The 58-year-old, who became CEO in early 2021, has been driving through Citigroup’s biggest restructuring in decades — including cutting 20,000 roles — in an attempt to shed its laggard reputation on Wall Street.
In recent years, the lender exited consumer banking in markets in Asia, including China, India and Taiwan. It is also cutting technology employee workforce in China by about 3,500 as part of its global simplification efforts.
Fraser said it’s not retrenching, but is on the front foot and taking market share.
The lender is focused on serving Chinese companies looking to expand overseas as well as clients with cross-border needs, who are a “vibrant segment,” said Fraser, who was hosting a Citigroup conference in Shanghai.
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Citi beat Wall Street revenue estimates across all five of its major business lines during the third quarter. The bank last month handed Fraser more power, with the additional title of chair, making her the last of the big six US bank CEOs to take the added position.
Fraser said the bank is quite optimistic about 2026, but the challenge right now for the US Federal Reserve has been the government shutdown.
‘Flourishing’
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Viswas Raghavan, Citi’s head of banking, also said in a interview on Friday that China’s market was “flourishing”, singled out strength in Japan and that there are multiple tailwinds in the region.
Raghavan was hired last year from JPMorgan Chase & Co to lead its newly formed banking division. He’s beefed up the unit with dozens of bankers at the managing director level.
The bank has been seeking to get a licence for a securities business in China over the past years, submitting initial documents to Chinese regulators in late 2021, but has been hampered by US and Chinese authorities.
Still, it has a wide ranging business in China, with licences for bond clearing, corporate bond underwriting, and for domestic fund custody.
Globally, the bank has raised more than US$250 billion (RM1.03 trillion) for clients from in the capital markets year to date, including nearly US$30 billion for Chinese clients, according to data provided by Citigroup.
Citi sees strong pipelines for both equity and debt offerings in Asia, with Hong Kong, China, and India expected to lead activity. The bank forecasts up to US$20 billion in IPOs in India over the next 12 months.
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