1
1
—
—
—
—
—
Personal, small business and other
1
—
—
—
1
—
—
Total
$
3
$
1
$
—
$
1
$
1
$
—
$
—
For the Three Months Ended September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
Total
(1)(2)
Interest rate reduction
Term
extension
Payment
delay
Combination: interest rate reduction and term extension
Combination: term extension and payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction, term extension and payment delay
In North America offices
(3)
Residential first mortgages
$
7
$
—
$
6
$
—
$
1
$
—
$
—
Home equity loans
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Credit cards
(4)
105
105
—
—
—
—
—
Personal, small business and other
1
—
—
—
1
—
—
Total
$
113
$
105
$
6
$
—
$
2
$
—
$
—
In offices outside North America
(3)
Residential mortgages
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Credit cards
(4)
1
1
—
—
—
—
—
Personal, small business and other
1
—
—
—
1
—
—
Total
$
2
$
1
$
—
$
—
$
1
$
—
$
—
(1) The above tables reflect activity for loans outstanding as of the end of the reporting period.
(2) Modified residential first mortgages that default are typically liquidated through foreclosure or a similar type of liquidation.
(3) North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America.
(4) Modified credit card loans that default continue to be charged off in accordance with Citi’s consumer charge-off policy.
152
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Total
(1)(2)
Interest rate reduction
Term
extension
Payment
delay
Combination: interest rate reduction and term extension
Combination: term extension and payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction, term extension and payment delay
In North America offices
(3)
Residential first mortgages
$
25
$
—
$
15
$
—
$
10
$
—
$
—
Home equity loans
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Credit cards
(4)
150
150
—
—
—
—
—
Personal, small business and other
2
—
—
—
2
—
—
Total
$
177
$
150
$
15
$
—
$
12
$
—
$
—
In offices outside North America
(3)
Residential mortgages
$
4
$
—
$
—
$
3
$
1
$
—
$
—
Credit cards
(4)
2
2
—
—
—
—
—
Personal, small business and other
4
—
—
—
4
—
—
Total
$
10
$
2
$
—
$
3
$
5
$
—
$
—
For the Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
Total
(1)(2)
Interest rate reduction
Term
extension
Payment
delay
Combination: interest rate reduction and term extension
Combination: term extension and payment delay
Combination: interest rate reduction, term extension and payment delay
In North America offices
(3)
Residential first mortgages
$
25
$
—
$
22
$
—
$
3
$
—
$
—
Home equity loans
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Credit cards
(4)
178
178
—
—
—
—
—
Personal, small business and other
1
—
—
—
1
—
—
Total
$
204
$
178
$
22
$
—
$
4
$
—
$
—
In offices outside North America
(3)
Residential mortgages
$
3
$
—
$
—
$
3
$
—
$
—
$
—
Credit cards
(4)
1
1
—
—
—
—
—
Personal, small business and other
3
—
—
—
3
—
—
Total
$
7
$
1
$
—
$
3
$
3
$
—
$
—
(1) The above tables reflect activity for loans outstanding as of the end of the reporting period.
(2) Modified residential first mortgages that default are typically liquidated through foreclosure or a similar type of liquidation.
(3) North America includes the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico. Mexico is included in offices outside North America.
(4) Modified credit card loans that default continue to be charged off in accordance with Citi’s consumer charge-off policy.
153
15.
ALLOWANCE FOR CREDIT LOSSES
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL) at beginning of period
$
19,123
$
18,216
$
18,574
$
18,145
Gross credit losses on loans
(
2,726
)
(
2,609
)
(
8,375
)
(
8,014
)
Gross recoveries on loans
512
437
1,468
1,256
Net credit losses (NCLs) on loans
$
(
2,214
)
$
(
2,172
)
$
(
6,907
)
$
(
6,758
)
Replenishment of NCLs
$
2,214
$
2,172
$
6,907
$
6,758
Net reserve builds (releases) for loans
(
10
)
254
466
636
Net specific reserve builds (releases) for loans
55
(
44
)
(
76
)
(
231
)
Total provision for credit losses on loans (PCLL)
$
2,259
$
2,382
$
7,297
$
7,163
Initial allowance for credit losses on newly purchased credit-deteriorated assets during the period
(1)
—
23
—
23
Other, net (see table below)
38
(
93
)
242
(
217
)
ACLL at end of period
$
19,206
$
18,356
$
19,206
$
18,356
Allowance for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments (ACLUC) at beginning of period
(2)
$
1,721
$
1,619
$
1,601
$
1,728
Provision (release) for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
100
105
189
(
1
)
Other, net
(
1
)
1
30
(
2
)
ACLUC at end of period
(2)
$
1,820
$
1,725
$
1,820
$
1,725
Total ACLL and ACLUC
$
21,026
$
20,081
$
21,026
$
20,081
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at beginning of period
(3)
$
2,699
$
1,911
$
1,865
$
1,788
NCLs on other assets
(
7
)
(
6
)
(
25
)
(
21
)
Provision (release) for credit losses on other assets
79
110
499
226
Other, net
(4)
(
150
)
(
146
)
282
(
124
)
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at end of period
(3)
$
2,621
$
1,869
$
2,621
$
1,869
Allowance for credit losses on HTM debt securities at beginning of period
$
136
$
99
$
137
$
95
Provision (release) for credit losses on HTM debt securities
(
5
)
50
(
3
)
55
Other, net
—
(
8
)
(
3
)
(
9
)
Allowance for credit losses on HTM debt securities at end of period
$
131
$
141
$
131
$
141
Total ACL
$
23,778
$
22,091
$
23,778
$
22,091
Other, net details (ACLL)
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Reclasses of consumer ACLL to HFS
(5)
$
—
$
—
$
(
29
)
$
—
FX translation and other
38
(
93
)
271
(
217
)
Other, net (ACLL)
$
38
$
(
93
)
$
242
$
(
217
)
(1)
Upon acquisition, the par value of the purchased credit-deteriorated assets was approximately $
37
million during the three months ended September 30, 2024, and $
46
million during the nine months ended September 30, 2024.
(2)
Represents additional credit loss reserves for unfunded lending commitments and letters of credit recorded in
Other liabilities
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(3)
See additional details on the Allowance for credit losses on other assets below.
(4)
Primarily reflects the impact of FX translation on the ACL on
Other assets
for transfer risk associated with exposures outside the U.S.
(5)
See Note 2.
154
Allowance for Credit Losses on Loans (ACLL) and End-of-Period Loans
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2025
September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
Corporate
Consumer
Total
Corporate
Consumer
Total
ACLL at beginning of period
$
3,023
$
16,100
$
19,123
$
2,484
$
15,732
$
18,216
Charge-offs
(
114
)
(
2,612
)
(
2,726
)
(
113
)
(
2,496
)
(
2,609
)
Recoveries
22
490
512
39
398
437
Replenishment of NCLs
92
2,122
2,214
74
2,098
2,172
Net reserve builds (releases)
(
76
)
66
(
10
)
143
111
254
Net specific reserve builds (releases)
54
1
55
(
40
)
(
4
)
(
44
)
Initial allowance for credit losses on newly purchased credit-deteriorated assets during the period
(1)
—
—
—
—
23
23
Other
—
38
38
4
(
97
)
(
93
)
Ending balance
$
3,001
$
16,205
$
19,206
$
2,591
$
15,765
$
18,356
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2025
September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
Corporate
Consumer
Total
Corporate
Consumer
Total
ACLL at beginning of period
$
2,556
$
16,018
$
18,574
$
2,714
$
15,431
$
18,145
Charge-offs
(
376
)
(
7,999
)
(
8,375
)
(
420
)
(
7,594
)
(
8,014
)
Recoveries
53
1,415
1,468
74
1,182
1,256
Replenishment of NCLs
323
6,584
6,907
346
6,412
6,758
Net reserve builds (releases)
468
(
2
)
466
115
521
636
Net specific reserve builds (releases)
(
77
)
1
(
76
)
(
229
)
(
2
)
(
231
)
Initial allowance for credit losses on newly purchased credit-deteriorated assets during the period
(1)
—
—
—
—
23
23
Other
54
188
242
(
9
)
(
208
)
(
217
)
Ending balance
$
3,001
$
16,205
$
19,206
$
2,591
$
15,765
$
18,356
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Corporate
Consumer
Total
Corporate
Consumer
Total
ACLL
Collectively evaluated
$
2,774
$
16,165
$
18,939
$
2,254
$
15,967
$
18,221
Individually evaluated
227
40
267
302
38
340
Purchased credit deteriorated
—
—
—
—
13
13
Total ACLL
$
3,001
$
16,205
$
19,206
$
2,556
$
16,018
$
18,574
Loans, net of unearned income
Collectively evaluated
$
325,336
$
398,361
$
723,697
$
292,250
$
392,562
$
684,812
Individually evaluated
2,071
133
2,204
1,377
134
1,511
Purchased credit deteriorated
—
108
108
—
125
125
Held at fair value
7,870
26
7,896
7,759
281
8,040
Total loans, net of unearned income
$
335,277
$
398,628
$
733,905
$
301,386
$
393,102
$
694,488
(1) Upon acquisition, the par value of the purchased credit-deteriorated assets was approximately $
37
million during the three months ended September 30, 2024, and $
46
million during the nine months ended September 30, 2024.
155
Changes in the ACL (September 30, 2025 vs. December 31, 2024)
The total allowance for credit losses on loans, leases, unfunded lending commitments, other assets and HTM debt securities (in aggregate, total ACL) as of September 30, 2025 was $
23,778
million, an increase of $
1,601
million from $
22,177
million at December 31, 2024, driven by changes in the macroeconomic outlook, FX translation on the ACL and transfer risk associated with Russia.
Consumer ACLL
Citi’s total consumer allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL) as of September 30, 2025 was $
16,205
million, an increase of $
187
million from $
16,018
million at December 31, 2024. The increase was driven by FX translation on the ACLL within
All Other
consumer.
Corporate ACLL
Citi’s total corporate ACLL as of September 30, 2025 was $
3,001
million, an increase of $
445
million from $
2,556
million at December 31, 2024. The increase was driven by changes in portfolio composition, including credit quality and exposure growth, and changes in the macroeconomic outlook.
ACLUC
As of September 30, 2025, Citi’s total allowance for unfunded lending commitments (ACLUC), included in
Other liabilities
, was $
1,820
million, an increase of $
219
million from $
1,601
million at December 31, 2024. The increase was driven by changes in portfolio composition, including exposure growth, and changes in the macroeconomic outlook.
156
Allowance for Credit Losses on Other Assets
Three Months Ended September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Deposits with banks
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements
to resell
All other assets
(1)
Total
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at beginning of quarter
$
40
$
10
$
2,649
$
2,699
Gross credit losses
—
—
(
19
)
(
19
)
Gross recoveries
—
—
12
12
Net credit losses (NCLs)
$
—
$
—
$
(
7
)
$
(
7
)
Replenishment of NCLs
$
—
$
—
$
7
$
7
Net reserve builds (releases)
2
(
2
)
72
72
Total provision for credit losses
$
2
$
(
2
)
$
79
$
79
Other, net
$
—
$
—
$
(
150
)
$
(
150
)
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at end of quarter
$
42
$
8
$
2,571
$
2,621
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Deposits with banks
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements
to resell
All other assets
(1)
Total
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at beginning of year
$
25
$
3
$
1,837
$
1,865
Gross credit losses
—
—
(
50
)
(
50
)
Gross recoveries
—
—
25
25
Net credit losses (NCLs)
$
—
$
—
$
(
25
)
$
(
25
)
Replenishment of NCLs
$
—
$
—
$
25
$
25
Net reserve builds (releases)
17
5
452
474
Total provision for credit losses
$
17
$
5
$
477
$
499
Other, net
$
—
$
—
$
282
$
282
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at end of quarter
$
42
$
8
$
2,571
$
2,621
(1)
Primarily ACL related to transfer risk associated with exposures outside the U.S.
157
Three Months Ended September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
Deposits with banks
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements
to resell
All other assets
(1)
Total
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at beginning of quarter
$
21
$
33
$
1,857
$
1,911
Adjustment to opening balance for CECL adoption
—
—
—
—
Gross credit losses
—
—
(
14
)
(
14
)
Gross recoveries
—
—
8
8
Net credit losses (NCLs)
$
—
$
—
$
(
6
)
$
(
6
)
Replenishment of NCLs
$
—
$
—
$
6
$
6
Net reserve builds (releases)
2
(
27
)
129
104
Total provision for credit losses
$
2
$
(
27
)
$
135
$
110
Other, net
$
—
$
(
2
)
$
(
144
)
$
(
146
)
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at end of quarter
$
23
$
4
$
1,842
$
1,869
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
In millions of dollars
Deposits with banks
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements
to resell
All other assets
(1)
Total
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at beginning of year
$
31
$
27
$
1,730
$
1,788
Adjustment to opening balance for CECL adoption
—
—
—
—
Gross credit losses
—
—
(
42
)
(
42
)
Gross recoveries
—
—
21
21
Net credit losses (NCLs)
$
—
$
—
$
(
21
)
$
(
21
)
Replenishment of NCLs
$
—
$
—
$
21
$
21
Net reserve builds (releases)
(
9
)
(
22
)
236
205
Total provision for credit losses
$
(
9
)
$
(
22
)
$
257
$
226
Other, net
$
1
$
(
1
)
$
(
124
)
$
(
124
)
Allowance for credit losses on other assets at end of quarter
$
23
$
4
$
1,842
$
1,869
(1) Primarily ACL related to transfer risk associated with exposures outside the U.S.
For the ACL on AFS debt securities, see Note 13.
158
16.
GOODWILL AND INTANGIBLE ASSETS
Goodwill
The changes in
Goodwill
were as follows:
In millions of dollars
Services
Markets
Banking
USPB
Wealth
All Other
Total
Balance at December 31, 2024
$
2,052
$
5,674
$
1,002
$
5,219
$
4,451
$
902
$
19,300
Foreign currency translation
11
75
3
16
—
17
122
Balance at March 31, 2025
$
2,063
$
5,749
$
1,005
$
5,235
$
4,451
$
919
$
19,422
Foreign currency translation
109
171
20
71
2
83
456
Balance at June 30, 2025
$
2,172
$
5,920
$
1,025
$
5,306
$
4,453
$
1,002
$
19,878
Foreign currency translation
(
19
)
(
49
)
1
21
—
20
(
26
)
Impairment of goodwill
(1)
—
—
—
—
—
(
726
)
(
726
)
Balance at September 30, 2025
$
2,153
$
5,871
$
1,026
$
5,327
$
4,453
$
296
$
19,126
(1)
In connection with the agreed-upon bid received for Banamex, a goodwill impairment of $
726
million ($
714
million after-tax) was incurred in the Mexico Consumer/SBMM reporting unit of
All Other
—Legacy Franchises during the third quarter.
Citi tests for goodwill impairment annually as of October 1 (the annual test) and conducts interim assessments between the annual tests if an event occurs or circumstances change that would more-likely-than-not reduce the fair value of a reporting unit below its carrying amount.
Citi performed an interim goodwill impairment test in the third quarter of 2025, in connection with the agreed-upon bid received for Banamex. The test resulted in an impairment of $
726
million ($
714
million after-tax) in the Mexico Consumer/SBMM reporting unit within
All Other
—Legacy Franchises, recorded in
Other operating
expenses. The fair value of that reporting unit was estimated using the agreed-upon bid from the buyer as a key assumption, which was considered a significant unobservable input (Level 3 fair value inputs).
No other events or circumstances were identified as part of the qualitative assessment performed as of September 30, 2025. For additional information regarding Citi’s goodwill impairment testing process, see Notes 1 and 17 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Unanticipated declines in business performance, increases in credit losses, increases in capital requirements and adverse regulatory or legislative changes, and deterioration in economic or market conditions, as well as circumstances related to Citi’s strategic refresh, are factors that could result in a material impairment loss to earnings in a future period related to some portion of the associated goodwill.
Reporting units used for goodwill assessment at the Citigroup consolidated level may differ from the reporting units of its subsidiaries.
Intangible Assets
The components of intangible assets were as follows:
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Gross
carrying
amount
Accumulated
amortization
Net
carrying
amount
Gross
carrying
amount
Accumulated
amortization
Net
carrying
amount
Purchased credit card relationships
(1)
$
5,315
$
4,606
$
709
$
5,315
$
4,507
$
808
Credit card contract-related intangibles
(2)
4,578
1,964
2,614
4,586
1,905
2,681
Other customer relationships
334
299
35
325
278
47
Present value of future profits
35
34
1
31
30
1
Indefinite-lived intangible assets
223
—
223
197
—
197
Intangible assets (excluding MSRs)
$
10,485
$
6,903
$
3,582
$
10,454
$
6,720
$
3,734
Mortgage servicing rights (MSRs)
(3)
748
—
748
760
—
760
Total intangible assets
$
11,233
$
6,903
$
4,330
$
11,214
$
6,720
$
4,494
159
The changes in intangible assets were as follows:
In millions of dollars
Net carrying amount at December 31, 2024
Acquisitions/renewals/
divestitures
Amortization
Impairments
FX translation and other
Net carrying amount at September 30, 2025
Purchased credit card relationships
(1)
$
808
$
—
$
(
99
)
$
—
$
—
$
709
Credit card contract-related intangibles
(2)
2,681
—
(
69
)
—
2
2,614
Other customer relationships
47
—
(
15
)
—
3
35
Present value of future profits
1
—
—
—
—
1
Indefinite-lived intangible assets
197
—
—
—
26
223
Intangible assets (excluding MSRs)
$
3,734
$
—
$
(
183
)
$
—
$
31
$
3,582
Mortgage servicing rights (MSRs)
(3)
760
748
Total intangible assets
$
4,494
$
4,330
(1)
Reflects intangibles for the value of purchased cardholder relationships, which are discrete from contract-related intangibles.
(2)
Reflects contract-related intangibles associated with Citi’s credit card program agreements with partners.
(3)
See Note 21.
17.
DEPOSITS
Deposits consisted of the following:
September 30,
December 31,
In millions of dollars
2025
(1)
2024
Non-interest-bearing deposits in U.S. offices
$
116,921
$
123,338
Interest-bearing deposits in U.S. offices (including $
1,878
and $
1,262
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
592,728
551,547
Total deposits in U.S. offices
(1)
$
709,649
$
674,885
Non-interest-bearing deposits in offices outside the U.S. (including $
519
million and $
383
million as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
$
83,920
$
84,349
Interest-bearing deposits in offices outside the U.S. (including $
1,287
and $
1,963
as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, at fair value)
590,360
525,224
Total deposits in offices outside the U.S.
(1)
$
674,280
$
609,573
Total deposits
$
1,383,929
$
1,284,458
(1) For information on time deposits that met or exceeded the insured limit at December 31, 2024, see Note 18 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
For additional information on Citi’s deposits, see Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
160
18.
DEBT
For additional information regarding Citi’s short-term borrowings and long-term debt, see Note 19 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Short-Term Borrowings
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
Commercial paper
Bank
(1)
$
13,139
$
15,127
Broker-dealer and other
(2)
6,252
13,789
Total commercial paper
$
19,391
$
28,916
Other borrowings
(3)
35,369
19,589
Total
$
54,760
$
48,505
(1)
Represents Citibank entities as well as other bank entities.
(2)
Represents broker-dealer and other non-bank subsidiaries that are consolidated into Citigroup Inc., the parent holding company.
(3)
Includes borrowings from Federal Home Loan Banks and other market participants. At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, collateralized short-term advances from Federal Home Loan Banks were $
6.0
billion and $
5.0
billion, respectively.
Long-Term Debt
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31, 2024
Citigroup Inc.
(1)
$
174,661
$
164,024
Bank
(2)
40,489
35,470
Broker-dealer and other
(3)
100,696
87,806
Total
$
315,846
$
287,300
(1)
Represents the parent holding company.
(2)
Represents Citibank entities as well as other bank entities. At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, collateralized long-term advances from the Federal Home Loan Banks were $
6.0
billion and $
8.5
billion, respectively.
(3)
Represents broker-dealer and other non-bank subsidiaries that are consolidated into Citigroup Inc., the parent holding company. Certain Citigroup consolidated hedging activities are also included in this line.
Long-term debt
outstanding includes trust preferred securities with a balance sheet carrying value of $
1.6
billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024.
The following table summarizes Citi’s outstanding trust preferred securities at September 30, 2025:
Junior subordinated debentures owned by trust
Trust
Issuance
date
Securities
issued
Liquidation
value
(1)
Coupon
rate
(2)
Common
shares
issued
to parent
Notional amount
Maturity
Redeemable
by issuer
beginning
In millions of dollars, except securities and share amounts
Citigroup Capital III
Dec. 1996
194,053
$
194
7.625
%
6,003
$
200
Dec. 1, 2036
Not redeemable
Citigroup Capital XIII
Oct. 2010
89,840,000
2,246
3 mo. SOFR +
663.161
bps
(3)
1,000
2,246
Oct. 30, 2040
Oct. 30, 2015
Total obligated
$
2,440
$
2,446
Note: Distributions on the trust preferred securities and interest on the subordinated debentures are payable semiannually for Citigroup Capital III and quarterly for Citigroup Capital XIII.
(1)
Represents the notional value received by outside investors from the trusts at the time of issuance. This differs from Citi’s balance sheet carrying value due primarily to unamortized discount and issuance costs.
(2)
In each case, the coupon rate on the subordinated debentures is the same as that on the trust preferred securities.
(3)
The spread incorporates the original contractual spread and a
26.161
bps tenor spread adjustment.
161
19.
CHANGES IN ACCUMULATED OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS) (AOCI)
Changes in each component of Citigroup’s
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
were as follows:
In millions of dollars
Net
unrealized
gains (losses)
on debt securities
Debt valuation adjustment (DVA)
(1)
Cash flow hedges
(2)
Benefit plans
(3)
CTA, net of hedges
(4)(5)
Excluded component of fair value hedges
Long-duration insurance contracts
(6)
Accumulated
other
comprehensive income (loss)
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2025
Balance, June 30, 2025
$
(
2,044
)
$
(
684
)
$
(
141
)
$
(
5,690
)
$
(
35,232
)
$
(
45
)
$
50
$
(
43,786
)
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications
523
(
1,044
)
(
75
)
(
20
)
138
11
(
10
)
(
477
)
Increase (decrease) due to amounts reclassified from
AOCI
(
73
)
23
100
46
(
3
)
—
—
93
Change, net of taxes
$
450
$
(
1,021
)
$
25
$
26
$
135
$
11
$
(
10
)
$
(
384
)
Balance at September 30, 2025
$
(
1,594
)
$
(
1,705
)
$
(
116
)
$
(
5,664
)
$
(
35,097
)
$
(
34
)
$
40
$
(
44,170
)
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2025
Balance, December 31, 2024
$
(
2,837
)
$
(
1,121
)
$
(
220
)
$
(
5,627
)
$
(
38,047
)
$
(
52
)
$
52
$
(
47,852
)
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications
1,502
(
613
)
(
267
)
(
171
)
2,941
15
(
12
)
3,395
Increase (decrease) due to amounts reclassified from
AOCI
(
259
)
29
371
134
9
3
—
287
Change, net of taxes
$
1,243
$
(
584
)
$
104
$
(
37
)
$
2,950
$
18
$
(
12
)
$
3,682
Balance at September 30, 2025
$
(
1,594
)
$
(
1,705
)
$
(
116
)
$
(
5,664
)
$
(
35,097
)
$
(
34
)
$
40
$
(
44,170
)
In millions of dollars
Net
unrealized
gains (losses)
on debt securities
Debt valuation adjustment (DVA)
(1)
Cash flow hedges
(2)
Benefit plans
(3)
CTA, net
of hedges
(4)(5)
Excluded component of fair value hedges
Long-duration insurance contracts
(6)
Accumulated
other
comprehensive income (loss)
Three Months Ended
September 30, 2024
Balance at June 30, 2024
$
(
3,682
)
$
(
1,016
)
$
(
629
)
$
(
5,794
)
$
(
35,573
)
$
(
39
)
$
56
$
(
46,677
)
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications
1,381
(
155
)
(
305
)
1
416
(
8
)
(
17
)
1,313
Increase (decrease) due to amounts reclassified from
AOCI
(
46
)
5
161
48
—
(
1
)
—
167
Change, net of taxes
$
1,335
$
(
150
)
$
(
144
)
$
49
$
416
$
(
9
)
$
(
17
)
$
1,480
Balance at September 30, 2024
$
(
2,347
)
$
(
1,166
)
$
(
773
)
$
(
5,745
)
$
(
35,157
)
$
(
48
)
$
39
$
(
45,197
)
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2024
Balance, December 31, 2023
$
(
3,744
)
$
(
709
)
$
(
1,406
)
$
(
6,050
)
$
(
32,885
)
$
(
40
)
$
34
$
(
44,800
)
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications
1,533
(
474
)
14
164
(
2,272
)
4
6
(
1,025
)
Increase (decrease) due to amounts reclassified from
AOCI
(
136
)
17
619
141
—
(
12
)
(
1
)
628
Change, net of taxes
$
1,397
$
(
457
)
$
633
$
305
$
(
2,272
)
$
(
8
)
$
5
$
(
397
)
Balance at September 30, 2024
$
(
2,347
)
$
(
1,166
)
$
(
773
)
$
(
5,745
)
$
(
35,157
)
$
(
48
)
$
39
$
(
45,197
)
(1)
Reflects the after-tax valuation of Citi’s fair value option liabilities. See “Market Valuation Adjustments” in Note 23.
(2)
Primarily driven by Citi’s pay floating/receive fixed interest rate swap programs that hedge certain floating rates on assets.
(3)
Primarily reflects adjustments based on actuarial valuations of the Company’s significant pension and postretirement plans, actuarial valuations of all other plans and amortization of amounts previously recognized in other comprehensive income. Citigroup remeasures its significant pension and postretirement benefits plans’ obligations and assets by updating plan actuarial assumptions quarterly, when certain conditions are met to trigger interim remeasurement. No interim remeasurement occurred for the third quarter of 2025.
(4)
Primarily reflects the movements in (by order of impact) the Mexican peso, euro and Brazilian real against the U.S. dollar and changes in related tax effects and hedges for the three months ended September 30, 2025. Primarily reflects the movements in (by order of impact) the euro, Mexican peso, Polish zloty, Brazilian real, South Korean won, Singapore dollar and Japanese yen against the U.S. dollar and changes in related tax effects and hedges for the nine months ended
162
September 30, 2025. Primarily reflects the movement in (by order of impact) the Mexican peso, euro, Japanese yen, Singapore dollar, Malaysian ringgit, Polish zloty and Chilean peso against the U.S. dollar and changes in related tax effects and hedges for the three months ended September 30, 2024. Primarily reflects the movement in (by order of impact) the Mexican peso, Egyptian pound, Brazilian real, Malaysian ringgit and Taiwan dollar against the U.S. dollar and changes in related tax effects and hedges for the nine months ended September 30, 2024. Amounts recorded in the CTA component of
AOCI
remain in
AOCI
until the sale or substantial liquidation of the foreign entity, at which point such amounts related to the foreign entity are reclassified into earnings.
(5)
Citi’s
AOCI
includes CTA losses, net of hedges and taxes, amounting to approximately $(
9
) billion, attributable to Banamex and its consolidated subsidiaries as of September 30, 2025.
(6)
Reflects the change in the liability for future policyholder benefits for certain long-duration life-contingent annuity contracts that are issued by a regulated Banamex insurance subsidiary within Mexico Consumer/SBMM and reported within Legacy Franchises. The amount reflects the change in the liability after discounting using an upper-medium-grade fixed income instrument yield that reflects the duration characteristics of the liability. The balance of the liability for future policyholder benefits, which is recorded within
Other liabilities
, for this insurance subsidiary was approximately $
491
million and $
463
million at September 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
163
The pretax and after-tax changes in each component of
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
were as follows:
In millions of dollars
Pretax
Tax effect
(1)
After-tax
Three Months Ended September 30, 2025
Balance, June 30, 2025
$
(
49,927
)
$
6,141
$
(
43,786
)
Change in net unrealized gains (losses) on debt securities
613
(
163
)
450
Debt valuation adjustment (DVA)
(
1,293
)
272
(
1,021
)
Cash flow hedges
44
(
19
)
25
Benefit plans
20
6
26
Foreign currency translation adjustment (CTA)
67
68
135
Excluded component of fair value hedges
14
(
3
)
11
Long-duration insurance contracts
(
16
)
6
(
10
)
Change
$
(
551
)
$
167
$
(
384
)
Balance at September 30, 2025
$
(
50,478
)
$
6,308
$
(
44,170
)
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2025
Balance, December 31, 2024
$
(
54,439
)
$
6,587
$
(
47,852
)
Change in net unrealized gains (losses) on debt securities
1,720
(
477
)
1,243
DVA
(
684
)
100
(
584
)
Cash flow hedges
140
(
36
)
104
Benefit plans
(
55
)
18
(
37
)
CTA
2,834
116
2,950
Excluded component of fair value hedges
22
(
4
)
18
Long-duration insurance contracts
(
16
)
4
(
12
)
Change
$
3,961
$
(
279
)
$
3,682
Balance at September 30, 2025
$
(
50,478
)
$
6,308
$
(
44,170
)
In millions of dollars
Pretax
Tax effect
(1)
After-tax
Three Months Ended September 30, 2024
Balance at June 30, 2024
$
(
54,102
)
$
7,425
$
(
46,677
)
Change in net unrealized gains (losses) on debt securities
1,781
(
446
)
1,335
DVA
(
201
)
51
(
150
)
Cash flow hedges
(
171
)
27
(
144
)
Benefit plans
88
(
39
)
49
CTA
638
(
222
)
416
Excluded component of fair value hedges
(
10
)
1
(
9
)
Long-duration insurance contracts
(
26
)
9
(
17
)
Change
$
2,099
$
(
619
)
$
1,480
Balance, September 30, 2024
$
(
52,003
)
$
6,806
$
(
45,197
)
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2024
Balance, December 31, 2023
$
(
52,422
)
$
7,622
$
(
44,800
)
Change in net unrealized gains (losses) on debt securities
1,853
(
456
)
1,397
DVA
(
608
)
151
(
457
)
Cash flow hedges
843
(
210
)
633
Benefit plans
405
(
100
)
305
CTA
(
2,071
)
(
201
)
(
2,272
)
Excluded component of fair value hedges
(
12
)
4
(
8
)
Long-duration insurance contracts
9
(
4
)
5
Change
$
419
$
(
816
)
$
(
397
)
Balance, September 30, 2024
$
(
52,003
)
$
6,806
$
(
45,197
)
(1) Income tax effects of these items are released from
AOCI
contemporaneously with the related gross pretax amount.
164
The Company recognized pretax (gains) losses related to amounts in
AOCI
reclassified to the Consolidated Statement of Income as follows:
Increase (decrease) in AOCI due to amounts reclassified to
Consolidated Statement of Income
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Realized (gains) losses on sales of investments
$
(
105
)
$
(
72
)
$
(
364
)
$
(
210
)
Gross impairment losses
9
13
14
36
Subtotal, pretax
$
(
96
)
$
(
59
)
$
(
350
)
$
(
174
)
Tax effect
23
13
91
38
Net realized (gains) losses on investments, after-tax
(1)
$
(
73
)
$
(
46
)
$
(
259
)
$
(
136
)
Realized DVA (gains) losses on fair value option liabilities, pretax
$
42
$
7
$
49
$
23
Tax effect
(
19
)
(
2
)
(
20
)
(
6
)
Net realized DVA, after-tax
$
23
$
5
$
29
$
17
Interest rate contracts
$
125
$
212
$
482
$
814
Foreign exchange contracts
6
1
6
3
Subtotal, pretax
$
131
$
213
$
488
$
817
Tax effect
(
31
)
(
52
)
(
117
)
(
198
)
Amortization of cash flow hedges, after-tax
(2)
$
100
$
161
$
371
$
619
Amortization of unrecognized:
Prior service cost (benefit)
$
(
4
)
$
(
4
)
$
(
13
)
$
(
14
)
Net actuarial loss
66
62
196
196
Curtailment/settlement impact
(3)
—
4
—
6
Subtotal, pretax
$
62
$
62
$
183
$
188
Tax effect
(
16
)
(
14
)
(
49
)
(
47
)
Amortization of benefit plans, after-tax
(3)
$
46
$
48
$
134
$
141
Excluded component of fair value hedges, pretax
$
—
$
(
2
)
$
3
$
(
16
)
Tax effect
—
1
—
4
Excluded component of fair value hedges, after-tax
$
—
$
(
1
)
$
3
$
(
12
)
Long-duration contracts, pretax
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
(
1
)
Tax effect
—
—
—
—
Long-duration contracts, after-tax
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
(
1
)
CTA, pretax
$
(
3
)
$
—
$
9
$
—
Tax effect
—
—
—
—
CTA, after-tax
(4)
$
(
3
)
$
—
$
9
$
—
Total amounts reclassified out of
AOCI
, pretax
$
136
$
221
$
382
$
837
Total tax effect
(
43
)
(
54
)
(
95
)
(
209
)
Total amounts reclassified out of
AOCI
, after-tax
$
93
$
167
$
287
$
628
(1)
The pretax amount is reclassified to
Realized gains (losses) on sales of investments, net
and
Gross impairment losses
in the Consolidated Statement of Income. See Note 13.
(2)
See Note 22.
(3)
See Note 8.
(4)
The pretax amount is reclassified to
Other revenue
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
165
20.
PREFERRED STOCK
The following table summarizes the Company’s preferred stock outstanding:
Dividend rate as of September 30, 2025
Redemption
price per depositary share/preference share
Carrying value
(in millions of dollars)
Issuance date
Redeemable by issuer beginning
Number
of depositary
shares
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
Series P
(1)
April 24, 2015
May 15, 2025
N/A
$
1,000
2,000,000
$
—
$
2,000
Series T
(2)
April 25, 2016
August 15, 2026
6.250
%
1,000
1,500,000
1,500
1,500
Series V
(3)
January 23, 2020
January 30, 2025
N/A
1,000
1,500,000
—
1,500
Series W
(4)
December 10, 2020
December 10, 2025
4.000
1,000
1,500,000
1,500
1,500
Series X
(5)
February 18, 2021
February 18, 2026
3.875
1,000
2,300,000
2,300
2,300
Series Y
(6)
October 27, 2021
November 15, 2026
4.150
1,000
1,000,000
1,000
1,000
Series Z
(7)
March 7, 2023
May 15, 2028
7.375
1,000
1,250,000
1,250
1,250
Series AA
(8)
September 21, 2023
November 15, 2028
7.625
1,000
1,500,000
1,500
1,500
Series BB
(9)
March 6, 2024
May 15, 2029
7.200
1,000
550,000
550
550
Series CC
(10)
May 29, 2024
August 15, 2029
7.125
1,000
1,750,000
1,750
1,750
Series DD
(11)
July 30, 2024
August 15, 2034
7.000
1,000
1,500,000
1,500
1,500
Series EE
(12)
December 3, 2024
February 15, 2030
6.750
1,000
1,500,000
1,500
1,500
Series FF
(13)
February 12, 2025
February 15, 2030
6.950
1,000
2,000,000
2,000
—
Series GG
(14)
July 23, 2025
August 15, 2030
6.875
1,000
2,700,000
2,700
—
$
19,050
$
17,850
(1)
Citi redeemed Series P in its entirety on May 15, 2025.
(2)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable semiannually on February 15 and August 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, August 15, 2026, thereafter payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a floating rate, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(3)
Citi redeemed Series V in its entirety on January 30, 2025.
(4)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on March 10, June 10, September 10 and December 10 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, December 10, 2025, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series W reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
3.597
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(5)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 18, May 18, August 18 and November 18 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, February 18, 2026, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series X reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
3.417
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(6)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, November 15, 2026, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series Y reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
3.000
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(7)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, May 15, 2028, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series Z reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
3.209
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(8)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, November 15, 2028, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series AA reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
3.211
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(9)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, May 15, 2029, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series BB reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
2.905
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(10)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, August 15, 2029, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series CC reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
2.693
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(11)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, August 15, 2034, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series DD reset date and every 10 years thereafter equal to the 10-year treasury rate plus
2.757
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(12)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, February 15, 2030, thereafter payable quarterly on the
166
same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series EE reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
2.572
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(13)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, February 15, 2030, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series FF reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
2.726
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
(14)
Issued as depositary shares, each representing a 1/25
th
interest in a share of the corresponding series of non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Dividends are payable quarterly on February 15, May 15, August 15 and November 15 at a fixed rate until, but excluding, August 15, 2030, thereafter payable quarterly on the same dates at a fixed rate that resets on the Series GG reset date and every five years thereafter equal to the five-year treasury rate plus
2.890
%, in each case when, as and if declared by the Citi Board of Directors.
N/A Not applicable, as the series has been redeemed.
167
21.
SECURITIZATIONS AND VARIABLE INTEREST ENTITIES
For additional information regarding Citi’s use of special purpose entities (SPEs) and variable interest entities (VIEs), see Note 23 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Citigroup’s involvement with consolidated and unconsolidated VIEs with which the Company holds significant variable interests or has continuing involvement through servicing a majority of the assets in a VIE is presented below:
As of September 30, 2025
Maximum exposure to loss in significant unconsolidated VIEs
(1)
Funded exposures
(2)
Unfunded exposures
In millions of dollars
Total
involvement
with SPE
assets
Consolidated
VIE/SPE assets
Significant
unconsolidated
VIE assets
(3)
Debt
investments
Equity
investments
Funding
commitments
Guarantees
and
derivatives
Total
Credit card securitizations
$
27,489
$
27,489
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Mortgage securitizations
(4)
U.S. agency-sponsored
123,762
—
123,762
3,391
—
—
115
3,506
Non-agency-sponsored
66,430
—
66,430
4,204
—
234
—
4,438
Citi-administered asset-backed commercial paper conduits
19,037
19,037
—
—
—
—
—
—
Collateralized loan obligations (CLOs)
731
—
731
227
—
—
—
227
Asset-based financing
(5)
369,331
8,298
361,033
59,862
638
15,940
—
76,440
Municipal securities tender option bond trusts (TOBs)
2,802
2,802
—
—
—
—
—
—
Municipal investments
21,725
—
21,725
2,392
2,817
3,374
—
8,583
Client intermediation
196
84
112
3
—
—
52
55
Investment funds
3,835
6
3,829
4
47
92
13
156
Total
$
635,338
$
57,716
$
577,622
$
70,083
$
3,502
$
19,640
$
180
$
93,405
As of December 31, 2024
Maximum exposure to loss in significant unconsolidated VIEs
(1)
Funded exposures
(2)
Unfunded exposures
In millions of dollars
Total
involvement
with SPE
assets
Consolidated
VIE/SPE assets
Significant
unconsolidated
VIE assets
(3)
Debt
investments
Equity
investments
Funding
commitments
Guarantees
and
derivatives
Total
Credit card securitizations
$
29,746
$
29,746
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Mortgage securitizations
(4)
U.S. agency-sponsored
120,568
—
120,568
2,387
—
—
123
2,510
Non-agency-sponsored
62,378
—
62,378
3,479
—
566
—
4,045
Citi-administered asset-backed commercial paper conduits
21,306
21,306
—
—
—
—
—
—
Collateralized loan obligations (CLOs)
3,920
—
3,920
2,019
—
—
—
2,019
Asset-based financing
(5)
268,498
7,947
260,551
54,349
735
13,185
—
68,269
Municipal securities tender option bond trusts (TOBs)
935
935
—
—
—
—
—
—
Municipal investments
20,280
3
20,277
2,360
2,730
2,502
—
7,592
Client intermediation
387
81
306
20
—
—
49
69
Investment funds
641
21
620
4
18
98
—
120
Total
$
528,659
$
60,039
$
468,620
$
64,618
$
3,483
$
16,351
$
172
$
84,624
(1) The definition of maximum exposure to loss is included in the text that follows this table.
(2) Included on Citigroup’s September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024 Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(3) A significant unconsolidated VIE is an entity in which the Company has any variable interest or continuing involvement considered to be significant, regardless of the likelihood of loss.
(4) Citigroup mortgage securitizations also include agency and non-agency (private label) re-securitization activities. These SPEs are not consolidated. See “Re-securitizations” below for further discussion.
(5) Included within this line are loans to third-party-sponsored private equity funds, which represent $
125.1
billion and $
45.5
billion in unconsolidated VIE assets and $
1,191
million and $
824
million in maximum exposure to loss as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
168
The previous tables do not include:
•
certain investment funds for which the Company provides investment management services and personal estate trusts for which the Company provides administrative, trustee and/or investment management services;
•
certain third-party-sponsored private equity funds to which the Company provides credit facilities. The Company has no decision-making power and does not consolidate these funds, some of which may meet the definition of a VIE. The Company’s maximum exposure to loss is generally limited to a loan or lending-related commitment. As of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, the Company’s maximum exposure to loss related to these transactions was $
9.1
billion and $
8.1
billion, respectively (see Note 14 and Note 23 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K);
•
certain VIEs structured by third parties in which the Company holds securities in inventory, as these investments are made on arm’s-length terms;
•
certain positions in mortgage- and asset-backed securities held by the Company, which are classified as
Trading account assets
,
Investments
or
Loans
, in which the Company has no other involvement with the related securitization entity deemed to be significant (see Notes 13, 14 and 23);
•
certain representations and warranties exposures in Citigroup residential mortgage securitizations, in which the original mortgage loan balances are no longer outstanding; and
•
VIEs such as preferred securities trusts used in connection with the Company’s funding activities. The Company does not have a variable interest in these trusts.
Consolidated VIEs
The Company engages in on-balance sheet securitizations, which are securitizations that do not qualify for sales treatment; thus, the assets remain on Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet, and any proceeds received are recognized as secured liabilities. In general, the third-party investors in the obligations of consolidated VIEs have legal recourse only to the assets of the respective VIEs and do not have such recourse to the Company, except where Citi has provided a guarantee to the investors or is the counterparty to certain derivative transactions involving the VIE. Thus, Citigroup’s maximum legal exposure to loss related to consolidated VIEs is significantly less than the carrying value of the consolidated VIE assets due to outstanding third-party financing.
Intercompany assets and liabilities are excluded from Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet. All VIE assets are restricted from being sold or pledged as collateral. The cash flows from these assets are the only source used to pay down the associated liabilities, which are non-recourse to Citi’s general assets.
The asset balances for consolidated VIEs represent the carrying amounts of the assets consolidated by the Company. The carrying amount may represent the amortized cost or the current fair value of the assets depending on the classification of the asset (e.g., loan or security) and the associated accounting model ascribed to that classification.
The asset balances for unconsolidated VIEs in which the Company has significant involvement represent the most current information available to the Company. In most cases, the asset balances represent an amortized cost basis without regard to impairments, unless fair value information is readily available to the Company.
The maximum funded exposure represents the balance sheet carrying amount of the Company’s investment in the VIE. It reflects the initial amount of cash invested in the VIE, adjusted for any accrued interest and cash principal payments received. The carrying amount may also be adjusted for increases or declines in fair value or any impairment in value recognized in earnings. The maximum exposure of unfunded positions represents the remaining undrawn committed amount, including liquidity and credit facilities provided by the Company or the notional amount of a derivative instrument considered to be a variable interest. In certain transactions, the Company has entered into derivative instruments or other arrangements that are not considered variable interests in the VIE (e.g., interest rate swaps, cross-currency swaps or where the Company is the purchaser of credit protection under a credit default swap or total return swap where the Company pays the total return on certain assets to the SPE). Receivables under such arrangements are not included in the maximum exposure amounts.
169
The following tables present assets and liabilities related to consolidated VIEs, which are included on Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet. These assets can only be used to settle obligations of consolidated VIEs. In addition, the assets and liabilities of consolidated VIEs include only third-party balances and exclude intercompany balances that eliminate in consolidation. The liabilities also exclude amounts where creditors or beneficial interest holders have recourse to the general credit of Citigroup.
September 30,
2025
December 31,
In millions of dollars
(Unaudited)
2024
Assets of consolidated VIEs to be used to settle obligations of consolidated VIEs
Cash and due from banks
$
73
$
65
Trading account assets
7,225
6,971
Investments
2,324
739
Loans, net of unearned income
Consumer
30,742
32,958
Corporate
19,446
21,492
Loans, net of unearned income
$
50,188
$
54,450
Allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL)
(
2,213
)
(
2,376
)
Total loans, net
$
47,975
$
52,074
Other assets
119
190
Total assets of consolidated VIEs to be used to settle obligations of consolidated VIEs
$
57,716
$
60,039
September 30,
2025
December 31,
In millions of dollars
(Unaudited)
2024
Liabilities of consolidated VIEs for which creditors or beneficial interest holders
do not have recourse to the general credit of Citigroup
Short-term borrowings
$
12,606
$
13,628
Long-term debt
6,906
5,271
Other liabilities
450
920
Total liabilities of consolidated VIEs for which creditors or beneficial interest holders
do not have recourse to the general credit of Citigroup
$
19,962
$
19,819
170
Funding Commitments for Significant Unconsolidated VIEs—Liquidity Facilities and Loan Commitments
The following table presents the notional amount of liquidity facilities and loan commitments that are classified as funding commitments in the VIE tables above:
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Liquidity
facilities
Loan/equity
commitments
Liquidity
facilities
Loan/equity
commitments
Non-agency-sponsored mortgage securitizations
$
—
$
234
$
—
$
566
Citi-administered asset-backed commercial paper conduits
—
—
—
—
Asset-based financing
—
15,940
—
13,185
Municipal securities tender option bond trusts (TOBs)
—
—
—
—
Municipal investments
—
3,374
—
2,502
Investment funds
—
92
—
98
Total funding commitments
$
—
$
19,640
$
—
$
16,351
Significant Interests in Unconsolidated VIEs—Balance Sheet Classification
The following table presents the carrying amounts and classification of significant variable interests in unconsolidated VIEs:
In billions of dollars
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Cash
$
—
$
—
Trading account assets
3.3
3.4
Investments
5.1
5.6
Total loans, net of allowance
64.5
58.4
Other
0.6
0.6
Total assets
$
73.5
$
68.0
Credit Card Securitizations
The Company’s primary credit card securitization activity is through
two
trusts—Citibank Credit Card Master Trust and Citibank Omni Trust. These trusts are consolidated entities given Citi’s continuing involvement.
The following table reflects amounts related to the Company’s securitized credit card receivables:
In billions of dollars
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Ownership interests in principal amount of trust credit card receivables
Sold to investors via trust-issued securities
$
6.9
$
5.2
Retained by Citigroup as trust-issued securities
3.4
3.7
Retained by Citigroup via non-certificated interests
18.1
22.1
Total
$
28.4
$
31.0
The following table summarizes selected cash flow information related to Citigroup’s credit card securitizations:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In billions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Proceeds from new securitizations
$
—
$
—
$
2.0
$
—
Paydown of maturing notes
0.4
0.2
0.4
1.3
Master Trust Liabilities (at Par Value)
The weighted average maturity of the third-party term notes issued by the Master Trust was
3.3
years as of September 30, 2025 and
3.6
years as of December 31, 2024.
In billions of dollars
Sep. 30, 2025
Dec. 31, 2024
Term notes issued to third parties
$
6.0
$
4.3
Term notes retained by Citigroup affiliates
1.9
1.7
Total Master Trust liabilities
$
7.9
$
6.0
Omni Trust Liabilities (at Par Value)
The weighted average maturity of the third-party term notes issued by the Omni Trust was
0.6
years as of September 30, 2025 and
1.4
years as of December 31, 2024.
In billions of dollars
Sep. 30, 2025
Dec. 31, 2024
Term notes issued to third parties
$
0.9
$
0.9
Term notes retained by Citigroup affiliates
1.5
2.0
Total Omni Trust liabilities
$
2.4
$
2.9
171
Mortgage Securitizations
The following tables summarize selected cash flow information and retained interests related to Citigroup mortgage securitizations:
Three Months Ended September 30,
2025
2024
In billions of dollars
U.S. agency-
sponsored
mortgages
Non-agency-
sponsored
mortgages
U.S. agency-
sponsored
mortgages
Non-agency-
sponsored
mortgages
Principal securitized
$
1.5
$
2.9
$
2.9
$
2.7
Proceeds from new securitizations
1.6
1.6
3.0
2.7
Contractual servicing fees received
—
—
—
—
Cash flows received on retained interests and other net cash flows
—
0.1
—
—
Purchases of previously transferred financial assets
—
—
—
—
Nine Months Ended September 30,
2025
2024
In billions of dollars
U.S. agency-
sponsored
mortgages
Non-agency-
sponsored
mortgages
U.S. agency-
sponsored
mortgages
Non-agency-
sponsored
mortgages
Principal securitized
$
4.9
$
5.7
$
5.8
$
6.8
Proceeds from new securitizations
5.1
3.9
6.0
6.4
Contractual servicing fees received
0.1
—
0.1
—
Cash flows received on retained interests and other net cash flows
—
0.2
—
0.1
Purchases of previously transferred financial assets
—
—
0.1
—
Note: Excludes re-securitization transactions.
Gains recognized on the securitization of U.S. agency-sponsored mortgages were less than $
1
million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025. Gains recognized on the securitization of non-agency-sponsored mortgages were $
69.2
million and $
164.8
million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, respectively.
Gains recognized on the securitization of U.S. agency-sponsored mortgages were less than $
1
million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024. Gains recognized on the securitization of non-agency-sponsored mortgages were $
44.8
million and $
126.8
million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, respectively.
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Non-agency-sponsored mortgages
(1)
Non-agency-sponsored mortgages
(1)
In millions of dollars
U.S. agency-
sponsored mortgages
Senior
interests
Subordinated
interests
U.S. agency-
sponsored mortgages
Senior
interests
Subordinated
interests
Carrying value of retained interests
(2)
$
789
$
908
$
1,023
$
783
$
902
$
1,058
(1) Disclosure of non-agency-sponsored mortgages as senior and subordinated interests is indicative of the interests’ position in the capital structure of the securitization.
(2) Retained interests consist of Level 2 and Level 3 assets depending on the observability of significant inputs. See Note 23 for more information about fair value measurements.
The following table includes information about loan delinquencies and liquidation losses for assets held in non-consolidated, non-agency-sponsored securitization entities:
Liquidation (gains) losses
Securitized assets
90 days past due
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In billions of dollars, except liquidation losses in millions
Sep. 30, 2025
Dec. 31, 2024
Sep. 30, 2025
Dec. 31, 2024
2025
2024
2025
2024
Securitized assets
Residential mortgages
(1)
$
29.9
$
31.0
$
0.3
$
0.3
$
(
1.2
)
$
(
0.7
)
$
0.1
$
0.5
Commercial and other
31.5
31.1
—
—
—
—
—
—
Total
$
61.4
$
62.1
$
0.3
$
0.3
$
(
1.2
)
$
(
0.7
)
$
0.1
$
0.5
(1) Securitized assets include $
0.1
billion of personal loan securitizations as of September 30, 2025.
172
Consumer Loan Securitizations
Beginning in the third quarter of 2023, Citi relaunched a program securitizing other consumer loans into asset-backed securities. The principal securitized for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 was $
0.3
billion and $
0.9
billion, respectively. The proceeds from new securitizations for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 were $
0.3
billion and $
0.8
billion, respectively. The gains recognized on the securitization of consumer loans were $
2.1
million and $
2.7
million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, respectively.
Mortgage Servicing Rights (MSRs)
In connection with the securitization of mortgage loans, Citi’s U.S. consumer mortgage business generally retains the servicing rights, which entitle the Company to a future stream of cash flows based on the outstanding principal balances of the loans and the contractual servicing fee. Failure to service the loans in accordance with contractual requirements may lead to a termination of the servicing rights and the loss of future servicing fees. These transactions create intangible assets referred to as MSRs, which are recorded at fair value on Citi’s Consolidated Balance Sheet (see Note 23 for the valuation of MSRs). The MSRs correspond to principal loan balances of $
58
billion and $
55
billion as of September 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
The Company receives fees during the course of servicing previously securitized mortgages.
The amounts of these fees were as follows:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Servicing fees
$
37
$
30
$
112
$
95
Late fees
1
—
2
1
Total MSR fees
$
38
$
30
$
114
$
96
In the Consolidated Statement of Income these fees are primarily classified as
Commissions and fees
, and changes in MSR fair values are classified as
Other revenue
.
Re-securitizations
The Company engages in re-securitization transactions backed by either residential or commercial mortgages in which debt securities are transferred to a VIE in exchange for new beneficial interests. Citi did not transfer non-agency (private label) securities to re-securitization entities, nor did Citi hold retained interests in such securitizations, during the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024.
As of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, Citi held
no
retained interests in private label re-securitization transactions structured by Citi.
The Company also re-securitizes U.S. government-agency-guaranteed mortgage-backed (agency) securities. During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, Citi transferred agency securities with a fair value of approximately $
10.5
billion and $
24.1
billion to re-securitization entities, compared to approximately $
6.3
billion
and $
17.0
billion for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, respectively.
As of September 30, 2025, the fair value of Citi-retained interests in agency re-securitization transactions structured by Citi totaled approximately $
2.6
billion (including $
1.8
billion related to re-securitization transactions executed in 2025), compared to $
1.6
billion as of December 31, 2024 (including $
977
million related to re-securitization transactions executed in 2024), which is recorded in
Trading account assets
. The original fair values of agency re-securitization transactions in which Citi holds a retained interest as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024 were approximately $
78.0
billion and $
76.8
billion, respectively.
As of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, the Company did not consolidate any private label or agency re-securitization entities.
Citi-Administered Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Conduits
At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, the commercial paper conduits administered by Citi had approximately $
19.0
billion and $
21.3
billion of purchased assets outstanding, and unfunded commitments with clients of approximately $
16.9
billion and $
16.7
billion, respectively.
At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, the weighted-average remaining maturities of the commercial paper issued by the conduits were approximately
58
and
82
days, respectively.
The conduits have obtained letters of credit from the Company that equal at least
8
% to
10
% of the conduit’s assets with a minimum of $
200
million to $
350
million. The letters of credit provided by the Company to the conduits total approximately $
1.9
billion and $
2.1
billion as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively. In the event that defaulted assets exceed the transaction-specific credit enhancement described above, any losses in each conduit are allocated first to the Company and then to the commercial paper investors.
At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, the Company owned $
6.1
billion and $
6.4
billion, respectively, of the commercial paper issued by its administered conduits. The Company’s investments were not driven by market illiquidity and the Company is not obligated under any agreement to purchase the commercial paper issued by the conduits.
Municipal Securities Tender Option Bond (TOB) Trusts
The Company provides credit enhancement for certain non-customer trusts. At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, $
0.8
billion and $
0.4
billion, respectively, of the municipal bonds owned by non-customer TOB trusts were subject to a credit guarantee provided by the Company.
The Company provides other liquidity agreements or letters of credit to customer-sponsored municipal investment funds, which are not variable interest entities, and municipality-related issuers that totaled $
0.1
billion and $
0.5
billion as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively. These liquidity agreements and letters of credit are offset by reimbursement agreements with various term-out provisions.
173
Asset-Based Financing
The primary types of Citi’s asset-based financings, total assets of the unconsolidated VIEs with significant involvement and Citi’s maximum exposure to loss are presented below. For Citi to realize the maximum loss, the VIE (borrower) would have to default with no recovery from the assets held by the VIE.
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Total
unconsolidated
VIE assets
Maximum
exposure to
unconsolidated VIEs
Total
unconsolidated
VIE assets
Maximum
exposure to
unconsolidated VIEs
Type
Commercial and other real estate
$
66,784
$
12,371
$
61,322
$
9,693
Corporate loans
59,127
30,803
45,542
21,009
Other (including investment funds, airlines and shipping)
235,122
33,266
153,687
37,567
Total
$
361,033
$
76,440
$
260,551
$
68,269
174
22.
DERIVATIVES
In the ordinary course of business, Citigroup enters into various types of derivative transactions. All derivatives are recorded in
Trading account assets/Trading account liabilities
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. For additional information regarding Citi’s use of and accounting for derivatives, see Note 24 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Information pertaining to Citigroup’s derivatives activities, based on notional amounts, is presented in the table below. Derivative notional amounts are reference amounts from which contractual payments are derived and do not represent a complete measure of Citi’s exposure to derivative transactions. Citi’s derivative exposure arises primarily from
market fluctuations (i.e., market risk), counterparty failure (i.e., credit risk) and/or periods of high volatility or financial stress (i.e., liquidity risk), as well as any market valuation adjustments that may be required on the transactions. Moreover, notional amounts presented below do not reflect the netting of offsetting trades. For example, if Citi enters into a receive-fixed interest rate swap with $100 million notional, and offsets this risk with an identical but opposite pay-fixed position with a different counterparty, $200 million in derivative notionals is reported, although these offsetting positions may result in de minimis overall market risk.
In addition, aggregate derivative notional amounts can fluctuate from period to period in the normal course of business based on Citi’s market share, levels of client activity and other factors.
Derivative Notionals
Hedging instruments under ASC 815
Trading derivative instruments
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
Interest rate contracts
Swaps
$
388,000
$
276,939
$
20,066,734
$
15,245,212
Futures and forwards
—
—
4,128,658
3,006,869
Written options
—
—
3,301,018
2,799,577
Purchased options
—
—
2,984,836
2,526,165
Total interest rate contracts
$
388,000
$
276,939
$
30,481,246
$
23,577,823
Foreign exchange contracts
Swaps
$
40,421
$
36,421
$
9,439,666
$
7,422,309
Futures, forwards and spot
60,328
55,671
5,805,127
4,028,135
Written options
—
—
1,054,305
1,022,109
Purchased options
—
—
1,007,206
1,013,884
Total foreign exchange contracts
$
100,749
$
92,092
$
17,306,304
$
13,486,437
Equity contracts
Swaps
$
—
$
—
$
438,187
$
323,751
Futures and forwards
—
—
92,003
73,437
Written options
—
—
864,311
581,659
Purchased options
—
—
709,291
436,702
Total equity contracts
$
—
$
—
$
2,103,792
$
1,415,549
Commodity and other contracts
Swaps
$
—
$
—
$
82,251
$
80,582
Futures and forwards
11,985
4,403
208,178
183,494
Written options
—
—
77,355
54,673
Purchased options
—
—
78,930
55,819
Total commodity and other contracts
$
11,985
$
4,403
$
446,714
$
374,568
Credit derivatives
(1)
Protection sold
$
—
$
—
$
553,561
$
439,146
Protection purchased
—
—
668,543
531,429
Total credit derivatives
$
—
$
—
$
1,222,104
$
970,575
Total derivative notionals
$
500,734
$
373,434
$
51,560,160
$
39,824,952
175
The following tables present the gross and net fair values of the Company’s derivative transactions and the related offsetting amounts as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024. Gross positive fair values are offset against gross negative fair values by counterparty, pursuant to enforceable master netting agreements. Under ASC 815-10-45, payables and receivables in respect of cash collateral received from or paid to a given counterparty pursuant to a credit support annex are included in the offsetting amount if a legal opinion supporting the enforceability of netting and collateral rights has been obtained. GAAP does not permit similar offsetting for security collateral.
In addition, the following tables reflect rule changes adopted by clearing organizations that require or allow entities to treat certain derivative assets, liabilities and the related variation margin as settlement of the related derivative fair values for legal and accounting purposes, as opposed to presenting gross derivative assets and liabilities that are subject to collateral, whereby the counterparties would also record a related collateral payable or receivable. The tables also present amounts that are not permitted to be offset in the Company’s balance sheet presentation, such as security collateral or cash collateral posted at third-party custodians, but which would be eligible for offsetting to the extent that an event of default has occurred and a legal opinion supporting enforceability of the netting and collateral rights has been obtained.
176
Derivative Mark-to-Market (MTM) Receivables/Payables
Derivatives classified in
Trading account assets/liabilities
(1)(2)
In millions of dollars at September 30, 2025
Assets
Liabilities
Derivatives instruments designated as ASC 815 hedges
Over-the-counter
$
52
$
515
Cleared
171
145
Interest rate contracts
$
223
$
660
Over-the-counter
$
424
$
1,171
Cleared
—
—
Foreign exchange contracts
$
424
$
1,171
Total derivatives instruments designated as ASC 815 hedges
$
647
$
1,831
Derivatives instruments not designated as ASC 815 hedges
Over-the-counter
$
97,018
$
86,180
Cleared
128,981
130,143
Exchange traded
35
58
Interest rate contracts
$
226,034
$
216,381
Over-the-counter
$
125,351
$
110,887
Cleared
1,676
1,769
Exchange traded
3
3
Foreign exchange contracts
$
127,030
$
112,659
Over-the-counter
$
32,291
$
47,453
Cleared
—
—
Exchange traded
53,849
52,152
Equity contracts
$
86,140
$
99,605
Over-the-counter
$
19,836
$
20,293
Exchange traded
667
797
Commodity and other contracts
$
20,503
$
21,090
Over-the-counter
$
7,631
$
8,252
Cleared
2,538
2,491
Credit derivatives
$
10,169
$
10,743
Total derivatives instruments not designated as ASC 815 hedges
$
469,876
$
460,478
Total derivatives
$
470,523
$
462,309
Less: Netting agreements
(3)
$
(
387,237
)
$
(
387,237
)
Less: Netting cash collateral received/paid
(4)
(
28,789
)
(
20,065
)
Net receivables/payables included on the Consolidated Balance Sheet
(5)
$
54,497
$
55,007
Additional amounts subject to an enforceable master netting agreement,
but not offset on the Consolidated Balance Sheet
Less: Cash collateral received/paid
$
(
1,392
)
$
(
66
)
Less: Non-cash collateral received/paid
(
5,467
)
(
3,343
)
Total net receivables/payables
(5)
$
47,638
$
51,598
(1)
The derivatives fair values are also presented in Note 23.
(2)
Over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives are derivatives executed and settled bilaterally with counterparties without the use of an organized exchange or central clearing house. Cleared derivatives include derivatives executed bilaterally with a counterparty in the OTC market, but then novated to a central clearing house, whereby the central clearing house becomes the counterparty to both of the original counterparties. Exchange-traded derivatives include derivatives executed directly on an organized exchange that provides pre-trade price transparency.
(3)
Represents the netting of balances with the same counterparty under enforceable netting agreements. Approximately $
204
billion, $
132
billion and $
51
billion of the netting against trading account asset/liability balances is attributable to each of the OTC, cleared and exchange-traded derivatives, respectively.
(4)
Represents the netting of cash collateral paid and received by counterparties under enforceable credit support agreements with appropriate legal opinion supporting enforceability of netting. Substantially all netting of cash collateral received and paid is against OTC derivative assets and liabilities, respectively.
(5)
The net receivables/payables include approximately $
9
billion of derivative asset and $
13
billion of derivative liability fair values not subject to enforceable master netting agreements, respectively.
177
Derivatives classified in
Trading account assets/liabilities
(1)(2)
In millions of dollars at December 31, 2024
Assets
Liabilities
Derivatives instruments designated as ASC 815 hedges
Over-the-counter
$
695
$
1
Cleared
154
19
Interest rate contracts
$
849
$
20
Over-the-counter
$
2,951
$
1,117
Cleared
—
—
Foreign exchange contracts
$
2,951
$
1,117
Total derivatives instruments designated as ASC 815 hedges
$
3,800
$
1,137
Derivatives instruments not designated as ASC 815 hedges
Over-the-counter
$
95,907
$
88,776
Cleared
33,447
33,269
Exchange traded
75
67
Interest rate contracts
$
129,429
$
122,112
Over-the-counter
$
210,755
$
202,582
Cleared
2,329
2,298
Exchange traded
10
20
Foreign exchange contracts
$
213,094
$
204,900
Over-the-counter
$
19,262
$
25,950
Cleared
—
—
Exchange traded
35,882
35,786
Equity contracts
$
55,144
$
61,736
Over-the-counter
$
11,945
$
13,804
Exchange traded
675
826
Commodity and other contracts
$
12,620
$
14,630
Over-the-counter
$
6,907
$
5,569
Cleared
1,808
1,684
Credit derivatives
$
8,715
$
7,253
Total derivatives instruments not designated as ASC 815 hedges
$
419,002
$
410,631
Total derivatives
$
422,802
$
411,768
Less: Netting agreements
(3)
$
(
334,900
)
$
(
334,900
)
Less: Netting cash collateral received/paid
(4)
(
27,303
)
(
28,570
)
Net receivables/payables included on the Consolidated Balance Sheet
(5)
$
60,599
$
48,298
Additional amounts subject to an enforceable master netting agreement,
but not offset on the Consolidated Balance Sheet
Less: Cash collateral received/paid
$
(
808
)
$
(
52
)
Less: Non-cash collateral received/paid
(
6,017
)
(
3,376
)
Total net receivables/payables
(5)
$
53,774
$
44,870
(1)
The derivative fair values are also presented in Note 23.
(2)
OTC derivatives are derivatives executed and settled bilaterally with counterparties without the use of an organized exchange or central clearing house. Cleared derivatives include derivatives executed bilaterally with a counterparty in the OTC market, but then novated to a central clearing house, whereby the central clearing house becomes the counterparty to both of the original counterparties. Exchange-traded derivatives include derivatives executed directly on an organized exchange that provides pre-trade price transparency.
(3)
Represents the netting of balances with the same counterparty under enforceable netting agreements. Approximately $
264
billion, $
36
billion and $
35
billion of the netting against trading account asset/liability balances is attributable to each of the OTC, cleared and exchange-traded derivatives, respectively.
(4)
Represents the netting of cash collateral paid and received by counterparties under enforceable credit support agreements with appropriate legal opinion supporting enforceability of netting. Substantially all netting of cash collateral received and paid is against OTC derivative assets and liabilities, respectively.
(5)
The net receivables/payables include approximately $
13
billion of derivative asset and $
15
billion of derivative liability fair values not subject to enforceable master netting agreements, respectively.
178
For the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, amounts recognized in
Principal transactions
in the Consolidated Statement of Income include certain derivatives not designated in a qualifying hedging relationship. Citigroup presents this disclosure by business classification, showing derivative gains and losses related to its trading activities together with gains and losses related to non-derivative instruments within the same trading portfolios, as this represents how these portfolios are risk managed. See Note 6 for further information.
179
Fair Value Hedges
For additional information on Citi’s fair value hedges, see Notes 1 and 24 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The following table summarizes the gains (losses) on the Company’s fair value hedges:
Gains (losses) on fair value hedges
(1)
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
2025
2024
2025
2024
In millions of dollars
Principal transactions
Net interest income
Principal transactions
Net interest income
Principal transactions
Net interest income
Principal transactions
Net interest income
Gain (loss) on the hedging derivatives included in assessment of the effectiveness of fair value hedges
Interest rate hedges
$
—
$
(
328
)
$
—
$
(
128
)
$
—
$
(
751
)
$
—
$
(
1,168
)
Foreign exchange hedges
(
84
)
—
350
—
233
—
424
—
Commodity hedges
(
1,011
)
—
9
—
(
1,781
)
—
1,240
—
Total gain (loss) on the hedging derivatives included in assessment of the effectiveness of fair value hedges
$
(
1,095
)
$
(
328
)
$
359
$
(
128
)
$
(
1,548
)
$
(
751
)
$
1,664
$
(
1,168
)
Gain (loss) on the hedged item in designated and qualifying fair value hedges
Interest rate hedges
$
—
$
323
$
—
$
110
$
—
$
751
$
—
$
1,178
Foreign exchange hedges
84
—
(
350
)
—
(
233
)
—
(
424
)
—
Commodity hedges
1,011
—
(
9
)
—
1,781
—
(
1,240
)
—
Total gain (loss) on the hedged item in designated and qualifying fair value hedges
$
1,095
$
323
$
(
359
)
$
110
$
1,548
$
751
$
(
1,664
)
$
1,178
Net gain (loss) on the hedging derivatives excluded from assessment of the effectiveness of fair value hedges
Interest rate hedges
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
Foreign exchange hedges
(2)
8
—
51
—
129
—
54
—
Commodity hedges
(3)
107
—
102
—
463
—
269
—
Total net gain (loss) on the hedging derivatives excluded from assessment of the effectiveness of fair value hedges
$
115
$
—
$
153
$
—
$
592
$
—
$
323
$
—
(1)
Gain (loss) amounts for interest rate risk hedges are included in
Interest income/Interest expense
. The accrued interest income on fair value hedges is recorded in
Net interest income
and is excluded from this table. Amounts included both hedges of AFS securities and long-term debt on a net basis, which largely offset in the current period.
(2)
Amounts related to the forward points (i.e., the spot-forward difference) that are excluded from the assessment of hedge effectiveness and are generally reflected directly in earnings under the mark-to-market approach. Amounts related to cross-currency basis, which are recognized in
AOCI
, are not reflected in the table above. The amount of cross-currency basis included in
AOCI
was $
14
million and $(
10
) million for the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively.
(3)
Amounts related to the forward points (i.e., the spot-forward difference) that are excluded from the assessment of hedge effectiveness and are generally reflected directly in earnings under the mark-to-market approach or recorded in
AOCI
under the amortization approach. The quarter ended September 30, 2025 includes a gain (loss) of approximately $
107
million and less than $
1
million under the mark-to-market approach and amortization approach, respectively. The quarter ended September 30, 2024 includes a gain (loss) of approximately $
70
million and $
32
million under the mark-to-market approach and amortization approach, respectively.
180
Cumulative Basis Adjustment
For additional information on Citi’s cumulative basis adjustment, see Notes 1 and 24 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The table below presents the carrying amount of Citi’s hedged assets and liabilities under qualifying fair value hedges at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, along with the cumulative basis adjustments included in the carrying value of those hedged assets and liabilities that would reverse through earnings in future periods:
Balance sheet line item in which
hedged item is recorded
(in millions of dollars)
Carrying amount of hedged asset/ liability
(1)
Cumulative basis adjustment increasing (decreasing) the carrying amount
Active
De-designated
As of September 30, 2025
Debt securities AFS—specifically hedged
(2)
$
43,359
$
101
$
106
Debt securities AFS—portfolio-layer method
(2)(3)
34,357
293
89
Consumer loans—portfolio-layer method
(4)
51,781
592
—
Corporate loans—portfolio-layer method
(5)
3,976
53
(
28
)
Long-term debt
160,896
366
(
3,224
)
As of December 31, 2024
Debt securities AFS—specifically hedged
(2)
$
55,786
$
(
348
)
$
(
100
)
Debt securities AFS—portfolio-layer method
(2)(3)
28,554
(
193
)
(
67
)
Consumer loans—portfolio-layer method
(4)
53,700
(
224
)
—
Corporate loans—portfolio-layer method
(5)
4,269
(
72
)
(
12
)
Long-term debt
147,910
(
1,051
)
(
4,499
)
(1)
Excludes physical commodities inventories with a carrying value of approximately $
11.2
billion and $
11.4
billion as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, which includes cumulative basis adjustments of approximately $
1.2
billion and $
0.8
billion, respectively, for active hedges.
(2)
Carrying amount represents the amortized cost basis of the hedged securities or portfolio layers.
(3)
The Company designated approximately $
25.9
billion and $
12.9
billion as the hedged amount in the portfolio-layer hedging relationship as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(4) The Company designated approximately $
26.0
billion and $
17.0
billion as the hedged amount in the portfolio-layer hedging relationship as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(5) The Company designated approximately $
2.7
billion and $
3.0
billion as the hedged amount in the portfolio-layer hedging relationship as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
181
Cash Flow Hedges
For additional information on Citi’s cash flow hedges, see Notes 1 and 24 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The pretax change in
AOCI
from cash flow hedges is presented below:
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Amount of gain (loss) recognized in
AOCI
on derivatives
Interest rate contracts
$
(
75
)
$
(
378
)
$
(
336
)
$
(
38
)
Foreign exchange contracts
(
12
)
(
6
)
(
12
)
(
7
)
Total gain (loss) recognized in
AOCI
$
(
87
)
$
(
384
)
$
(
348
)
$
(
45
)
Net interest income
Net interest income
Amount of gain (loss) reclassified from
AOCI
to earnings
(1)
Interest rate contracts
$
(
125
)
$
(
212
)
$
(
482
)
$
(
814
)
Foreign exchange contracts
(
6
)
(
1
)
(
6
)
(
3
)
Total gain (loss) reclassified from
AOCI
into earnings
$
(
131
)
$
(
213
)
$
(
488
)
$
(
817
)
Net pretax change in cash flow hedges included within
AOCI
$
44
$
(
171
)
$
140
$
772
(1)
All amounts reclassified into earnings for interest rate contracts are included in
Interest income/Interest expense (Net interest income)
. For all other hedges, the amounts reclassified to earnings are included primarily in
Other revenue
and
Net interest income
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
The net gain (loss) associated with cash flow hedges expected to be reclassified from
AOCI
within 12 months of September 30, 2025 is approximately $(
0.1
) billion. The maximum length of time over which forecasted cash flows are hedged is
13
years.
The after-tax impact of cash flow hedges on
AOCI
is presented in Note 19.
Net Investment Hedges
For additional information on Citi’s net investment hedges, see Notes 1 and 24 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The pretax gain (loss) recorded in CTA within
AOCI
, related to net investment hedges, was $
161
million and $(
2,302
) million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and $(
92
) million and $
1,158
million for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, respectively. The quarter ending September 30, 2025 includes an approximate $
1
million pretax loss related to net investment hedges, which were reclassified from
AOCI
into earnings (recorded in
Other revenue
).
182
Credit Derivatives
For additional information on Citi’s credit derivatives, see Note 24 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The following tables summarize the key characteristics of Citi’s credit derivatives portfolio by reference entity and derivative form:
Fair values
Notionals
In millions of dollars at September 30, 2025
Receivable
(1)
Payable
(2)
Protection
purchased
Protection
sold
By instrument
Credit default swaps and options
$
7,961
$
7,770
$
599,891
$
537,267
Total return swaps and other
2,208
2,973
68,652
16,294
Total by instrument
$
10,169
$
10,743
$
668,543
$
553,561
By rating of reference entity
Investment grade
$
5,179
$
4,519
$
489,183
$
422,190
Non-investment grade
4,990
6,224
179,360
131,371
Total by rating of reference entity
$
10,169
$
10,743
$
668,543
$
553,561
By maturity
Within 1 year
$
1,053
$
2,279
$
169,249
$
141,110
From 1 to 5 years
6,645
6,484
406,118
349,795
After 5 years
2,471
1,980
93,176
62,656
Total by maturity
$
10,169
$
10,743
$
668,543
$
553,561
(1)
The fair value amount receivable is composed of $
3,846
million under protection purchased and $
6,323
million under protection sold.
(2)
The fair value amount payable is composed of $
9,095
million under protection purchased and $
1,648
million under protection sold.
Fair values
Notionals
In millions of dollars at December 31, 2024
Receivable
(1)
Payable
(2)
Protection
purchased
Protection
sold
By instrument
Credit default swaps and options
$
6,765
$
6,545
$
486,901
$
431,005
Total return swaps and other
1,950
708
44,528
8,141
Total by instrument
$
8,715
$
7,253
$
531,429
$
439,146
By rating of reference entity
Investment grade
$
4,578
$
3,450
$
405,271
$
350,124
Non-investment grade
4,137
3,803
126,158
89,022
Total by rating of reference entity
$
8,715
$
7,253
$
531,429
$
439,146
By maturity
Within 1 year
$
1,606
$
1,166
$
140,541
$
118,885
From 1 to 5 years
5,625
4,906
342,608
295,503
After 5 years
1,484
1,181
48,280
24,758
Total by maturity
$
8,715
$
7,253
$
531,429
$
439,146
(1) The fair value amount receivable is composed of $
3,864
million under protection purchased and $
4,851
million under protection sold.
(2) The fair value amount payable is composed of $
5,403
million under protection purchased and $
1,850
million under protection sold.
183
Credit Risk-Related Contingent Features in Derivatives
Certain derivative instruments contain provisions that require the Company to either post additional collateral or immediately settle any outstanding liability balances upon the occurrence of a specified event related to the credit risk of the Company. These events, which are defined by the existing derivative contracts, are primarily downgrades in the credit ratings of the Company and its affiliates.
The fair value (excluding CVA) of all derivative instruments with credit risk-related contingent features that were in a net liability position at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024 was $
13
billion and $
15
billion, respectively. The Company posted $
11
billion and $
13
billion as collateral for this exposure in the normal course of business as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
A downgrade could trigger additional collateral or cash settlement requirements for the Company and certain affiliates. In the event that Citigroup and Citibank were downgraded a single notch by all
three
major rating agencies as of September 30, 2025, the Company could be required to post an additional $
0.2
billion as either collateral or settlement of the derivative transactions. In addition, the Company could be required to segregate with third-party custodians collateral previously received from existing derivative counterparties in an amount of approximately $
4
million upon the single notch downgrade, resulting in aggregate cash obligations and collateral requirements of approximately $
0.2
billion.
Derivatives Accompanied by Financial Asset Transfers
For transfers of financial assets accounted for as a sale by the Company, and for which the Company has retained substantially all of the economic exposure to the transferred asset through a total return swap executed with the same counterparty in contemplation of the initial sale (and still outstanding), the asset amounts derecognized and the gross cash proceeds received as of the date of derecognition were $
6.5
billion and $
6.2
billion as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
At September 30, 2025, the fair value of these previously derecognized assets was $
6.2
billion. The fair value of the total return swaps as of September 30, 2025 was $
114
million recorded as gross derivative assets and $
37
million recorded as gross derivative liabilities. At December 31, 2024, the fair value of these previously derecognized assets was $
5.8
billion, and the fair value of the total return swaps was $
179
million recorded as gross derivative assets and $
29
million recorded as gross derivative liabilities.
The balances for the total return swaps are on a gross basis, before the application of counterparty and cash collateral netting, and are included primarily as equity derivatives in the tabular disclosures in this Note.
184
23.
FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENT
For additional information regarding fair value measurement at Citi, see Note 26 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Fair Value Hierarchy Principles
ASC 820-10 specifies a hierarchy of inputs based on whether the inputs are observable or unobservable. Observable inputs are developed using market data and reflect market participant assumptions, while unobservable inputs reflect the Company’s market assumptions. These two types of inputs have created the following fair value hierarchy:
•
Level 1: Quoted prices for
identical
instruments in active markets.
•
Level 2: Quoted prices for
similar
instruments in active markets, quoted prices for identical or similar instruments in markets that are not active and model-derived valuations in which all significant inputs and value drivers are
observable
in the market.
•
Level 3: Valuations derived from valuation techniques in which one or more significant inputs or significant value drivers are
unobservable
.
As required under the fair value hierarchy, the Company considers relevant and observable market inputs in its valuations where possible.
The fair value hierarchy classification approach typically utilizes rules-based and data-driven criteria to determine whether an instrument is classified as Level 1, Level 2 or Level 3:
•
The determination of whether an instrument is quoted in an active market and therefore considered a Level 1 instrument is based on the frequency of observed transactions and the quality of independent market data available on the measurement date.
•
A Level 2 classification is assigned where there is observability of prices/market inputs to models, or where any unobservable inputs are not significant to the valuation. The determination of whether an input is considered observable is based on the availability of independent market data and its corroboration, for example through observed transactions in the market.
•
Otherwise, an instrument is classified as Level 3.
Market Valuation Adjustments
The table below summarizes the credit valuation adjustments (CVA) and funding valuation adjustments (FVA) applied to the fair value of derivative instruments (recorded in
Trading account assets
and
Trading account liabilities
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet) at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024:
Credit and funding
valuation adjustments
contra-liability (contra-asset)
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
Counterparty CVA
$
(
565
)
$
(
561
)
Asset FVA
(
572
)
(
539
)
Citigroup (own credit) CVA
366
346
Liability FVA
187
209
Total CVA and FVA—derivative instruments
$
(
584
)
$
(
545
)
The table below summarizes pretax gains (losses) related to changes in CVA and FVA on derivative instruments, net of hedges (recorded in
Principal transactions revenue
in the Consolidated Statement of Income), and changes in debt valuation adjustments (DVA) on Citi’s own fair value option (FVO) liabilities (recorded in
Other comprehensive income
in the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income) for the periods indicated:
Credit/funding/debt valuation
adjustments gain (loss)
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Counterparty CVA
$
2
$
(
38
)
$
(
59
)
$
(
56
)
Asset FVA
27
1
24
87
Own credit CVA
(
4
)
(
2
)
15
(
48
)
Liability FVA
(
25
)
(
13
)
(
8
)
(
42
)
Total CVA and FVA—derivative instruments
$
—
$
(
52
)
$
(
28
)
$
(
59
)
DVA related to own FVO liabilities
(1)
$
(
1,293
)
$
(
201
)
$
(
684
)
$
(
608
)
Total CVA, DVA and FVA
$
(
1,293
)
$
(
253
)
$
(
712
)
$
(
667
)
(1) See Note 21 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
185
Items Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis
The following tables present for each of the fair value hierarchy levels the Company’s assets and liabilities that are measured at fair value on a recurring basis at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024. The Company may hedge
positions that have been classified in the Level 3 category with other financial instruments (hedging instruments) that may be classified as Level 3, but also with financial instruments classified as Level 1 or Level 2. These hedges are presented gross in the following tables:
Fair Value Levels
In millions of dollars at September 30, 2025
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Gross
inventory
Netting
(1)
Net
balance
Assets
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
—
$
558,114
$
182
$
558,296
$
(
393,518
)
$
164,778
Trading non-derivative assets
Trading mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
—
92,427
391
92,818
—
92,818
Residential
—
705
100
805
—
805
Commercial
—
638
58
696
—
696
Total trading mortgage-backed securities
$
—
$
93,770
$
549
$
94,319
$
—
$
94,319
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
158,719
$
1,420
$
—
$
160,139
$
—
$
160,139
State and municipal
—
177
1
178
—
178
Foreign government
67,052
57,120
61
124,233
—
124,233
Corporate
1,129
22,411
236
23,776
—
23,776
Equity securities
67,425
8,095
262
75,782
—
75,782
Asset-backed securities
1
2,640
248
2,889
—
2,889
Other trading assets
—
26,019
422
26,441
—
26,441
Total trading non-derivative assets
$
294,326
$
211,652
$
1,779
$
507,757
$
—
$
507,757
Trading derivatives
Interest rate contracts
$
18
$
224,304
$
1,935
$
226,257
Foreign exchange contracts
—
126,735
719
127,454
Equity contracts
78
85,119
943
86,140
Commodity contracts
—
19,592
911
20,503
Credit derivatives
—
9,274
895
10,169
Total trading derivatives—before netting and collateral
$
96
$
465,024
$
5,403
$
470,523
Netting agreements
$
(
387,237
)
Netting of cash collateral received
(
28,789
)
Total trading derivatives—after netting and collateral
$
96
$
465,024
$
5,403
$
470,523
$
(
416,026
)
$
54,497
Investments
Mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
—
$
35,642
$
31
$
35,673
$
—
$
35,673
Residential
—
974
—
974
—
974
Commercial
—
1
—
1
—
1
Total investment mortgage-backed securities
$
—
$
36,617
$
31
$
36,648
$
—
$
36,648
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
37,018
$
—
$
—
$
37,018
$
—
$
37,018
State and municipal
—
1,177
514
1,691
—
1,691
Foreign government
80,847
80,768
26
161,641
—
161,641
Corporate
3,580
1,563
229
5,372
—
5,372
Marketable equity securities
38
3
161
202
—
202
Asset-backed securities
—
862
—
862
—
862
Other debt securities
76
2,919
—
2,995
—
2,995
Non-marketable equity securities
(2)
—
—
448
448
—
448
Total investments
$
121,559
$
123,909
$
1,409
$
246,877
$
—
$
246,877
Table continues on the next page.
186
In millions of dollars at September 30, 2025
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Gross
inventory
Netting
(1)
Net
balance
Loans
$
—
$
7,694
$
202
$
7,896
$
—
$
7,896
Mortgage servicing rights
—
—
748
748
—
748
Other financial assets
$
5,924
$
10,569
$
—
$
16,493
$
—
$
16,493
Total assets
$
421,905
$
1,376,962
$
9,723
$
1,808,590
$
(
809,544
)
$
999,046
Total as a percentage of gross assets
(3)
23.3
%
76.2
%
0.5
%
Liabilities
Deposits
$
—
$
3,457
$
227
$
3,684
$
—
$
3,684
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
—
426,002
1,082
427,084
(
224,892
)
202,192
Trading account liabilities
Securities sold, not yet purchased
89,981
15,216
29
105,226
—
105,226
Other trading liabilities
—
10
—
10
—
10
Total trading account liabilities
$
89,981
$
15,226
$
29
$
105,236
$
—
$
105,236
Trading derivatives
Interest rate contracts
$
11
$
214,916
$
2,114
$
217,041
Foreign exchange contracts
—
113,218
612
113,830
Equity contracts
68
95,449
4,088
99,605
Commodity contracts
—
20,235
855
21,090
Credit derivatives
—
9,507
1,236
10,743
Total trading derivatives—before netting and collateral
$
79
$
453,325
$
8,905
$
462,309
Netting agreements
$
(
387,237
)
Netting of cash collateral paid
(
20,065
)
Total trading derivatives—after netting and collateral
$
79
$
453,325
$
8,905
$
462,309
$
(
407,302
)
$
55,007
Short-term borrowings
$
—
$
24,666
$
357
$
25,023
$
—
$
25,023
Long-term debt
—
107,390
22,427
129,817
—
129,817
Other financial liabilities
$
4,828
$
73
$
1
$
4,902
$
—
$
4,902
Total liabilities
$
94,888
$
1,030,139
$
33,028
$
1,158,055
$
(
632,194
)
$
525,861
Total as a percentage of gross liabilities
(3)
8.2
%
88.9
%
2.9
%
(1)
Represents netting of (i) the amounts due under securities purchased under agreements to resell and the amounts owed under securities sold under agreements to repurchase and (ii) derivative exposures covered by a qualifying master netting agreement and cash collateral offsetting.
(2)
Amounts exclude $
34
million of investments measured at net asset value (NAV) in accordance with ASU 2015-07,
Fair Value Measurement (Topic 820): Disclosures for Investments in Certain Entities That Calculate Net Asset Value per Share (or Its Equivalent).
(3)
Because the amount of the cash collateral paid/received has not been allocated to the Level 1, 2 and 3 subtotals, these percentages are calculated based on total assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis, excluding the cash collateral paid/received on derivatives.
187
Fair Value Levels
In millions of dollars at December 31, 2024
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Gross
inventory
Netting
(1)
Net
balance
Assets
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
—
$
462,542
$
128
$
462,670
$
(
321,815
)
$
140,855
Trading non-derivative assets
Trading mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
—
63,365
301
63,666
—
63,666
Residential
—
528
67
595
—
595
Commercial
—
631
36
667
—
667
Total trading mortgage-backed securities
$
—
$
64,524
$
404
$
64,928
$
—
$
64,928
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
142,837
$
6,517
$
1
$
149,355
$
—
$
149,355
State and municipal
—
168
11
179
—
179
Foreign government
35,805
39,035
15
74,855
—
74,855
Corporate
1,197
13,474
269
14,940
—
14,940
Equity securities
41,163
7,479
166
48,808
—
48,808
Asset-backed securities
—
2,131
178
2,309
—
2,309
Other trading assets
—
26,441
333
26,774
—
26,774
Total trading non-derivative assets
$
221,002
$
159,769
$
1,377
$
382,148
$
—
$
382,148
Trading derivatives
Interest rate contracts
$
17
$
128,562
$
1,699
$
130,278
Foreign exchange contracts
—
215,330
715
216,045
Equity contracts
44
53,734
1,366
55,144
Commodity contracts
—
11,546
1,074
12,620
Credit derivatives
—
7,993
722
8,715
Total trading derivatives—before netting and collateral
$
61
$
417,165
$
5,576
$
422,802
Netting agreements
$
(
334,900
)
Netting of cash collateral received
(
27,303
)
Total trading derivatives—after netting and collateral
$
61
$
417,165
$
5,576
$
422,802
$
(
362,203
)
$
60,599
Investments
Mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
—
$
29,270
$
36
$
29,306
$
—
$
29,306
Residential
—
596
28
624
—
624
Commercial
—
1
—
1
—
1
Total investment mortgage-backed securities
$
—
$
29,867
$
64
$
29,931
$
—
$
29,931
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
51,501
$
878
$
—
$
52,379
$
—
$
52,379
State and municipal
—
1,230
428
1,658
—
1,658
Foreign government
62,106
71,241
12
133,359
—
133,359
Corporate
3,163
1,505
146
4,814
—
4,814
Marketable equity securities
130
7
14
151
—
151
Asset-backed securities
—
846
2
848
—
848
Other debt securities
—
3,881
6
3,887
—
3,887
Non-marketable equity securities
(2)
—
—
404
404
—
404
Total investments
$
116,900
$
109,455
$
1,076
$
227,431
$
—
$
227,431
Table continues on the next page.
188
In millions of dollars at December 31, 2024
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Gross
inventory
Netting
(1)
Net
balance
Loans
$
—
$
7,778
$
262
$
8,040
$
—
$
8,040
Mortgage servicing rights
—
—
760
760
—
760
Other financial assets
$
5,373
$
9,424
$
15
$
14,812
$
—
$
14,812
Total assets
$
343,336
$
1,166,133
$
9,194
$
1,518,663
$
(
684,018
)
$
834,645
Total as a percentage of gross assets
(3)
22.6
%
76.8
%
0.6
%
Liabilities
Deposits
$
—
$
3,569
$
39
$
3,608
$
—
$
3,608
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
—
260,286
390
260,676
(
211,522
)
49,154
Trading account liabilities
Securities sold, not yet purchased
72,324
13,184
28
85,536
—
85,536
Other trading liabilities
—
12
—
12
—
12
Total trading account liabilities
$
72,324
$
13,196
$
28
$
85,548
$
—
$
85,548
Trading derivatives
Interest rate contracts
$
6
$
120,097
$
2,029
$
122,132
Foreign exchange contracts
—
205,487
530
206,017
Equity contracts
40
58,642
3,054
61,736
Commodity contracts
—
13,960
670
14,630
Credit derivatives
—
6,635
618
7,253
Total trading derivatives—before netting and collateral
$
46
$
404,821
$
6,901
$
411,768
Netting agreements
$
(
334,900
)
Netting of cash collateral paid
(
28,570
)
Total trading derivatives—after netting and collateral
$
46
$
404,821
$
6,901
$
411,768
$
(
363,470
)
$
48,298
Short-term borrowings
$
—
$
12,187
$
297
$
12,484
$
—
$
12,484
Long-term debt
—
91,619
21,100
112,719
—
112,719
Other financial liabilities
$
4,478
$
744
$
—
$
5,222
$
—
$
5,222
Total liabilities
$
76,848
$
786,422
$
28,755
$
892,025
$
(
574,992
)
$
317,033
Total as a percentage of gross liabilities
(3)
8.6
%
88.2
%
3.2
%
(1)
Represents netting of (i) the amounts due under securities purchased under agreements to resell and the amounts owed under securities sold under agreements to repurchase and (ii) derivative exposures covered by a qualifying master netting agreement and cash collateral offsetting.
(2)
Amounts exclude $
23
million of investments measured at NAV in accordance with ASU 2015-07,
Fair Value Measurement (Topic 820): Disclosures for Investments in Certain Entities That Calculate Net Asset Value per Share (or Its Equivalent).
(3)
Because the amount of the cash collateral paid/received has not been allocated to the Level 1, 2 and 3 subtotals, these percentages are calculated based on total assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis, excluding the cash collateral paid/received on derivatives.
189
Changes in Level 3 Fair Value Category
The following tables present the changes in the Level 3 fair value category for the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024. The gains and losses presented below include changes in the fair value related to both observable and unobservable inputs.
The Company often hedges positions with offsetting positions that are classified in a different level. For example,
the gains and losses for assets and liabilities in the Level 3 category presented in the tables below do not reflect the effect of offsetting losses and gains on hedging instruments that may be classified in the Level 1 or Level 2 categories. In addition, the Company hedges items classified in the Level 3 category with instruments also classified in Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy. The hedged items and related hedges are presented gross in the following tables:
Level 3 Fair Value Rollforward
Net realized/unrealized
gains (losses) incl. in
(1)
Transfers
Unrealized
gains (losses)
still held
(3)
In millions of dollars
Jun. 30, 2025
Principal
transactions
Other
(1)(2)
into
Level 3
out of
Level 3
Purchases
Issuances
Sales
Settlements
Sep. 30, 2025
Assets
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
86
$
21
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
466
$
—
$
—
$
(
391
)
$
182
$
21
Trading non-derivative assets
Trading mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
545
(
11
)
—
67
(
138
)
55
—
(
127
)
—
391
(
7
)
Residential
85
(
3
)
—
8
(
49
)
95
—
(
36
)
—
100
(
5
)
Commercial
62
(
3
)
—
15
(
19
)
5
—
(
2
)
—
58
(
1
)
Total trading mortgage-backed securities
$
692
$
(
17
)
$
—
$
90
$
(
206
)
$
155
$
—
$
(
165
)
$
—
$
549
$
(
13
)
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
State and municipal
1
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
1
—
Foreign government
4
3
—
62
(
3
)
—
—
(
5
)
—
61
1
Corporate
282
(
68
)
—
15
(
49
)
124
—
(
68
)
—
236
(
97
)
Marketable equity securities
251
5
—
9
(
30
)
60
—
(
33
)
—
262
—
Asset-backed securities
211
(
11
)
—
12
(
12
)
121
—
(
73
)
—
248
(
6
)
Other trading assets
566
(
8
)
—
13
(
18
)
125
9
(
257
)
(
8
)
422
(
29
)
Total trading non-derivative assets
$
2,007
$
(
96
)
$
—
$
201
$
(
318
)
$
585
$
9
$
(
601
)
$
(
8
)
$
1,779
$
(
144
)
Trading derivatives, net
(4)
Interest rate contracts
$
(
456
)
$
37
$
—
$
90
$
87
$
47
$
—
$
(
82
)
$
98
$
(
179
)
$
(
18
)
Foreign exchange contracts
68
45
—
31
(
46
)
17
—
(
15
)
7
107
(
24
)
Equity contracts
(
2,167
)
(
412
)
—
(
46
)
5
(
736
)
—
(
23
)
234
(
3,145
)
(
291
)
Commodity contracts
127
271
—
(
37
)
19
(
207
)
—
(
6
)
(
111
)
56
121
Credit derivatives
(
188
)
(
19
)
—
22
88
(
260
)
—
—
16
(
341
)
(
55
)
Total trading derivatives, net
(4)
$
(
2,616
)
$
(
78
)
$
—
$
60
$
153
$
(
1,139
)
$
—
$
(
126
)
$
244
$
(
3,502
)
$
(
267
)
Table continues on the next page.
190
Net realized/unrealized
gains (losses) incl. in
(1)
Transfers
Unrealized
gains (losses)
still held
(3)
In millions of dollars
Jun. 30, 2025
Principal
transactions
Other
(1)(2)
into
Level 3
out of
Level 3
Purchases
Issuances
Sales
Settlements
Sep. 30, 2025
Investments
Mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
19
$
—
$
1
$
10
$
—
$
4
$
—
$
(
3
)
$
—
$
31
$
3
Residential
11
—
(
1
)
—
(
10
)
—
—
—
—
—
—
Commercial
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Total investment mortgage-backed securities
$
30
$
—
$
—
$
10
$
(
10
)
$
4
$
—
$
(
3
)
$
—
$
31
$
3
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
State and municipal
503
—
32
1
—
1
—
(
23
)
—
514
32
Foreign government
27
—
(
1
)
—
—
—
—
—
—
26
(
1
)
Corporate
208
—
(
2
)
85
(
38
)
27
—
(
51
)
—
229
—
Marketable equity securities
3
—
1
—
—
157
—
—
—
161
—
Asset-backed securities
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Other debt securities
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Non-marketable equity securities
439
—
3
—
—
9
—
(
3
)
—
448
3
Total investments
$
1,210
$
—
$
33
$
96
$
(
48
)
$
198
$
—
$
(
80
)
$
—
$
1,409
$
37
Loans
$
180
$
—
$
8
$
5
$
(
66
)
$
—
$
126
$
—
$
(
51
)
$
202
$
22
Mortgage servicing rights
770
—
(
25
)
—
—
—
24
—
(
21
)
748
(
25
)
Other financial assets
83
—
1
—
—
—
—
(
64
)
(
20
)
—
—
Liabilities
Deposits
$
43
$
—
$
(
5
)
$
6
$
—
$
—
$
175
$
—
$
(
2
)
$
227
$
(
6
)
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
955
(
11
)
—
—
—
415
—
—
(
299
)
1,082
(
1
)
Trading account liabilities
Securities sold, not yet purchased
37
7
—
8
(
5
)
17
—
—
(
21
)
29
4
Other trading liabilities
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Short-term borrowings
343
4
—
19
(
36
)
13
99
—
(
77
)
357
(
5
)
Long-term debt
21,166
(
858
)
—
726
(
889
)
—
922
—
(
356
)
22,427
(
786
)
Other financial liabilities measured on a recurring basis
65
—
—
1
—
—
—
—
(
65
)
1
—
(1)
Net realized/unrealized gains (losses) are presented as increase (decrease) to Level 3 assets and as (increase) decrease to Level 3 liabilities. Changes in fair value of available-for-sale debt securities are recorded in
AOCI
, unless related to credit impairment, while gains and losses from sales are recorded in
Realized gains (losses) from sales of investments
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
(2)
Unrealized gains (losses) on MSRs are recorded in
Other revenue
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
(3)
Represents the amount of total gains or losses for the period, included in earnings (and
AOCI
for changes in fair value of available-for-sale debt securities and DVA on fair value option liabilities), attributable to the change in fair value relating to assets and liabilities classified as Level 3 that are still held at September 30, 2025.
(4)
Total Level 3 trading derivative assets and liabilities have been netted in these tables for presentation purposes only.
191
Net realized/unrealized
gains (losses) incl. in
(1)
Transfers
Unrealized
gains (losses)
still held
(3)
In millions of dollars
Dec. 31, 2024
Principal
transactions
Other
(1)(2)
into
Level 3
out of
Level 3
Purchases
Issuances
Sales
Settlements
Sep. 30, 2025
Assets
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
128
$
48
$
—
$
—
$
(
84
)
$
634
$
—
$
—
$
(
544
)
$
182
$
21
Trading non-derivative assets
Trading mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
301
29
—
309
(
348
)
509
—
(
409
)
—
391
(
6
)
Residential
67
(
1
)
—
45
(
110
)
201
—
(
102
)
—
100
(
5
)
Commercial
36
(
7
)
—
45
(
58
)
61
—
(
19
)
—
58
(
3
)
Total trading mortgage-backed securities
$
404
$
21
$
—
$
399
$
(
516
)
$
771
$
—
$
(
530
)
$
—
$
549
$
(
14
)
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
1
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
(
1
)
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
State and municipal
11
1
—
—
(
11
)
—
—
—
—
1
—
Foreign government
15
—
—
62
(
13
)
9
—
(
12
)
—
61
1
Corporate
269
(
16
)
—
85
(
159
)
238
—
(
181
)
—
236
(
63
)
Marketable equity securities
166
23
—
52
(
36
)
183
—
(
126
)
—
262
12
Asset-backed securities
178
(
30
)
—
51
(
52
)
294
—
(
193
)
—
248
(
6
)
Other trading assets
333
92
—
66
(
50
)
400
33
(
428
)
(
24
)
422
58
Total trading non-derivative assets
$
1,377
$
91
$
—
$
715
$
(
838
)
$
1,895
$
33
$
(
1,470
)
$
(
24
)
$
1,779
$
(
12
)
Trading derivatives, net
(4)
Interest rate contracts
$
(
330
)
$
(
15
)
$
—
$
18
$
24
$
(
16
)
$
10
$
(
91
)
$
221
$
(
179
)
$
(
31
)
Foreign exchange contracts
185
39
—
111
(
121
)
66
—
(
164
)
(
9
)
107
(
105
)
Equity contracts
(
1,688
)
(
26
)
—
(
322
)
472
(
2,049
)
—
(
51
)
519
(
3,145
)
(
512
)
Commodity contracts
404
311
—
(
244
)
154
(
286
)
—
(
10
)
(
273
)
56
114
Credit derivatives
104
(
190
)
—
(
52
)
166
(
377
)
—
—
8
(
341
)
(
152
)
Total trading derivatives, net
(4)
$
(
1,325
)
$
119
$
—
$
(
489
)
$
695
$
(
2,662
)
$
10
$
(
316
)
$
466
$
(
3,502
)
$
(
686
)
Table continues on the next page.
192
Net realized/unrealized
gains (losses) incl. in
(1)
Transfers
Unrealized
gains (losses)
still held
(3)
In millions of dollars
Dec. 31, 2024
Principal
transactions
Other
(1)(2)
into
Level 3
out of
Level 3
Purchases
Issuances
Sales
Settlements
Sep. 30, 2025
Investments
Mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
36
$
—
$
(
1
)
$
10
$
(
15
)
$
4
$
—
$
(
3
)
$
—
$
31
$
(
2
)
Residential
28
—
—
—
(
15
)
—
—
(
13
)
—
—
—
Total investment mortgage-backed securities
$
64
$
—
$
(
1
)
$
10
$
(
30
)
$
4
$
—
$
(
16
)
$
—
$
31
$
(
2
)
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
State and municipal
428
—
36
90
(
14
)
256
—
(
282
)
—
514
32
Foreign government
12
—
(
4
)
20
(
2
)
—
—
—
—
26
(
1
)
Corporate
146
—
10
170
(
103
)
162
—
(
156
)
—
229
1
Marketable equity securities
14
—
(
10
)
—
—
157
—
—
—
161
—
Asset-backed securities
2
—
—
—
(
2
)
—
—
—
—
—
—
Other debt securities
6
—
—
—
—
1
—
(
7
)
—
—
—
Non-marketable equity securities
404
—
21
—
—
42
—
(
19
)
—
448
3
Total investments
$
1,076
$
—
$
52
$
290
$
(
151
)
$
622
$
—
$
(
480
)
$
—
$
1,409
$
33
Loans
$
262
$
—
$
104
$
7
$
(
165
)
$
—
$
133
$
—
$
(
139
)
$
202
$
74
Mortgage servicing rights
760
—
(
28
)
—
—
—
76
—
(
60
)
748
(
29
)
Other financial assets
15
—
1
2
—
62
30
(
64
)
(
46
)
—
—
Liabilities
Deposits
$
39
$
—
$
(
9
)
$
7
$
—
$
—
$
201
$
—
$
(
29
)
$
227
$
(
16
)
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
390
(
13
)
—
—
—
1,486
—
—
(
807
)
1,082
(
1
)
Trading account liabilities
Securities sold, not yet purchased
28
25
—
15
(
26
)
93
—
—
(
56
)
29
36
Other trading liabilities
—
1
—
—
(
2
)
25
—
—
(
22
)
—
—
Short-term borrowings
297
50
—
78
(
95
)
13
715
—
(
601
)
357
(
137
)
Long-term debt
21,100
(
1,277
)
—
1,966
(
2,954
)
—
2,971
—
(
1,933
)
22,427
(
1,064
)
Other financial liabilities
—
—
—
15
—
50
1
—
(
65
)
1
—
(1)
Net realized/unrealized gains (losses) are presented as increase (decrease) to Level 3 assets and as (increase) decrease to Level 3 liabilities. Changes in fair value of available-for-sale debt securities are recorded in
AOCI
, unless related to credit impairment, while gains and losses from sales are recorded in
Realized gains (losses) from sales of investments
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
(2)
Unrealized gains (losses) on MSRs are recorded in
Other revenue
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
(3)
Represents the amount of total gains or losses for the period, included in earnings (and
AOCI
for changes in fair value of available-for-sale debt securities and DVA on fair value option liabilities), attributable to the change in fair value relating to assets and liabilities classified as Level 3 that are still held at September 30, 2025.
(4)
Total Level 3 trading derivative assets and liabilities have been netted in these tables for presentation purposes only.
193
Net realized/unrealized
gains (losses) incl. in
(1)
Transfers
Unrealized
gains (losses)
still held
(3)
In millions of dollars
Jun. 30, 2024
Principal
transactions
Other
(1)(2)
into
Level 3
out of
Level 3
Purchases
Issuances
Sales
Settlements
Sep. 30, 2024
Assets
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
126
$
12
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
45
$
—
$
—
$
(
47
)
$
136
$
12
Trading non-derivative assets
Trading mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
691
22
—
139
(
160
)
124
—
(
85
)
—
731
15
Residential
91
(
6
)
—
10
(
18
)
28
—
(
34
)
—
71
(
1
)
Commercial
166
—
—
11
(
57
)
21
—
(
55
)
—
86
(
1
)
Total trading mortgage-backed securities
$
948
$
16
$
—
$
160
$
(
235
)
$
173
$
—
$
(
174
)
$
—
$
888
$
13
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
State and municipal
1
—
—
20
—
—
—
—
—
21
—
Foreign government
45
(
3
)
—
2
—
23
—
(
36
)
—
31
(
1
)
Corporate
315
15
—
61
(
37
)
120
—
(
214
)
—
260
13
Marketable equity securities
244
7
—
100
(
15
)
77
—
(
127
)
—
286
7
Asset-backed securities
244
(
6
)
—
21
(
13
)
53
—
(
84
)
—
215
—
Other trading assets
783
5
—
27
(
97
)
155
10
(
327
)
(
6
)
550
—
Total trading non-derivative assets
$
2,580
$
34
$
—
$
391
$
(
397
)
$
601
$
10
$
(
962
)
$
(
6
)
$
2,251
$
32
Trading derivatives, net
(4)
Interest rate contracts
$
(
1,028
)
$
(
73
)
$
—
$
39
$
523
$
3
$
5
$
(
18
)
$
233
$
(
316
)
$
(
248
)
Foreign exchange contracts
551
(
7
)
—
13
(
532
)
(
18
)
—
(
7
)
3
3
(
81
)
Equity contracts
(
2,050
)
(
119
)
—
(
59
)
149
(
102
)
—
(
13
)
(
42
)
(
2,236
)
(
272
)
Commodity contracts
404
174
—
(
9
)
(
126
)
(
78
)
—
(
47
)
83
401
204
Credit derivatives
74
(
119
)
—
(
6
)
44
(
47
)
—
—
—
(
54
)
(
93
)
Total trading derivatives, net
(4)
$
(
2,049
)
$
(
144
)
$
—
$
(
22
)
$
58
$
(
242
)
$
5
$
(
85
)
$
277
$
(
2,202
)
$
(
490
)
Table continues on the next page.
194
Net realized/unrealized
gains (losses) incl. in
(1)
Transfers
Unrealized
gains (losses)
still held
(3)
In millions of dollars
Jun. 30, 2024
Principal
transactions
Other
(1)(2)
into
Level 3
out of
Level 3
Purchases
Issuances
Sales
Settlements
Sep. 30, 2024
Investments
Mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
28
$
—
$
4
$
—
$
—
$
4
$
—
$
(
4
)
$
—
$
32
$
4
Residential
25
—
2
—
—
—
—
—
—
27
1
Commercial
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Total investment mortgage-backed securities
$
53
$
—
$
6
$
—
$
—
$
4
$
—
$
(
4
)
$
—
$
59
$
5
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
State and municipal
439
—
6
—
(
1
)
—
—
(
8
)
—
436
6
Foreign government
14
—
(
2
)
—
—
—
—
—
—
12
—
Corporate
112
—
(
2
)
21
(
14
)
60
—
(
27
)
—
150
—
Marketable equity securities
10
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
10
—
Asset-backed securities
—
—
—
—
—
3
—
(
3
)
—
—
—
Other debt securities
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Non-marketable equity securities
505
—
12
—
—
107
—
(
1
)
—
623
10
Total investments
$
1,133
$
—
$
20
$
21
$
(
15
)
$
174
$
—
$
(
43
)
$
—
$
1,290
$
21
Loans
$
301
$
—
$
36
$
1
$
(
3
)
$
1
$
12
$
—
$
(
1
)
$
347
$
39
Mortgage servicing rights
709
—
(
40
)
—
—
—
32
—
(
18
)
683
(
40
)
Other financial assets
21
—
1
—
—
—
24
(
2
)
(
19
)
25
—
Liabilities
Deposits
$
41
$
1
$
1
$
—
$
(
7
)
$
—
$
15
$
—
$
(
5
)
$
42
$
1
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
286
—
—
—
—
230
—
—
(
224
)
292
—
Trading account liabilities
Securities sold, not yet purchased
32
(
9
)
—
12
(
16
)
13
—
—
(
14
)
36
(
3
)
Other trading liabilities
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Short-term borrowings
201
(
1
)
—
49
(
10
)
—
107
—
(
127
)
221
(
26
)
Long-term debt
20,375
(
1,720
)
—
636
(
857
)
—
697
—
(
262
)
22,309
1,868
Other financial liabilities measured on a recurring basis
3
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
(
2
)
1
—
(1)
Net realized/unrealized gains (losses) are presented as increase (decrease) to Level 3 assets, and as (increase) decrease to Level 3 liabilities. Changes in fair value of available-for-sale debt securities are recorded in
AOCI
, unless related to credit impairment, while gains and losses from sales are recorded in
Realized gains (losses) from sales of investments
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
(2)
Unrealized gains (losses) on MSRs are recorded in
Other revenue
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
(3)
Represents the amount of total gains or losses for the period, included in earnings (and
AOCI
for changes in fair value of available-for-sale debt securities and DVA on fair value option liabilities), attributable to the change in fair value relating to assets and liabilities classified as Level 3 that are still held at September 30, 2024.
(4)
Total Level 3 trading derivative assets and liabilities have been netted in these tables for presentation purposes only.
195
Net realized/unrealized
gains (losses) incl. in
(1)
Transfers
Unrealized
gains (losses)
still held
(3)
In millions of dollars
Dec. 31, 2023
Principal
transactions
Other
(1)(2)
into
Level 3
out of
Level 3
Purchases
Issuances
Sales
Settlements
Sep. 30, 2024
Assets
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
139
$
4
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
111
$
—
$
—
$
(
118
)
$
136
$
4
Trading non-derivative assets
Trading mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
581
(
17
)
—
423
(
445
)
557
—
(
368
)
—
731
(
6
)
Residential
116
(
9
)
—
63
(
76
)
139
—
(
162
)
—
71
(
3
)
Commercial
202
17
—
50
(
146
)
152
—
(
189
)
—
86
(
4
)
Total trading mortgage-backed securities
$
899
$
(
9
)
$
—
$
536
$
(
667
)
$
848
$
—
$
(
719
)
$
—
$
888
$
(
13
)
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
7
$
4
$
—
$
—
$
(
1
)
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
(
10
)
$
—
$
—
State and municipal
3
—
—
20
—
—
—
(
2
)
—
21
—
Foreign government
54
(
3
)
—
14
(
49
)
186
—
(
171
)
—
31
—
Corporate
500
154
—
136
(
425
)
485
—
(
582
)
(
8
)
260
23
Marketable equity securities
292
(
2
)
—
230
(
64
)
137
—
(
307
)
—
286
(
12
)
Asset-backed securities
531
(
24
)
—
51
(
191
)
229
—
(
381
)
—
215
(
5
)
Other trading assets
833
170
—
179
(
263
)
350
16
(
726
)
(
9
)
550
41
Total trading non-derivative assets
$
3,119
$
290
$
—
$
1,166
$
(
1,660
)
$
2,235
$
16
$
(
2,888
)
$
(
27
)
$
2,251
$
34
Trading derivatives, net
(4)
Interest rate contracts
$
(
1,085
)
$
(
756
)
$
—
$
169
$
506
$
83
$
19
$
(
35
)
$
783
$
(
316
)
$
(
252
)
Foreign exchange contracts
295
500
—
51
(
459
)
(
91
)
—
(
173
)
(
120
)
3
(
49
)
Equity contracts
(
1,634
)
(
345
)
—
(
130
)
686
(
670
)
—
(
68
)
(
75
)
(
2,236
)
(
563
)
Commodity contracts
279
335
—
23
(
138
)
(
67
)
—
(
64
)
33
401
397
Credit derivatives
(
73
)
(
19
)
—
(
4
)
24
11
—
—
7
(
54
)
(
78
)
Total trading derivatives, net
(4)
$
(
2,218
)
$
(
285
)
$
—
$
109
$
619
$
(
734
)
$
19
$
(
340
)
$
628
$
(
2,202
)
$
(
545
)
Table continues on the next page.
196
Net realized/unrealized
gains (losses) incl. in
(1)
Transfers
Unrealized
gains (losses)
still held
(3)
In millions of dollars
Dec. 31, 2023
Principal
transactions
Other
(1)(2)
into
Level 3
out of
Level 3
Purchases
Issuances
Sales
Settlements
Sep. 30, 2024
Investments
Mortgage-backed securities
U.S. government-sponsored agency guaranteed
$
75
$
—
$
3
$
—
$
—
$
7
$
—
$
(
53
)
$
—
$
32
$
4
Residential
116
—
—
1
(
90
)
—
—
—
—
27
—
Total investment mortgage-backed securities
$
191
$
—
$
3
$
1
$
(
90
)
$
7
$
—
$
(
53
)
$
—
$
59
$
4
U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
$
—
State and municipal
542
—
(
25
)
—
(
7
)
—
—
(
74
)
—
436
(
7
)
Foreign government
194
—
(
14
)
6
(
174
)
36
—
(
36
)
—
12
—
Corporate
362
—
(
9
)
63
(
293
)
111
—
(
84
)
—
150
(
2
)
Marketable equity securities
27
—
(
17
)
—
—
—
—
—
—
10
—
Asset-backed securities
—
—
—
—
—
3
—
(
3
)
—
—
—
Other debt securities
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Non-marketable equity securities
483
—
4
—
—
167
—
(
31
)
—
623
10
Total investments
$
1,799
$
—
$
(
58
)
$
70
$
(
564
)
$
324
$
—
$
(
281
)
$
—
$
1,290
$
5
Loans
$
427
$
—
$
(
16
)
$
664
$
(
894
)
$
2
$
244
$
—
$
(
80
)
$
347
$
175
Mortgage servicing rights
691
—
(
23
)
—
—
—
68
—
(
53
)
683
(
16
)
Other financial assets
30
—
(
1
)
—
—
5
37
(
4
)
(
42
)
25
(
1
)
Liabilities
Deposits
$
29
$
1
$
5
$
51
$
(
40
)
$
—
$
30
$
—
$
(
22
)
$
42
$
4
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
390
—
—
—
—
668
—
—
(
766
)
292
—
Trading account liabilities
Securities sold, not yet purchased
35
(
17
)
—
26
(
26
)
109
—
—
(
125
)
36
(
1
)
Other trading liabilities
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Short-term borrowings
481
(
83
)
—
69
(
527
)
1
318
—
(
204
)
221
(
78
)
Long-term debt
38,380
(
293
)
—
3,674
(
22,587
)
—
5,479
—
(
2,930
)
22,309
(
1,021
)
Other financial liabilities
6
—
—
—
—
—
5
—
(
10
)
1
—
(1)
Net realized/unrealized gains (losses) are presented as increase (decrease) to Level 3 assets, and as (increase) decrease to Level 3 liabilities. Changes in fair value of available-for-sale debt securities are recorded in
AOCI
, unless related to credit impairment, while gains and losses from sales are recorded in
Realized gains (losses) from sales of investments
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
(2)
Unrealized gains (losses) on MSRs are recorded in
Other revenue
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
(3)
Represents the amount of total gains or losses for the period, included in earnings (and
AOCI
for changes in fair value of available-for-sale debt securities and DVA on fair value option liabilities), attributable to the change in fair value relating to assets and liabilities classified as Level 3 that are still held at September 30, 2024.
(4)
Total Level 3 trading derivative assets and liabilities have been netted in these tables for presentation purposes only.
197
Level 3 Fair Value Transfers
The following were the significant Level 3 transfers for the period from December 31, 2024 to September 30, 2025:
•
During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2025, transfers of
Long-term debt
were $
0.9
billion and $
3.0
billion from Level 3 to Level 2, and $
0.7
billion and $
2.0
billion from Level 2 to Level 3, respectively. The transfers were primarily related to certain unobservable inputs becoming less significant to the overall valuation of the instruments in the case of Level 3 to 2 transfers, and more significant in the case of Level 2 to 3.
The following were the significant Level 3 transfers for the period from December 31, 2023 to September 30, 2024:
•
During the three and nine months ended September 30, 2024, transfers of
Long-term debt
were $
0.9
billion and $
22.6
billion from Level 3 to Level 2, and $
0.6
billion and $
3.7
billion from Level 2 to Level 3, respectively. The Level 3 to Level 2 transfers were primarily the result of enhanced significance testing of unobservable inputs for certain structured debt instruments. The Level 2 to Level 3 transfers were primarily the result of certain unobservable inputs becoming more significant to the overall valuation of these instruments.
198
Valuation Techniques and Inputs for Level 3 Fair Value Measurements
The following tables present the valuation techniques covering the majority of Level 3 inventory and the most significant unobservable inputs used in Level 3 fair value measurements.
Differences between these tables and amounts presented in the Level 3 Fair Value Rollforward tables represent individually immaterial items that have been measured using a variety of valuation techniques other than those listed.
As of September 30, 2025
Fair value
(1)
(in millions)
Methodology
Input
Low
(2)(3)
High
(2)(3)
Weighted
average
(4)
Assets
Mortgage-backed securities
$
337
Price-based
Price
$
1.07
$
108.15
$
34.07
244
Yield analysis
Yield
4.37
%
22.41
%
7.55
%
State and municipal, foreign government, corporate and other debt securities
$
722
Price-based
Price
$
—
$
201.78
$
108.92
687
Model-based
Credit spread
167.00
bps
508.30
bps
366.91
bps
Non-marketable equities
(5)
$
277
Comparable analysis
Illiquidity discount
7.70
%
33.00
%
16.60
%
Revenue multiple
8.61
x
30.71
x
14.10
x
EBITDA multiple
14.20
x
17.80
x
16.00
x
96
Model-based
Discount rate
12.60
%
17.50
%
15.92
%
71
Price-based
Price
$
2.90
$
353.72
$
125.66
Derivatives—gross
(6)
Interest rate contracts (gross)
$
4,036
Model-based
IR normal volatility
0.05
%
2.99
%
0.64
%
Equity volatility
3.59
%
42.92
%
13.30
%
Foreign exchange contracts (gross)
$
1,279
Model-based
IR normal volatility
0.50
%
0.87
%
0.77
%
IR basis
(
1.17
)
%
2.78
%
(
0.07
)
%
Equity volatility
3.00
%
15.80
%
6.87
%
FX volatility
2.71
%
28.29
%
7.69
%
Equity contracts (gross)
(7)
$
4,995
Model-based
Equity volatility
3.00
%
96.55
%
18.64
%
Equity forward
69.15
%
347.85
%
111.99
%
Equity-Equity correlation
(
36.22
)
%
98.91
%
68.16
%
Equity-FX correlation
(
75.00
)
%
70.00
%
(
15.14
)
%
Recovery rate
6.25
%
6.25
%
6.25
%
WAL
2.65
years
2.65
years
2.65
years
Commodity and other contracts (gross)
$
1,769
Model-based
Forward price
0.16
%
334.80
%
101.52
%
Commodity volatility
2.06
%
242.89
%
44.40
%
Credit derivatives (gross)
$
1,140
Model-based
Credit spread
5.17
bps
1180.00
bps
132.75
bps
Recovery rate
0.50
%
40.00
%
31.15
%
Credit spread volatility
32.94
%
112.79
%
94.14
%
977
Price-based
Price
$
65.10
$
112.55
$
91.95
Upfront points
4.13
%
106.28
%
60.79
%
Mortgage servicing rights
$
659
Cash flow
Yield
(
0.10
)
%
12.00
%
6.54
%
WAL
3.33
years
8.29
years
7.07
years
Liabilities
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
$
1,082
Model-based
Interest rate
2.11
%
5.40
%
3.71
%
IR normal volatility
0.50
%
0.89
%
0.59
%
Short-term borrowings and
long-term debt
$
22,686
Model-based
IR normal volatility
0.05
%
2.99
%
0.76
%
Equity volatility
6.03
%
96.30
%
19.11
%
Equity forward
69.15
%
347.85
%
114.48
%
Equity-IR correlation
(
42.00
)
%
50.00
%
26.32
%
Equity-FX correlation
(
75.00
)
%
70.00
%
(
21.06
)
%
199
As of December 31, 2024
Fair value
(1)
(in millions)
Methodology
Input
Low
(2)(3)
High
(2)(3)
Weighted
average
(4)
Assets
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
128
Model-based
Credit spread
10
bps
10
bps
10
bps
Interest rate
3.81
%
3.81
%
3.81
%
Mortgage-backed securities
$
230
Yield analysis
Yield
5.24
%
18.43
%
9.25
%
214
Price-based
Price
$
0.01
$
99.81
$
35.24
State and municipal, foreign government, corporate and other debt securities
$
560
Price-based
Price
$
—
$
173.20
$
98.52
489
Model-based
Credit spread
35
bps
550
bps
277
bps
Yield
4.20
%
10.60
%
9.88
%
140
Cash flow
WAL
3.59
years
8.82
years
7.57
years
Marketable equities securities
(5)
$
131
Price-based
Price
$
—
$
14,382.07
$
442.64
22
Model-based
WAL
2.40
years
2.40
years
2.40
years
Recovery
(in millions)
$
8,628
$
8,628
$
8,628
Asset-backed securities
$
132
Price-based
Price
$
3.46
$
132.54
$
74.86
47
Yield analysis
Yield
5.85
%
12.76
%
8.07
%
Non-marketable equities
$
222
Comparable analysis
Illiquidity discount
7.40
%
33.00
%
16.47
%
Revenue multiple
4.50
x
16.31
x
11.97
x
EBITDA multiples
16.20
x
16.20
x
16.20
x
81
Price-based
Price
$
0.54
$
2,960.96
$
432.84
50
Cash flow
Discount rate
9.75
%
17.50
%
13.28
%
50
Model-based
Derivatives—gross
(6)
Interest rate contracts (gross)
$
3,574
Model-based
IR normal volatility
0.16
%
20.00
%
2.18
%
Yield
1.69
%
46.32
%
5.64
%
Equity forward
71.78
%
334.29
%
106.48
%
Foreign exchange contracts (gross)
$
1,247
Model-based
IR normal volatility
0.67
%
1.13
%
0.93
%
IR basis
(
7.50
)
%
64.75
%
5.01
%
FX volatility
3.33
%
27.64
%
12.55
%
Yield
1.69
%
46.32
%
9.26
%
Equity contracts (gross)
(7)
$
4,345
Model-based
Equity volatility
—
%
145.41
%
32.89
%
Equity forward
71.78
%
334.29
%
105.90
%
Equity-FX correlation
(
93.33
)
%
70.00
%
(
14.52
)
%
Equity-Equity correlation
(
36.22
)
%
99.00
%
72.43
%
Commodity and other contracts (gross)
$
1,716
Model-based
Forward price
1.84
%
244.41
%
115.84
%
Commodity volatility
7.14
%
285.61
%
35.86
%
200
As of December 31, 2024
Fair value
(1)
(in millions)
Methodology
Input
Low
(2)(3)
High
(2)(3)
Weighted
average
(4)
Credit derivatives (gross)
$
869
Model-based
Recovery rate
20.00
%
72.00
%
41.54
%
Credit spread
5.00
bps
747.27
bps
100.50
bps
Credit spread volatility
29.85
%
81.44
%
67.58
%
468
Price-based
Price
$
43.71
$
103.53
$
85.76
Upfront points
(
6.25
)
%
110.52
%
43.93
%
Other financial assets and liabilities (gross)
$
14
Price-based
Price
$
91.12
$
104.49
$
100.04
Loans and leases
$
177
Model-based
Equity volatility
35.42
%
41.94
%
37.21
%
Forward price
1.84
%
244.41
%
102.92
%
82
Price-based
Price
$
73.88
$
99.25
$
85.09
Mortgage servicing rights
$
671
Cash flow
WAL
3.59
years
8.82
years
7.57
years
84
Model-based
Yield
0.30
%
12.00
%
6.82
%
Liabilities
Interest-bearing deposits
$
39
Model-based
Forward price
100.00
%
100.00
%
100.00
%
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
$
390
Model-based
Interest rate
4.25
%
4.85
%
4.28
%
IR normal volatility
0.67
%
1.13
%
0.93
%
Trading account liabilities
Securities sold, not yet purchased and other trading liabilities
$
27
Price-based
Price
$
—
$
14,382.07
$
91.47
Short-term borrowings and long-term debt
$
20,883
Model-based
IR normal volatility
0.04
%
20.00
%
1.54
%
Equity volatility
—
%
145.41
%
19.81
%
Equity-IR correlation
(
34.00
)
%
60.00
%
27.29
%
(1)
The tables above include the fair values for the items listed and may not represent the total population for each category.
(2)
Some inputs are shown as zero due to rounding.
(3)
When the low and high inputs are the same, there is either a constant input applied to all positions, or the methodology involving the input applies to only one large position.
(4)
Weighted averages are calculated based on the fair values of the instruments.
(5)
For equity securities, the price inputs are expressed on an absolute basis, not as a percentage of the notional amount.
(6)
Both trading and non-trading account derivatives—assets and liabilities—are presented on a gross absolute value basis.
(7)
Includes hybrid products.
201
Items Measured at Fair Value on a Nonrecurring Basis
Certain assets and liabilities are measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis and, therefore, are not included in the tables above. These include assets measured at cost that have been written down to fair value during the periods as a result of an impairment. These also include non-marketable equity securities that have been measured using the measurement alternative and are either (i) written down to fair value during the periods as a result of an impairment or (ii) adjusted upward or downward to fair value as a result of a transaction observed during the periods for an identical or similar investment in the same issuer. In addition, these assets include loans held-for-sale and other real estate owned that are measured at the lower of cost or market value.
The following tables present the carrying amounts of all assets that were still held as of the balance sheet date for which a nonrecurring fair value measurement was recorded during the period. The amounts reflect the fair values of the assets as of their respective remeasurement dates, which are generally prior to the balance sheet date. The following tables exclude certain consumer mortgage loans for which Citi has elected the fair value option (see Note 24), and consumer loans and other assets held by businesses held-for-sale (see Note 2):
In millions of dollars
Fair value
Level 2
Level 3
September 30, 2025
Loans HFS
(1)
$
567
$
331
$
236
Other real estate owned
2
—
2
Loans
(2)
620
—
620
Non-marketable equity securities measured using the measurement alternative
291
—
291
Total assets at fair value on a nonrecurring basis
$
1,480
$
331
$
1,149
In millions of dollars
Fair value
Level 2
Level 3
December 31, 2024
Loans HFS
(1)
$
684
$
413
$
271
Other real estate owned
1
—
1
Loans
(2)
353
—
353
Non-marketable equity securities measured using the measurement alternative
184
—
184
Total assets at fair value on a nonrecurring basis
$
1,222
$
413
$
809
(1)
Net of mark-to-market amounts on the unfunded portion of loans HFS recognized as
Other liabilities
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(2)
Represents collateral-dependent loans held-for-investment for which the fair value of collateral is used to estimate expected credit losses, and whose carrying amount is based on the fair value of the underlying collateral less costs to sell, as applicable (primarily real estate).
202
Valuation Techniques and Inputs for Level 3 Nonrecurring Fair Value Measurements
The following tables present the valuation techniques covering the majority of Level 3 nonrecurring fair value measurements and the most significant unobservable inputs used in those measurements:
As of September 30, 2025
Fair value
(1)
(in millions)
Methodology
Input
Low
(2)
High
Weighted
average
(3)
Loans HFS
$
235
Price-based
Price
$
80.00
$
100.00
$
95.55
Loans
(4)
$
620
Recovery analysis
Appraised value
(5)
$
10,000
$
184,687,798
$
99,270,639
Recovery rate
35.10
%
90.10
%
57.97
%
Non-marketable equity securities measured using the measurement alternative
$
163
Price-based
Price
$
9.94
$
205.01
$
94.50
127
Comparable analysis
Revenue multiple
3.00
x
53.75
x
31.84
x
As of December 31, 2024
Fair value
(1)
(in millions)
Methodology
Input
Low
(2)
High
Weighted
average
(3)
Loans HFS
$
271
Price-based
Price
$
—
$
101.00
$
96.61
Loans
(4)
$
353
Recovery analysis
Appraised value
(5)
$
10,000
$
104,049,422
$
58,636,070
Non-marketable equity securities measured using the measurement alternative
$
136
Price-based
Price
$
1.50
$
2,961.00
$
258.00
29
Comparable analysis
Revenue multiple
3.80
x
9.19
x
6.67
x
19
Recovery analysis
Appraised value
(5)
$
503,332
$
7,220,000
$
4,309,976
(1)
The tables above include the fair values for the items listed and may not represent the total population for each category.
(2)
Some inputs are shown as zero due to rounding.
(3)
Weighted averages are calculated based on the fair values of the instruments.
(4)
Represents collateral-dependent loans held-for-investment for which the fair value of collateral is used to estimate expected credit losses, and whose carrying amount is based on the fair value of the underlying collateral less costs to sell, as applicable (primarily real estate).
(5)
Appraised values are disclosed in whole dollars.
Nonrecurring Fair Value Changes
The following table presents total nonrecurring fair value measurements for the period, included in earnings, attributable to the change in fair value relating to assets that were still held:
Three Months Ended
September 30,
Nine Months Ended
September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Loans HFS
$
(
10
)
$
(
1
)
$
(
22
)
$
(
46
)
Other real estate owned
(
1
)
—
(
1
)
—
Loans
(1)
(
79
)
(
16
)
(
67
)
(
16
)
Non-marketable equity securities measured using the measurement alternative
(
8
)
(
8
)
(
51
)
20
Total nonrecurring fair value gains (losses)
$
(
98
)
$
(
25
)
$
(
141
)
$
(
42
)
(1)
Represents collateral-dependent loans held-for-investment for which the fair value of collateral is used to estimate expected credit losses, and whose carrying amount is based on the fair value of the underlying collateral less costs to sell, as applicable (primarily real estate).
203
Estimated Fair Value of Financial Instruments Not Carried at Fair Value
The following tables present the carrying value and fair value of Citigroup’s financial instruments that are not carried at fair value. The tables below therefore exclude items measured at fair value on a recurring basis presented in the tables above.
September 30, 2025
Estimated fair value
Carrying
value
Estimated
fair value
In billions of dollars
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Assets
HTM debt securities, net of allowance
(1)
$
202.3
$
190.6
$
89.8
$
98.6
$
2.2
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
156.6
156.6
—
156.6
—
Loans
(2)(3)
706.6
722.8
—
—
722.8
Other financial assets
(3)(4)(5)
457.7
457.7
348.1
109.6
—
Liabilities
Deposits
$
1,380.2
$
1,380.2
$
—
$
1,380.2
$
—
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
147.6
147.6
—
147.6
—
Long-term debt
(6)
186.0
190.7
—
186.3
4.4
Other financial liabilities
(5)(7)
155.7
155.7
—
155.7
—
December 31, 2024
Estimated fair value
Carrying
value
Estimated
fair value
In billions of dollars
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Assets
HTM debt securities, net of allowance
(1)
$
247.6
$
229.8
$
120.2
$
107.4
$
2.2
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
133.2
133.2
—
133.2
—
Loans
(2)(3)
667.6
673.5
—
—
673.5
Other financial assets
(3)(4)
362.2
362.2
260.6
15.9
85.7
Liabilities
Deposits
$
1,280.9
$
1,280.9
$
—
$
1,280.9
$
—
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
205.6
205.6
—
205.6
—
Long-term debt
(6)
174.5
178.0
—
162.1
15.9
Other financial liabilities
(7)
137.7
137.7
—
34.7
103.0
(1)
Includes $
5.2
billion and $
5.2
billion of non-marketable equity securities carried at cost at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(2)
The carrying value of loans is net of the allowance for credit losses on loans of $
19.2
billion for September 30, 2025 and $
18.6
billion for December 31, 2024. In addition, the carrying values exclude $
0.2
billion and $
0.3
billion of lease finance receivables at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
(3)
Includes items measured at fair value on a nonrecurring basis.
(4)
Includes cash and due from banks, deposits with banks, brokerage receivables, reinsurance recoverables and other financial instruments included in
Other assets
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet, for all of which the carrying value is a reasonable estimate of fair value.
(5)
As a result of Citi refining its application of fair value hierarchy methodologies, certain other financial assets and other financial liabilities that were previously classified as Level 2 or 3 are now classified as Level 1 or 2.
(6)
The carrying value includes long-term debt balances under qualifying fair value hedges.
(7)
Includes brokerage payables, separate and variable accounts, short-term borrowings (carried at cost) and other financial instruments included in
Other liabilities
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet, for all of which the carrying value is a reasonable estimate of fair value.
The estimated fair values of the Company’s corporate unfunded lending commitments at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024 were off-balance sheet liabilities of $
10.7
billion and $
13.5
billion, respectively, substantially all of which are classified as Level 3. The Company does not estimate the fair values of consumer unfunded lending commitments, which are generally cancelable by providing notice to the borrower.
204
24.
FAIR VALUE ELECTIONS
The Company may elect to report most financial instruments and certain other items at fair value on an instrument-by-instrument basis with changes in fair value reported in earnings, other than DVA (see below). The election is made upon the initial recognition of an eligible financial asset, financial liability or firm commitment or when certain specified reconsideration events occur. The fair value election
may not otherwise be revoked once an election is made. The changes in fair value are recorded in current earnings. Movements in DVA are reported as a component of
AOCI
.
The Company has elected fair value accounting for its mortgage servicing rights (MSRs). See Note 21 for additional details on Citi’s MSRs.
Additional discussion regarding other applicable areas in which fair value elections were made is presented in Note 23.
The following table presents the changes in fair value of those items for which the fair value option has been elected:
Changes in fair value—gains (losses)
Three Months Ended September 30,
Nine Months Ended September 30,
In millions of dollars
2025
2024
2025
2024
Assets
Securities borrowed and purchased under agreements to resell
$
88
$
223
$
210
$
164
Trading account assets
13
8
52
10
Investments
4
—
4
—
Loans
Corporate loans
587
(
143
)
1,539
1,235
Consumer loans
1
14
4
4
Total loans
$
588
$
(
129
)
$
1,543
$
1,239
Other assets
MSRs
$
(
25
)
$
(
40
)
$
(
28
)
$
(
23
)
Mortgage loans HFS
(1)
21
43
51
48
Total other assets
$
(
4
)
$
3
$
23
$
25
Total assets
$
689
$
105
$
1,832
$
1,438
Liabilities
Deposits
$
(
51
)
$
(
43
)
$
(
146
)
$
(
106
)
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
(
90
)
(
70
)
(
78
)
(
44
)
Trading account liabilities
(
70
)
(
17
)
(
223
)
(
241
)
Short-term borrowings
(2)
(
1,627
)
(
200
)
(
2,507
)
(
581
)
Long-term debt
(2)
(
4,174
)
(
6,216
)
(
9,312
)
(
8,338
)
Total liabilities
$
(
6,012
)
$
(
6,546
)
$
(
12,266
)
$
(
9,310
)
(1)
Includes gains (losses) associated with interest rate lock commitments for originated loans for which the Company has elected the fair value option.
(2)
Includes DVA that is included in
AOCI
. See Notes 19 and 23.
205
Own Debt Valuation Adjustments (DVA)
Own debt valuation adjustments are recognized on Citi’s liabilities for which the fair value option has been elected using Citi’s credit spreads observed in the bond market. Changes in fair value of fair value option liabilities related to changes in Citigroup’s own credit spreads (DVA) are reflected as a component of
AOCI
. See Note 19 for additional information.
Among other variables, the fair value of liabilities for which the fair value option has been elected (other than non-recourse debt and similar liabilities) is impacted by the narrowing or widening of the Company’s credit spreads.
The estimated changes in the fair value of these non-derivative liabilities due to such changes in the Company’s own credit spread (or instrument-specific credit risk) were a loss of $(
1,293
) million and $(
201
) million for the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, and a loss of $(
684
) million and $(
608
) million for the nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024, respectively. Changes in fair value resulting from changes in instrument-specific credit risk were estimated by incorporating the Company’s current credit spreads observable in the bond market into the relevant valuation technique used to value each liability as described above.
The Fair Value Option for Financial Assets and Financial Liabilities
Selected Portfolios of Securities Purchased Under Agreements to Resell, Securities Borrowed, Securities Sold Under Agreements to Repurchase, Securities Loaned and Certain Uncollateralized Short-Term Borrowings
The Company elected the fair value option for certain portfolios of fixed income securities purchased under agreements to resell and fixed income securities sold under
agreements to repurchase, securities borrowed, securities loaned and certain uncollateralized short-term borrowings held primarily by broker-dealer entities in the U.S., the U.K. and Japan. In each case, the election was made because the related interest rate risk is managed on a portfolio basis, primarily with offsetting derivative instruments that are accounted for at fair value through earnings.
Changes in fair value for transactions in these portfolios are recorded in
Principal transactions
. The related interest income and interest expense are measured based on the contractual rates specified in the transactions and are reported as
Interest income
and
Interest expense
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
Loans and Other Credit Products
Citigroup has also elected the fair value option for certain other originated and purchased loans, including certain unfunded loan products, such as guarantees and letters of credit, executed by Citigroup’s lending and trading businesses. Significant groups of transactions include loans and unfunded loan products that are expected to be either sold or securitized in the near term, or transactions where the economic risks are hedged with derivative instruments, such as purchased credit default swaps or total return swaps where the Company pays the total return on the underlying loans to a third party. Citigroup has elected the fair value option to mitigate accounting mismatches in cases where hedge accounting is complex and to achieve operational simplifications. Fair value was not elected for most lending transactions across the Company.
The following table provides information about certain credit products carried at fair value:
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Trading assets
Loans
Trading assets
Loans
Carrying amount reported on the Consolidated Balance Sheet
$
4,873
$
7,896
$
5,025
$
8,040
Aggregate unpaid principal balance in excess of (less than) fair value
143
(
133
)
137
(
55
)
Balance of non-accrual loans or loans more than 90 days past due
—
2
—
2
Aggregate unpaid principal balance in excess of (less than) fair value for non-accrual loans or loans more than 90 days past due
—
1
—
—
In addition to the amounts reported above, $
355
million and $
280
million of unfunded commitments related to certain credit products selected for fair value accounting were outstanding as of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
206
Changes in the fair value of funded and unfunded credit products are classified in
Principal transactions
in Citi’s Consolidated Statement of Income. Related interest income is measured based on the contractual interest rates and reported as
Interest income
on
Trading account assets
or loan interest depending on the balance sheet classifications of the credit products. The changes in fair value for the three months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024 due to instrument-specific credit risk were a gain of $
7
million and $
6
million, respectively. Changes in fair value due to instrument-specific credit risk are estimated based on changes in borrower-specific credit spreads and recovery assumptions.
Certain Investments in Unallocated Precious Metals
Citigroup invests in unallocated precious metals accounts (e.g., gold, silver, platinum and palladium) as part of its commodity trading activities. Under ASC 815, the investment is bifurcated into a debt host contract and a commodity derivative instrument. Citigroup elects the fair value option for the debt host contract and reports the contract within
Trading account assets
on the Company’s Consolidated Balance Sheet.
As part of its commodity trading activities, Citi trades unallocated precious metals investments and executes forward purchase and forward sale derivative contracts with trading counterparties. When Citi sells an unallocated precious metals investment, Citi’s receivable from its depository bank is repaid and Citi derecognizes its investment in the unallocated precious metal. The forward purchase or sale contract with the trading counterparty indexed to unallocated precious metals is accounted for as a derivative, at fair value through earnings.
Certain Mortgage Loans Held-for-Sale (HFS)
Citigroup has elected the fair value option for certain purchased and originated prime fixed-rate and conforming adjustable-rate first mortgage loans HFS. These loans are intended for sale or securitization and are economically hedged with derivative instruments. The Company has elected the fair value option to mitigate accounting mismatches in cases where hedge accounting is complex and to achieve operational simplifications.
The following table provides information about certain mortgage loans HFS carried at fair value:
In millions of dollars
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Carrying amount reported on the Consolidated Balance Sheet
$
992
$
692
Aggregate fair value in excess of (less than) unpaid principal balance
27
4
Balance of non-accrual loans or loans more than 90 days past due
1
1
Aggregate unpaid principal balance in excess of fair value for non-accrual loans
or loans more than 90 days past due
—
—
The changes in the fair values of these mortgage loans are reported in
Other revenue
in the Company’s Consolidated Statement of Income. There was no net change in fair value during the nine months ended September 30, 2025 and 2024 due to instrument-specific credit risk. Changes in fair value due to instrument-specific credit risk are estimated based on changes in the borrower default, prepayment and recovery forecasts in addition to instrument-specific credit spread. Related interest income continues to be measured based on the contractual interest rates and reported as
Interest income
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
207
Certain Debt Liabilities
The Company has elected the fair value option for certain debt liabilities, because these exposures are considered to be trading-related positions and, therefore, are managed on a fair value basis. These positions are classified as
Long-term debt
or
Short-term borrowings
on the Company’s Consolidated Balance Sheet.
The following table provides information about the carrying value of notes carried at fair value, disaggregated by type of risk:
In billions of dollars
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Interest rate linked
$
67.0
$
58.0
Foreign exchange linked
0.1
0.1
Equity linked
49.0
41.8
Commodity linked
6.6
6.9
Credit linked
7.1
5.9
Total
$
129.8
$
112.7
The portion of the changes in fair value attributable to changes in Citigroup’s own credit spreads (DVA) is reflected as a component of
AOCI
while all other changes in fair value are reported in
Principal transactions
. Changes in the fair value of these liabilities include accrued interest, which is also included in the change in fair value reported in
Principal transactions
.
The following table provides information about long-term debt and short-term borrowings carried at fair value:
In millions of dollars
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
Long-term debt
Carrying amount reported on the Consolidated Balance Sheet
$
129,817
$
112,719
Aggregate unpaid principal balance in excess of (less than) fair value
882
(
1,943
)
Short-term borrowings
Carrying amount reported on the Consolidated Balance Sheet
$
25,023
$
12,484
Aggregate unpaid principal balance in excess of (less than) fair value
(
370
)
(
87
)
208
25.
GUARANTEES AND COMMITMENTS
The following tables present information about Citi’s guarantees at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024.
For additional information on Citi’s guarantees and indemnifications included in the tables below, as well as its other guarantees and indemnifications excluded from these tables, see Note 28 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Maximum potential amount of future payments
In billions of dollars at September 30, 2025
Expire within
1 year
Expire after
1 year
Total amount
outstanding
Carrying value
(in millions of dollars)
Financial standby letters of credit
$
14.3
$
66.3
$
80.6
$
535
Performance guarantees
4.8
5.8
10.6
21
Derivative instruments considered to be guarantees
23.1
32.4
55.5
440
Loans sold with recourse
—
0.9
0.9
—
Securities lending indemnifications
(1)
125.5
—
125.5
—
Card merchant processing
(2)
34.4
—
34.4
—
Credit card arrangements with partners
(3)
1.6
19.9
21.5
1
Guarantees under the Fixed Income Clearing Corporation sponsored member repo program
226.3
—
226.3
—
Other
(4)(5)
—
8.4
8.4
80
Total
$
430.0
$
133.7
$
563.7
$
1,077
Maximum potential amount of future payments
In billions of dollars at December 31, 2024
Expire within
1 year
Expire after
1 year
Total amount
outstanding
Carrying value
(
in millions of dollars)
Financial standby letters of credit
$
15.5
$
63.5
$
79.0
$
546
Performance guarantees
4.2
5.8
10.0
27
Derivative instruments considered to be guarantees
15.8
27.3
43.1
332
Loans sold with recourse
—
1.0
1.0
—
Securities lending indemnifications
(1)
96.3
—
96.3
—
Card merchant processing
(2)
124.3
—
124.3
—
Credit card arrangements with partners
(3)
0.2
21.5
21.7
2
Guarantees under the Fixed Income Clearing Corporation sponsored member repo program
139.5
—
139.5
—
Other
(4)(5)
0.1
8.4
8.5
57
Total
$
395.9
$
127.5
$
523.4
$
964
(1)
The carrying values of securities lending indemnifications were not material for either period presented, as the probability of potential liabilities arising from these guarantees is minimal.
(2)
At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, this maximum potential exposure was estimated to be approximately $
34
billion and $
124
billion, respectively. However, Citi believes that the maximum exposure is not representative of the actual potential loss exposure based on its historical experience. This contingent liability is unlikely to arise, as most products and services are delivered when purchased and amounts are refunded when items are returned to merchants. See “Card Merchant Processing” in Note 28 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
(3)
Includes additional guarantees entered into as part of the extension and amendment of the American Airlines co-branded credit card partnership agreement, executed in December 2024. See “Credit Card Arrangements with Partners” in Note 28 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K. Citi believes that the maximum exposure is not representative of actual potential loss exposure based on historical and expected future performance of the portfolio.
(4)
Includes guarantees of subsidiaries.
(5)
In the fourth quarter of 2024, the Company entered into an agreement that indemnifies certain subsidiaries of the Company against certain matters related to the business operated by the Company through other subsidiaries, including certain existing, as well as potential future, legal proceedings, including tax matters. Certain of such indemnification obligations have no stated expiration date and are not subject to specific limitations on the maximum potential amount of future payments that the Company could be required to make. The Company is not able to estimate the maximum potential amount of future payments to be made under this agreement because the triggering events are not predictable.
209
Loans Sold with Recourse
In addition to the amounts presented in the tables above, the repurchase reserve was approximately $
14
million and $
12
million at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively, and these amounts are included in
Other liabilities
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
Futures and Over-the-Counter Derivatives Clearing
Citi provides clearing services on central clearing parties (CCP) for clients that need to clear exchange-traded and over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives contracts with CCPs. As a clearing member, Citi is exposed to the risk of non-performance by clients (e.g., failure of a client to post variation margin to the CCP for negative changes in the value of the client’s derivative contracts). In the event of non-performance by a client, Citi would move to close out the client’s positions. The CCP would typically utilize initial margin posted by the client and held by the CCP, with any remaining shortfalls required to be paid by Citi as clearing member. Citi generally holds incremental cash or securities margin posted by the client, which would typically be expected to be sufficient to mitigate Citi’s credit risk in the event that the client fails to perform.
Carrying Value—Guarantees and Indemnifications
At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, the total carrying amounts of the liabilities related to the guarantees and indemnifications included in the tables above amounted to approximately $
1.1
billion and $
1.0
billion, respectively. The carrying value of financial and performance guarantees is included in
Other liabilities
.
Collateral
Cash collateral available to Citi to reimburse losses realized under these guarantees and indemnifications amounted to $
54.6
billion and $
49.0
billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively. Securities and other marketable assets held as collateral amounted to $
88.7
billion and $
62.5
billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively. The majority of collateral is held to reimburse losses realized under securities lending indemnifications. In addition, letters of credit in favor of Citi held as collateral amounted to $
3.0
billion and $
3.1
billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively. Other property may also be available to Citi to cover losses under certain guarantees and indemnifications; however, the value of such property has not been determined.
Performance Risk
Presented in the tables below are the maximum potential amounts of future payments that are classified based on internal and external credit ratings. The determination of the maximum potential future payments is based on the notional amount of the guarantees without consideration of possible recoveries under recourse provisions or from collateral held or pledged. As such, Citi believes such amounts bear no relationship to the anticipated losses, if any, on these guarantees.
Maximum potential amount of future payments
In billions of dollars at September 30, 2025
Investment
grade
Non-investment
grade
Not
rated
Total
Financial standby letters of credit
$
67.1
$
13.5
$
—
$
80.6
Loans sold with recourse
—
—
0.9
0.9
Other
—
8.4
—
8.4
Total
$
67.1
$
21.9
$
0.9
$
89.9
Maximum potential amount of future payments
In billions of dollars at December 31, 2024
Investment
grade
Non-investment
grade
Not
rated
Total
Financial standby letters of credit
$
63.2
$
15.6
$
0.2
$
79.0
Loans sold with recourse
—
—
1.0
1.0
Other
—
8.4
—
8.4
Total
$
63.2
$
24.0
$
1.2
$
88.4
210
Credit Commitments and Lines of Credit
The table below summarizes Citigroup’s credit commitments:
In millions of dollars
U.S.
Outside of
U.S.
(1)
September 30,
2025
December 31, 2024
Commercial and similar letters of credit
$
525
$
3,774
$
4,299
$
4,031
One- to four-family residential mortgages
901
618
1,519
967
Revolving open-end loans secured by one- to four-family residential properties
5,066
2
5,068
5,271
Commercial real estate, construction and land development
11,531
2,299
13,830
14,107
Credit card lines
627,925
64,758
692,683
676,749
Commercial and other consumer loan commitments
252,871
124,210
377,081
325,329
Other commitments and contingencies
(2)
4,915
157
5,072
4,908
Total
$
903,734
$
195,818
$
1,099,552
$
1,031,362
(1)
Consumer commitments related to the business HFS countries under sales agreements are reflected in their original categories until the respective sales are completed.
(2)
Other commitments and contingencies include commitments to purchase certain debt and equity securities.
The majority of unused commitments are contingent upon customers maintaining specific credit standards. Commercial commitments generally have floating interest rates and fixed expiration dates and may require payment of fees. Such fees (net of certain direct costs) are deferred and, upon exercise of the commitment, amortized over the life of the loan or, if exercise is deemed remote, amortized over the commitment period.
Other Commitments
As a Federal Reserve member bank, Citi is required to subscribe to half of a certain amount of shares issued by its Federal Reserve District Bank. As of September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, Citi holds shares with a carrying value of $
4.5
billion, with the remaining half subject to call by the Federal Reserve District Bank Board.
In the normal course of business, Citi enters into reverse repurchase and securities borrowing agreements, as well as repurchase and securities lending agreements, which settle at a future date. At September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, Citi had approximately $
201.2
billion and $
117.7
billion of unsettled reverse repurchase and securities borrowing agreements, and approximately $
215.9
billion and $
126.8
billion of unsettled repurchase and securities lending agreements, respectively. See Note 11 for a further discussion of securities purchased under agreements to resell and securities borrowed, and securities sold under agreements to repurchase and securities loaned, including the Company’s policy for offsetting repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements.
These amounts are not included in the table above.
Restricted Cash
Citigroup defines restricted cash (as cash subject to withdrawal restrictions) to include cash deposited with central banks that must be maintained to meet minimum regulatory requirements, and cash set aside for the benefit of customers or for other purposes such as compensating balance arrangements or debt retirement. Restricted cash may include minimum reserve requirements at certain central banks and cash segregated to satisfy rules regarding the protection of customer assets as required by Citigroup broker-dealers’ primary regulators, including the SEC, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the United Kingdom’s Prudential Regulation Authority.
Restricted cash is included on the Consolidated Balance Sheet within the following balance sheet lines:
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31, 2024
Cash and due from banks
$
4,004
$
3,325
Deposits with banks, net of allowance
20,249
16,217
Total
$
24,253
$
19,542
In addition to the restricted cash amounts presented above, at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, approximately $
11.7
billion and $
7.2
billion, respectively, was held at the Russian Deposit Insurance Agency (DIA) and was subject to restrictions imposed by the Russian government. These restricted amounts are reported within
Other assets
on the Consolidated Balance Sheet.
211
26.
LEASES
The Company’s operating leases, where Citi is a lessee, include real estate, such as office space and branches, and various types of equipment. These leases may contain renewal and extension options and early termination features; however, these options do not impact the lease term unless the Company is reasonably certain that it will exercise options. These leases have a weighted-average remaining lease term of approximately
seven years
as of September 30, 2025.
For additional information regarding Citi’s leases, see Notes 1 and 29 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The following table presents information on the right-of-use (ROU) asset and lease liabilities included in
Premises and equipment
and
Other liabilities
, respectively:
In millions of dollars
September 30,
2025
December 31,
2024
ROU asset
$
3,048
$
2,836
Lease liability
3,203
3,013
The Company recognizes fixed lease costs on a straight-line basis throughout the lease term in the Consolidated Statement of Income. In addition, variable lease costs are recognized in the period in which the obligation for those payments is incurred.
212
27.
CONTINGENCIES
The following information supplements and amends, as applicable, the disclosures in Note 27 to the Consolidated Financial Statements of Citigroup’s Second Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q, Note 27 to the Consolidated Financial Statements of Citigroup’s First Quarter of 2025 Form 10-Q and Note 30 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K. For purposes of this Note, Citigroup, its affiliates and subsidiaries and current and former officers, directors, and employees, are sometimes collectively referred to as Citigroup and Related Parties.
In accordance with ASC 450, Citigroup establishes accruals for contingencies, including any litigation, regulatory, or tax matters disclosed herein, when Citigroup believes it is probable that a loss has been incurred and the amount of the loss can be reasonably estimated. Once established, accruals are adjusted from time to time, as appropriate, in light of additional information. The amount of loss ultimately incurred in relation to those matters may be substantially higher or lower than the amounts accrued for those matters. With respect to previously incurred loss contingencies for which recovery is expected, Citi applies loss recovery accounting when disputes and uncertainties affecting recognition are resolved.
If Citigroup has not accrued for a matter because the matter does not meet the criteria for accrual (as set forth above), or Citigroup believes an exposure to loss exists in excess of the amount accrued for a particular matter, in each case assuming a material loss is reasonably possible but not probable, Citigroup discloses the matter. In addition, for such matters, Citigroup discloses an estimate of the aggregate reasonably possible loss or range of loss in excess of the amounts accrued for those matters for which an estimate can be made. At September 30, 2025, Citigroup estimates that the reasonably possible unaccrued loss for these matters ranges up to approximately $
1.3
billion in the aggregate.
As available information changes, the matters for which Citigroup is able to estimate will change, and the estimates themselves will change. In addition, while many estimates presented in financial statements and other financial disclosures involve significant judgment and may be subject to significant uncertainty, estimates of the range of reasonably possible loss arising from litigation, regulatory, tax, or other matters are subject to particular uncertainties. For example, at the time of making an estimate, Citigroup may only have preliminary or incomplete information about the facts underlying the claim; its assumptions about the future rulings of the court or other tribunal on significant issues, or the behavior and incentives of adverse parties, regulators, or tax authorities may prove to be wrong; and the outcomes it is attempting to predict are often not amenable to the use of statistical or other quantitative analytical tools. In addition, from time to time an outcome may occur that Citigroup had not accounted for in its estimates because it had deemed such an outcome to be remote. For all these reasons, the amount of loss in excess of amounts accrued in relation to matters for which an estimate has been made could be substantially higher or lower than the range of loss included in the estimate.
Subject to the foregoing, it is the opinion of Citigroup’s management, based on current knowledge and after taking into account its current accruals, that the eventual outcome of all matters described in this Note would not be likely to have a material adverse effect on the consolidated financial condition of Citigroup. Nonetheless, given the substantial or indeterminate amounts sought in certain of these matters and the inherent unpredictability of such matters, an adverse outcome in certain of these matters could, from time to time, have a material adverse effect on Citigroup’s consolidated results of operations or cash flows in particular quarterly or annual periods.
For further information on ASC 450 and Citigroup’s accounting and disclosure framework for contingencies, including for any litigation, regulatory, and tax matters disclosed herein, see Note 30 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Foreign Exchange Matters
On August 15, 2025, in J WISBEY & ASSOCIATES PTY LTD v. UBS AG & ORS, the Federal Court of Australia approved the settlement reached with Citibank and other defendants. Additional information concerning this action is publicly available in court filings under the docket number VID567/2019.
Greek Pension Claims
On September 16, 2025, ARVANITAKI & OTHERS filed a claim against CITIBANK EUROPE PUBLIC LIMITED in the Athens Court of First Instance regarding the treatment of their pension benefits following the sale of Citi’s consumer operations in Greece. Additional information is available in court filings under the docket number 183297/2300/2025 of the Athens Court of First Instance.
Interbank Offered Rates-Related Litigation
On August 20, 2025, and September 10, 2025, in IN RE LIBOR-BASED FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS ANTITRUST LITIGATION, the district court approved stipulations dismissing with prejudice the remaining pending claims against Citigroup and Citibank. Additional information concerning these actions is publicly available in court filings under the docket numbers 1:11-MD-2262 (S.D.N.Y.) (Buchwald, J.) and 17-1569 (2d Cir.).
Madoff-Related Litigation
On August 5, 2025, in FAIRFIELD SENTRY LTD., ET AL. v. CITIGROUP GLOBAL MARKETS LTD., ET AL.; FAIRFIELD SENTRY LTD., ET AL. v. CITIBANK (SWITZERLAND) AG, ET AL.; FAIRFIELD SENTRY LTD., ET AL. v. ZURICH CAPITAL MARKETS COMPANY, ET AL.; FAIRFIELD SENTRY LTD., ET AL. v. CITIBANK NA LONDON, ET AL.; FAIRFIELD SENTRY LTD., ET AL. v. CITIVIC NOMINEES LTD., ET AL.; FAIRFIELD SENTRY LTD., ET AL. v. DON
CHIMANGO SA, ET AL.; and FAIRFIELD SENTRY LTD., ET AL. v. CITIBANK KOREA INC. ET AL., the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed the portion of the decision of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York that permitted a single
213
claim to proceed against CGML, Citibank (Switzerland) AG, Citivic Nominees Ltd., and Citibank, NA London, and otherwise affirmed the district court’s decision dismissing the liquidators’ remaining claims against CGML, Citibank (Switzerland) AG, Citibank, NA London, Citivic Nominees Ltd., Cititrust Bahamas Ltd., and Citibank Korea Inc. On September 18, 2025, the liquidators petitioned the court of appeals for rehearing and rehearing
en banc
. Additional information is publicly available in court filings under the docket numbers 10-13164, 10-3496, 10-3622, 10-3634, 10-4100, 10-3640, 11-2770, 12-1142, 12-1298 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y.) (Mastando, J.); 19-3911, 19-4267, 19-4396, 19-4484, 19-5106, 19-5135, 19-5109, 21-2997, 21-3243, 21-3526, 21-3529, 21-3530, 21-3998, 21-4307, 21-4498, 21-4496 (S.D.N.Y.) (Broderick, J.); and 22-2101 (consolidated lead appeal), 22-2557, 22-2122, 23-697, 22-2562, 22-2216, 22-2545, 22-2308, 22-2591, 22-2502, 22-2553, 22-2398, 22-2582, 23-965 (consolidated lead appeal), 23-549, 23-572, 23-573, 23-975, 23-982, 23-987 (2d Cir.).
Variable Rate Demand Obligation Litigation
On August 1, 2025, in CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, ET AL. v. BANK OF AMERICA CORP., ET AL., the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed the district court’s grant of class certification. Additional information concerning this action is publicly available in court filings under the docket numbers 19-CV-1608 (S.D.N.Y.) (Furman, J.) and 23-7328 (2d Cir.).
Settlement Payments
Payments required in any settlement agreements described above have been made or are covered by existing litigation or other accruals.
214
28.
SUBSIDIARY GUARANTEES
Citigroup Inc. has fully and unconditionally guaranteed the payments due on debt securities issued by Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc. (CGMHI), a wholly owned subsidiary, under the Senior Debt Indenture dated as of March 8, 2016, between CGMHI, Citigroup Inc. and The Bank of New York Mellon, as trustee. In addition, Citigroup Capital III and Citigroup Capital XIII (collectively, the Capital Trusts), each of which is a wholly owned finance subsidiary of Citigroup Inc., have issued trust preferred securities. Citigroup Inc. has guaranteed the payments due on the trust preferred securities
to the extent that the Capital Trusts have insufficient available funds to make payments on the trust preferred securities. The guarantee, together with Citigroup Inc.’s other obligations with respect to the trust preferred securities, effectively provides a full and unconditional guarantee of amounts due on the trust preferred securities (see Note 18). No other subsidiary of Citigroup Inc. guarantees the debt securities issued by CGMHI or the trust preferred securities issued by the Capital Trusts.
Summarized financial information for Citigroup Inc. and CGMHI is presented in the tables below:
SUMMARIZED INCOME STATEMENT
Nine Months Ended
September 30, 2025
In millions of dollars
Citigroup parent company
CGMHI
Total revenues, net of interest expense
$
8,721
$
10,082
Total operating expenses
181
11,078
Provision for credit losses
—
41
Equity in undistributed income of subsidiaries
1,836
—
Income (loss) from continuing operations before income taxes
$
10,376
$
(
1,037
)
Provision (benefit) for income taxes
(
1,459
)
(
337
)
Net income (loss)
$
11,835
$
(
700
)
SUMMARIZED BALANCE SHEET
September 30, 2025
December 31, 2024
In millions of dollars
Citigroup parent company
CGMHI
Citigroup parent company
CGMHI
Cash and deposits with banks
$
5,785
$
24,324
$
4,014
$
19,464
Securities borrowed and purchased under resale agreements
—
249,761
—
215,995
Trading account assets
160
360,123
203
294,396
Advances to subsidiaries
156,499
—
150,790
—
Investments in subsidiary bank holding company
186,086
—
179,253
—
Investments in non-bank subsidiaries
43,727
—
46,549
—
Other assets
(1)
16,592
184,444
14,642
158,080
Total assets
$
408,849
$
818,652
$
395,451
$
687,935
Securities loaned and sold under agreements to repurchase
$
—
$
341,866
$
—
$
268,178
Trading account liabilities
2
109,478
69
89,146
Short-term borrowings
—
29,418
—
29,410
Long-term debt
174,661
203,302
164,024
184,516
Advances from subsidiaries
18,574
—
19,974
—
Other liabilities
2,589
98,836
2,786
80,486
Stockholders’ equity
213,023
35,752
208,598
36,199
Total liabilities and equity
$
408,849
$
818,652
$
395,451
$
687,935
(1) Other assets of CGMHI includes loans to affiliates of $
100
billion and $
91
billion at September 30, 2025 and December 31, 2024, respectively.
215
UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES, REPURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND DIVIDENDS
Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities
None.
Equity Security Repurchases
All large banks, including Citi, are subject to limitations on capital distributions in the event of a breach of any regulatory capital buffers, including the Stress Capital Buffer, with the degree of such restrictions based on the extent to which the buffers are breached. For additional information, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Buffers” and “Risk Factors—Strategic Risks,” “—Operational Risks” and “—Compliance Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
The following table summarizes Citi’s common share repurchases for the third quarter of 2025:
In thousands, except per share amounts and remaining program dollar value
Total shares purchased
Average
price paid
per share
Total shares purchased as part of publicly announced program
(1)
Approximate remaining dollar value of shares that may be purchased under the program
(in billions of dollars)
July 2025
Open market repurchases
(1)
11,150
$
93.97
61,710
$
15.2
Employee transactions
(2)
—
—
—
—
August 2025
Open market repurchases
(1)
15,445
93.62
77,155
13.8
Employee transactions
(2)
—
—
—
—
September 2025
Open market repurchases
(1)
25,132
99.73
102,287
11.3
Employee transactions
(2)
—
—
—
—
Total for 3Q25
51,727
$
96.66
102,287
$
11.3
(1) Represents repurchases under the multiyear $20 billion common stock repurchase program that was approved by Citigroup’s Board of Directors on January 13, 2025 and announced on January 15, 2025. Repurchases by Citigroup under this common stock repurchase program are subject to quarterly approval by Citigroup’s Board; may be effected from time to time through open market purchases, trading plans established in accordance with SEC rules or other means; and, as determined by Citigroup, may be subject to satisfactory market conditions, Citigroup’s capital position and capital requirements, applicable legal requirements and other factors.
(2) During the third quarter, pursuant to the Board’s authorization, Citi withheld an insignificant number of shares of common stock, added to treasury stock, related to activity from employee stock programs to satisfy the employee tax requirements.
During the third quarter of 2025, Citi repurchased $5.0 billion of common shares under the $20 billion stock repurchase program (of which there was $11.3 billion remaining at September 30, 2025).
Dividends
Citi paid common dividends of $0.60 per share for the third quarter of 2025, and on October 13, 2025, declared common dividends of $0.60 per share for the fourth quarter of 2025.
Citi’s ability to pay common stock dividends is subject to limitations on capital distributions in the event of a breach of any regulatory capital buffers, including the Stress Capital
Buffer, with the degree of such restrictions based on the extent to which the buffers are breached. For additional information, see “Capital Resources—Regulatory Capital Buffers” and “Risk Factors—Strategic Risks,” “—Operational Risks” and “—Compliance Risks” in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
Any dividend on Citi’s outstanding common stock would also need to be in compliance with Citi’s obligations on its outstanding preferred stock.
On October 13, 2025, Citi declared preferred dividends of approximately $284 million for the fourth quarter of 2025.
For information on the ability of Citigroup’s subsidiary depository institutions to pay dividends, see Note 20 to the Consolidated Financial Statements in Citi’s 2024 Form 10-K.
216
OTHER INFORMATION
Insider Trading Arrangements
During the third quarter of 2025, no director or executive officer of Citi
adopted
or
terminated
any Rule 10b5-1 or non-Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement (each, as defined in Item 408 of Regulation S-K).
217
EXHIBIT INDEX
Number
Description
3.1
Restated Certificate of Incorporation of Citigroup
Inc.
, as amended, as in effect on the date hereof, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to Citigroup
Inc.
’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2025, filed August 6, 2025 (File No. 001-09924).
10.1*+
Form of Citigroup Inc. Performance Share Unit Award Agreement (awards dated February 13, 2025 and in future years).
10.2*+
Agreement between Vis Raghavan and Citibank, N.A. (dated January 14, 2025).
22.01+
Subsidiary Issuers of Guaranteed Securities.
31.01+
Certification of principal executive officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
31.02+
Certification of principal financial officer pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
32.01+
Certification pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
99.01+
List of Securities Registered Pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, formatted in Inline XBRL.
101.01+
Financial statements from the Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q of Citigroup Inc. for the quarterly period ended September 30, 2025, filed on November 6, 2025, formatted in Inline XBRL: (i) the Consolidated Statement of Income, (ii) the Consolidated Balance Sheet, (iii) the Consolidated Statement of Changes in Stockholders’ Equity, (iv) the Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows and (v) the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements.
104
See the cover page of this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, formatted in Inline XBRL.
The total amount of securities authorized pursuant to any instrument defining rights of holders of long-term debt of Citigroup Inc. does not exceed 10% of the total assets of Citigroup Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries. Citigroup Inc. will furnish copies of any such instrument to the SEC upon request.
* Denotes a management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement.
+ Filed herewith.
218
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, on the 6
th
day of November, 2025.
CITIGROUP INC.
(Registrant)
By
/s/ Mark A. L. Mason
Mark A. L. Mason
Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Financial Officer)
By
/s/ Nicole Giles
Nicole Giles
Controller and Chief Accounting Officer
(Principal Accounting Officer)
219
GLOSSARY OF TERMS AND ACRONYMS
The following is a list of terms and acronyms that are used in this report and certain other Citigroup presentations.
* Denotes a Citi metric
2024 Annual Report on Form 10-K (2024 Form 10-K):
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the SEC.
90+ days past due delinquency rate*:
Represents consumer loans that are past due by 90 or more days, divided by that period’s total EOP loans.
ABS:
Asset-backed securities
ACL:
Allowance for credit losses, which is composed of the allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL), allowance for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments (ACLUC), allowance for credit losses on HTM securities and allowance for credit losses on other assets.
ACLL:
Allowance for credit losses on loans
ACLUC:
Allowance for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments
Advanced Approaches:
The Advanced Approaches capital framework, established through Basel III rules by the FRB, requires certain banking organizations to use an internal ratings-based approach and other methodologies to calculate risk-based capital requirements for credit risk and advanced measurement approaches to calculate risk-based capital requirements for operational risk.
AFS:
Available-for-sale
AI:
Artificial intelligence
ALCO:
Asset and Liability Committee
Amortized cost:
Amount at which a financing receivable or investment is originated or acquired, adjusted for accretion or amortization of premium, discount, and net deferred fees or costs, collection of cash, charge-offs, foreign exchange and fair value hedge accounting adjustments. For AFS securities, amortized cost is also reduced by any impairment losses recognized in earnings. Amortized cost is not reduced by the allowance for credit losses, except where explicitly presented net.
AOCI:
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
ASC:
Accounting Standards Codification under GAAP issued by the FASB.
Asia Consumer:
Asia Consumer Banking
ASU:
Accounting Standards Update under GAAP issued by the FASB.
AUC/AUA:
Assets under custody and administration includes assets for which Citi provides custody or safekeeping services for assets held directly or by a third party on behalf of clients, or assets for which Citi provides administrative services for clients.
Available liquidity resources*:
Resources available at the balance sheet date to support Citi’s client and business needs,
including HQLA assets; additional unencumbered securities, including excess liquidity held at bank entities that is non-transferable to other entities within Citigroup; and available assets not already accounted for within Citi’s HQLA to support Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) and Federal Reserve Bank discount window borrowing capacity.
Banamex:
Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V., the legal entity being divested by Citi
Basel III:
Liquidity and capital rules adopted by the FRB based on an internationally agreed set of measures developed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision.
Beneficial interests issued by consolidated VIEs:
Represents the interest of third-party holders of debt, equity securities or other obligations, issued by VIEs that Citi consolidates.
Benefit obligation:
Refers to the projected benefit obligation for pension plans and the accumulated postretirement benefit obligation for OPEB plans.
BHC:
Bank holding company
Board:
Citigroup’s Board of Directors
Book value per share*:
EOP common equity divided by EOP common shares outstanding.
Bps:
Basis points. One basis point equals 1/100th of one percent.
Branded Cards:
Citi’s branded cards business with a portfolio of proprietary cards (Value, Cash and Rewards), co-branded cards (including Costco and American Airlines) and personal installment loans.
Build:
A net increase in the ACL through the provision for credit losses.
Card spend volume*:
Dollar amount of card customers’ gross purchases. Also known as purchase sales.
Cards:
Citi’s credit cards’ businesses or activities.
CCAR:
Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review
CCO:
Chief Compliance Officer
CDS:
Credit default swaps
CECL:
Current expected credit losses
CEO:
Chief Executive Officer
CET1 Capital:
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital. See “Capital Resources—Components of Citigroup Capital” above within MD&A for the components of CET1.
CET1 Capital ratio*:
Common Equity Tier 1 Capital ratio. A primary regulatory capital ratio representing end-of-period CET1 Capital divided by total risk-weighted assets.
CFO:
Chief Financial Officer
CGMHI:
Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc.
220
CGMI:
Citigroup Global Markets Inc.
CGML:
Citigroup Global Markets Limited
Citi:
Citigroup Inc.
Citibank or CBNA:
Citibank, N.A. (National Association)
Classifiably managed:
Loans primarily evaluated for credit risk based on internal risk rating classification.
Client investment assets:
Represent assets under management, trust and custody assets.
Cluster revenues:
Cluster revenues are primarily based on where the underlying transaction is managed.
CODM:
Chief operating decision maker. For Citi, the Chief Executive Officer.
Collateral dependent:
A loan is considered collateral dependent when repayment of the loan is expected to be provided substantially through the operation or sale of the collateral when the borrower is experiencing financial difficulty, including when foreclosure is deemed probable based on borrower delinquency.
Commercial card spend volume:
Represents the total global spend volumes using Citi-issued commercial cards net of refunds and returns.
Commercial cards:
Provides a wide range of payment services to corporate and public sector clients worldwide through commercial card products. Services include procurement, corporate travel and entertainment, expense management services and business-to-business payment solutions.
Consent Orders:
In October 2020, Citigroup and Citibank entered into consent orders with the FRB and OCC that require Citigroup and Citibank to make improvements in various aspects of enterprise-wide risk management, compliance, data quality management related to governance, and internal controls. In July 2024, the FRB and OCC entered into civil money penalty consent orders with Citigroup and Citibank to address remediation effort shortcomings.
CRE:
Commercial real estate
Credit cycle:
A period of time over which credit quality improves, deteriorates and then improves again (or vice versa). The duration of a credit cycle can vary from a couple of years to several years.
Credit derivatives:
Financial instruments whose value is derived from the credit risk associated with the debt of a third-party issuer (the reference entity), which allow one party (the protection purchaser) to transfer that risk to another party (the protection seller).
Criticized:
Loans, lending-related commitments or derivative receivables that are classified as special mention, substandard or doubtful for regulatory purposes.
Cross-border transaction value:
Represents the total value of cross-border FX payments processed through Citi’s proprietary Worldlink and Cross-Border Funds Transfer platforms, including payments from consumer, corporate, financial institution and public sector clients.
CTA:
Cumulative translation adjustment (also known as currency translation adjustment). A separate component of equity within
AOCI
reported net of tax. For Citi, represents the impact of translating non-USD balance sheet items into USD each period. The CTA amount in EOP
AOCI
is a cumulative balance, net of tax.
CVA:
Credit valuation adjustment
DCM:
Debt Capital Markets
Delinquency managed:
Loans primarily evaluated for credit risk based on delinquencies, FICO scores and the value of underlying collateral.
Digital asset:
Anything created and stored digitally that is identifiable and discoverable, establishes ownership and has or provides value (e.g., cryptocurrency).
Divestiture-related impacts:
Citi’s results excluding divestiture-related impacts represent as reported, or GAAP, financial results adjusted for items that are incurred and recognized, which are wholly and necessarily a consequence of actions taken to sell (including through a public offering), dispose of or wind down business activities associated with Citi’s announced 14 exit markets.
Dividend payout ratio*:
Represents dividends declared per common share as a percentage of net income per diluted share.
DPD:
Days past due
DTA:
Deferred tax asset
DVA:
Debt valuation adjustment
ECM:
Equity Capital Markets
Efficiency ratio*:
A ratio signifying how much of a dollar in expenses (as a percentage) it takes to generate one dollar in revenue. Represents total operating expenses divided by total revenues, net.
EOP:
End-of-period
EPS*:
Earnings per share
EU:
European Union
Fannie Mae:
Federal National Mortgage Association
FASB:
Financial Accounting Standards Board
FCA:
Financial Conduct Authority
FDIC:
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Federal Reserve Board (FRB):
The Board of the Governors of the Federal Reserve System
FFIEC:
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
FHA:
Federal Housing Administration
FHLB:
Federal Home Loan Bank
FICO:
Fair Isaac Corporation
FICO score:
A measure of consumer credit risk provided by credit bureaus, typically produced from statistical models by Fair Isaac Corporation utilizing data collected by the credit bureaus.
FINRA:
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
221
FRB:
Federal Reserve Board
Freddie Mac:
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
FVA:
Funding valuation adjustment
FX:
Foreign exchange
FX translation:
The impact of converting non-U.S. dollar currencies into U.S. dollars.
GAAP or U.S. GAAP:
Generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of America.
Generative AI:
A type of artificial intelligence that uses generative models to create text and other content.
Ginnie Mae:
Government National Mortgage Association
GSIB:
Global Systemically Important Bank
HFI loans:
Loans that are held-for-investment (i.e., excludes loans held-for-sale).
HFS:
Held-for-sale
HQLA:
High-quality liquid assets. Consist of cash and certain high-quality liquid securities as defined in the LCR rule.
HTM:
Held-to-maturity
Hyperinflation:
Extreme economic inflation with prices rising at a very high rate in a very short time. Under U.S. GAAP, entities operating in a hyperinflationary economy need to change their functional currency to the U.S. dollar. Once the change is made, the CTA balance is frozen.
IMF:
International Monetary Fund
Interchange fees:
Fees earned from merchants based on Citi’s credit and debit card customer sales transactions. Interchange fees are presented net of certain transaction processing fees paid, primarily to the networks, on behalf of the merchant.
International region:
Comprises six clusters: United Kingdom; Japan, Asia North and Australia (JANA); LATAM; Asia South; Europe; and Middle East and Africa (MEA).
IPO:
Initial public offering
JANA:
Japan, Asia North and Australia
KPMG:
KPMG LLP, Citi’s Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
LATAM:
Latin America
LCR:
Liquidity Coverage ratio. Represents HQLA divided by net outflows in the period.
LGD:
Loss given default
LIBOR:
London Interbank Offered Rate
LLC:
Limited Liability Company
LTD:
Long-term debt
LTV:
Loan-to-value. For residential real estate loans, the relationship, expressed as a percentage, between the principal amount of a loan and the estimated value of the collateral (i.e., residential real estate) securing the loan.
Managed basis:
Results reflected on a managed basis exclude divestiture-related impacts.
Master netting agreement:
A single agreement with a counterparty that permits multiple transactions governed by that agreement to be terminated or accelerated and settled through a single payment in a single currency in the event of a default (e.g., bankruptcy, failure to make a required payment or securities transfer or deliver collateral or margin when due).
MBS:
Mortgage-backed securities
MD&A:
Management’s Discussion and Analysis, a section within an SEC Form 10-Q or 10-K.
MEA:
Middle East and Africa
Measurement alternative:
Measures equity securities without readily determinable fair values at cost less impairment (if any), plus or minus observable price changes from an identical or similar investment of the same issuer.
Mexico Consumer:
Mexico Consumer Banking
Mexico Consumer/SBMM:
Mexico Consumer Banking and Small Business and Middle-Market Banking reported within Legacy Franchises in
All Other
. Mexico Consumer/SBMM operates primarily through Grupo Financiero Banamex, S.A. de C.V. and its consolidated subsidiaries, including Banco Nacional de Mexico, S.A., which provides traditional retail banking and branded card products to consumers and small business customers and traditional middle-market banking products and services to commercial customers, and other affiliated subsidiaries that offer retirement fund administration and insurance products.
Mexico SBMM:
Mexico Small Business and Middle-Market Banking
Moody’s:
Moody’s Ratings
MSRs:
Mortgage servicing rights
N/A:
Data is not applicable or available for the period presented.
NAA:
Non-accrual assets. Consists of non-accrual loans and OREO.
NAL:
Non-accrual loans. Loans for which interest income is not recognized on an accrual basis. Loans (other than credit card loans and certain consumer loans insured by U.S. government-sponsored agencies) are placed on non-accrual status when full payment of principal and interest is not expected, regardless of delinquency status, or when principal and interest have been in default for a period of 90 days or more unless the loan is both well secured and in the process of collection. Collateral-dependent loans are typically maintained on non-accrual status.
NAV:
Net asset value
NCL(s):
Net credit losses. Represents gross credit losses, less gross credit recoveries.
NCL ratio*:
Represents net credit losses (recoveries) (annualized), divided by average loans for the reporting period.
Net capital rule:
Rule 15c3-1 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
222
NIM*:
Net interest margin expressed as a yield percentage, calculated as annualized net interest income divided by average interest-earning assets for the period.
NM:
Not meaningful
NNIA (net new investment asset flows) (
Wealth
):
Represents investment asset inflows, including dividends, interest and distributions, less investment asset outflows. Excluded from the calculation are the impacts of fees and commissions, market movement, internal transfers within Citi specific to systematic upgrades/downgrades with
USPB
and any impact from strategic decisions by Citi to exit certain markets or services. Also excluded from the calculation are net new investment assets associated with markets for which data was not available for current-period reporting.
Noncontrolling interests:
The portion of an investment that has been consolidated by Citi that is not 100% owned by Citi.
Non-GAAP financial measure:
A non-GAAP financial measure is a numerical measure of the Company’s historical or future financial performance, financial position or cash flows that (i) excludes amounts, or is subject to adjustments that have the effect of excluding amounts, that are included in the most directly comparable measure calculated and presented in accordance with GAAP in the statement of income, balance sheet or statement of cash flows (or equivalent statements) of the Company; or (ii) includes amounts, or is subject to adjustments that have the effect of including amounts, that are excluded from the most directly comparable measure so calculated and presented.
Note:
All “Note” references correspond to the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements herein, unless otherwise indicated.
NSFR:
Net stable funding ratio
O/S:
Outstanding
OCC:
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
OCI:
Other comprehensive income (loss)
Operating leverage*:
Represents the year-over-year growth rate in basis points (bps) of
Total revenues, net of interest expense
less the year-over-year growth rate of
Total operating expenses
. A positive operating leverage percentage indicates that the revenue growth rate was greater than the expense growth rate.
OREO:
Other real estate owned
Organic growth (
Wealth
):
Organic growth is defined as growth in client investment assets related to net new investment assets (NNIA) and excluding the impact of market growth. It is calculated as the sum of NNIA for each quarter from the fourth quarter of 2024 through the third quarter of 2025 divided by third quarter of 2024 client investment assets.
OTTI:
Other-than-temporary impairment
Over-the-counter cleared (OTC-cleared) derivatives:
Derivative contracts that are negotiated and executed bilaterally, but subsequently settled via a central clearing house, such that each derivative counterparty is only exposed to the default of that clearing house.
Over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives:
Derivative contracts that are negotiated, executed and settled bilaterally between two derivative counterparties, where one or both counterparties are derivatives dealers.
Parent company:
Citigroup Inc.
Partner payments:
Payments made to credit card partners primarily based on program sales and profitability.
PD:
Probability of default
PIL:
Personal installment loans
Prime balances:
Prime balances are defined as clients’ billable balances where Citi provides cash or synthetic prime brokerage services. Management uses this information in reviewing the business’s size and growth and believes it is useful to investors concerning underlying business size and growth trends.
Principal transactions revenue:
Primarily trading-related revenues predominantly generated by the
Services
,
Markets
and
Banking
segments. See Note 6.
Provision for credit losses:
Composed of the provision for credit losses on loans, provision for credit losses on HTM investments, provision for credit losses on other assets and provision for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments.
Provisions:
Provisions for credit losses and for benefits and claims.
Purchased credit-deteriorated:
Purchased credit-deteriorated assets are financial assets that as of the date of acquisition have experienced a more-than-insignificant deterioration in credit quality since origination, as determined by the Company.
R&S forecast period:
Reasonable and supportable period over which Citi forecasts future macroeconomic conditions for CECL purposes.
Real GDP:
Real gross domestic product is the inflation-adjusted value of the goods and services produced by labor and property located in a country.
Reconciling Items:
Divestiture-related impacts excluded from the results of
All Other
, as well as
All Other
—Legacy Franchises on a managed basis. The Reconciling Items are fully reflected in Citi’s Consolidated Statement of Income for each respective line item.
Regulatory VaR:
Daily aggregated VaR calculated in accordance with regulatory rules.
Release:
A net decrease in the ACL through the provision for credit losses.
Reported basis:
Financial statements prepared under U.S. GAAP.
Results of operations that exclude certain
impacts from gains or losses on sale, or one-time charges
*:
Represents GAAP items, excluding the impact of gains or losses on sales, or one-time charges (e.g., the loss on sale related to the sale of Citi’s consumer banking business in Australia).
223
Results of operations that exclude the impact of FX translation*:
Represents GAAP items, excluding the impact of FX translation, whereby the prior periods’ foreign currency balances are translated into U.S. dollars at the current period’s conversion rates (also known as constant dollar). GAAP measures excluding the impact of FX translation are non-GAAP financial measures.
Retail Services:
Citi’s U.S. retail services cards business with a portfolio of co-brand and private label relationships (including, among others, The Home Depot, Best Buy, Macy’s and Sears).
RoTCE*:
Return on tangible common equity. Represents net income less preferred dividends (both annualized), divided by average tangible common equity for the period.
RWA:
Risk-weighted assets. Basel III establishes two comprehensive approaches for calculating RWA (the Standardized Approach and the Advanced Approaches), which include capital requirements for credit risk, market risk and operational risk for Advanced Approaches. Key differences in the calculation of credit risk RWA between the Standardized and Advanced Approaches are that for Advanced, credit risk RWA is based on risk-sensitive approaches that largely rely on the use of internal credit models and parameters, whereas for Standardized, credit risk RWA is generally based on supervisory risk-weightings, which vary primarily by counterparty type and asset class. Market risk RWA is calculated on a generally consistent basis between Basel III Standardized Approach and Basel III Advanced Approaches.
S&P:
Standard and Poor’s Global Ratings
SCB:
Stress Capital Buffer
SEC:
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
SLR:
Supplementary Leverage ratio. Represents Tier 1 Capital divided by Total Leverage Exposure.
SOFR:
Secured Overnight Financing Rate
SPEs:
Special purpose entities
Standardized Approach:
Established through Basel III, the Standardized Approach aligns regulatory capital requirements more closely with the key elements of banking risk by introducing a wider differentiation of risk weights and a wider recognition of credit risk mitigation techniques, while avoiding excessive complexity. Accordingly, the Standardized Approach produces capital ratios more in line with the actual economic risks that banks face.
Tangible book value per share (TBVPS)*:
Represents tangible common equity divided by EOP common shares outstanding.
Tangible common equity (TCE):
Represents common stockholders’ equity less goodwill and identifiable intangible assets, other than MSRs.
Taxable equivalent basis:
Represents the total revenue, net of interest expense for the business, adjusted for revenue from investments that receive tax credits and the impact of tax-exempt securities. This metric presents results on a level comparable to taxable investments and securities. GAAP
measures on a taxable equivalent basis, including the metrics derived from these measures, are non-GAAP financial measures.
TDR:
Troubled debt restructuring. Prior to January 1, 2023, a TDR was deemed to occur when the Company modified the original terms of a loan agreement by granting a concession to a borrower that was experiencing financial difficulty. Loans with short-term and other insignificant modifications that are not considered concessions were not TDRs. The accounting guidance for TDRs was eliminated with the adoption of ASU 2022-02. See “Accounting Changes” in Note 1.
TEGU:
taxable equivalent gross-up adjustments
TLAC:
Total loss-absorbing capacity
Total ACL:
Allowance for credit losses, which comprises the allowance for credit losses on loans (ACLL), allowance for credit losses on unfunded lending commitments (ACLUC), allowance for credit losses on HTM securities and allowance for credit losses on other assets.
Total payout ratio*:
Represents total common dividends declared plus common share repurchases as a percentage of net income available to common shareholders.
Transactional and product servicing:
Comprises costs incurred in ongoing support of products or services, which are predominantly variable costs driven by transaction volumes, client accounts or other variable costs. These costs are primarily composed of brokerage exchange and clearance costs, exchange fees, regulatory memberships, customer-related costs (statement processing, postage, client activity, etc.) and certain indirect, non-income tax payments that are not recorded in
Provision for income taxes
in the Consolidated Statement of Income.
Transformation:
Citi has embarked on a multiyear transformation, with the target outcome to change Citi’s business and operating models such that they simultaneously strengthen risk and controls and improve Citi’s value to customers, clients and shareholders.
Unaudited:
Financial statements and information that have not been subjected to auditing procedures sufficient to permit an independent certified public accountant to express an opinion.
U.S. dollar clearing volume:
Represents the number of U.S. dollar clearing payment instructions processed by Citi on behalf of U.S. and foreign-domiciled entities (primarily financial institutions).
U.S. Treasury:
U.S. Department of the Treasury
VaR:
Value at risk. A measure of the dollar amount of potential loss from adverse market moves in an ordinary market environment.
VIEs:
Variable interest entities
Wallet:
Proportion of fee revenue based on estimates of investment banking fees generated across the industry (i.e., the revenue wallet) from investment banking transactions in M&A, equity and debt underwriting, and loan syndications.
224