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The second-quarter net loss totaled $2.5 billion, or 54 cents per share, and compared with a year-earlier profit of $6.23 billion, or $1.24 per share. Shares rose 9.1 percent to $19.60 in pre-market trading.
"It appears the worst may be over in the subprime mess," said Andre Bakhos, president of Princeton Financial Group in
Citigroup's loss from continuing operations was $2.22 billion, or 49 cents per share, while revenue declined 29 percent to $18.65 billion.
Analysts on average expected a loss of 67 cents per share on revenue of $17.44 billion, Reuters Estimates said.
The report followed surprisingly strong profits this week from JPMorgan and Wells Fargo & Co, and a much larger-than-expected $4.9 billion quarterly loss at Merrill Lynch.
Citigroup eliminated 6,000 jobs during the quarter, and about 11,000 from January to June. It aims to keep cutting jobs at a similar rate, as Chief Executive Vikram Pandit tries to slash $15 billion of costs within two to three years.
"While there is still much to do, we are encouraged by our progress," Pandit said in a statement.
Pandit has tried to focus on stronger businesses and cull $400 billion of risky or poorly performing assets after years of poor expense and risk management left the New York-based bank bearing the full brunt of the global credit crisis.
Citigroup has lost about $17.4 billion in the last three quarters and incurred more than $58 billion of write downs and increased credit costs since the middle of 2007.
"Pandit seems to be doing the right things and is starting to build a base," said Jonathan Monk, senior portfolio manager at Aerion Fund Management in