Reddit Posts
Use presidential polls in Latin America for short stocks
European part of biggest Russian State Owned bank is going to go bankrupt
We need to talk about CIB - Bancolombia
Pandemic Recovery… the recovery is just starting in other countries
EIB issues its first ever digital bond on a public blockchain
Mentions
Yup I even commented on OPs post from yesterday when He/she was asking about WFC and earnings. I never gamble on earnings, but this honestly wasn’t a bad trade idea. They had really good momentum in their CIB based on the deals they were doing, and coupled with the buybacks and removal of deposit caps from the WFC fake account saga last week, it seemed quite bullish. The guidance really screwed them and the trade, as well as the NII miss, I guess. Honestly though, all financials are down though so if I was OP, I wouldn’t feel too bad (though I think he put his full portfolio into this trade).
New, CIB copies of Earthbound for SNES
$JPM EPS: $5.07 (Est. $4.65); UP +14% YoY Managed Revenue: $46.01B (Est. $44.39B); UP +8% YoY Provision for Credit Losses: $3.31B (Est. $2.70B); UP +75% YoY Net Reserve Build: $973M Net Income: $14.64B; UP +9% YoY ROE: 18% ROTCE: 21% CET1 Ratio (Std.): 15.4% Book Value per Share: $119.24; UP +12% YoY Tangible Book Value per Share: $100.36; UP +13% YoY Outlook: SEES FY NET INTEREST INCOME ABOUT $94.5B, SAW ABOUT $94B Capital & Liquidity: Cash & Marketable Securities: $1.5T Average Loans: $1.3T; UP +2% YoY Average Deposits: UP +2% YoY Share Buybacks: $7.1B Quarterly Dividend: $1.40/share; $3.9B total Segment Highlights Consumer & Community Banking (CCB): Revenue: $18.31B; UP +4% YoY Net Income: $4.43B; DOWN -8% YoY Card Services & Auto Revenue: $6.85B; UP +12% Debit & Credit Card Sales Volume: UP +7% YoY Active Mobile Customers: UP +8% YoY Provision for Credit Losses: $2.63B; UP +37% YoY Card Net Charge-Off Rate: 3.58% Corporate & Investment Bank (CIB): Revenue: $19.67B; UP +12% YoY Net Income: $6.94B; UP +5% YoY Investment Banking Fees: $2.27B (Est. $2.34B); UP +12% YoY FICC Trading Revenue: $5.85B (Est. $5.99B); UP +8% YoY Equities Trading Revenue: $3.81B (Est. $3.18B); UP +48% YoY Securities Services Revenue: UP +7% YoY Markets Revenue: $9.7B; UP +21% YoY (Record Equities Performance) Asset & Wealth Management (AWM): Revenue: $5.73B; UP +12% YoY Net Income: $1.58B; UP +23% YoY AUM: $4.1T; UP +15% YoY Client Assets: $6.0T; UP +15% YoY Net Inflows: $90B Higher asset-based and brokerage fees supported growth Corporate: Revenue: $2.30B; UP +5% YoY Net Income: $1.69B; UP +150% YoY Includes $588M gain from First Republic-related asset sale Expense fell sharply due to reversal of FDIC special assessment
ADTX Baggins 
My CIB copy of Kuon is killing it, same with all my silent hills 🤑🤑
Some dude who’s previous service was an Army Officer with a CIB (Combat Infantry Badge) and 2 bronze stars, but don’t let me get in the way of a good story lol.
There are two major business segments for [JD.com](http://jd.com/): one is the retail business, and the other is fintech. The problem originated from the Retail BU but severely impacted the Fintech BU. It is believed that there might be a cash flow crisis due to a high volume of fund redemptions. Currently, evidence has shown that at least five banks' cash lending credit lines for [JD.com](http://jd.com/) have been depleted. It's true that the Chinese gov. won't let the crisis happen. Furthermore, the five banks are relatively small ones (CIB, Jang Su Bank, Shengjing Bank, etc.). No evidence has shown that major banks like ICBC, CCB, or BOC are involved. Also, considering the event happened this weekend, the situation will be alleviated on Monday since the interbank lending market will open for business. In short, there will be an impact on the Fintech business in the short term. However, even if [JD.com](http://jd.com/) successfully pulls through this challenge, there will be a much bigger impact on the Retail business in the long term - huge loss of brand influence, a large number of customers closing their accounts, boycott movements, etc.
>High-yield savings account(s) This is not an investment. It's good for cash (emergency fund) >Investing in SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) Yes, but not SPY. Use one of the cheaper funds like VOO >Investing in high-dividend stocks (CIB, BTI, STLA, etc.) No >Investing in tech (Google, Apple, Microsoft, etc.) These already make up a large segment of most indexes >Investing in REITs Nah >Contribute more pre-tax to my 401k Yes >Crypto? Gross >GOLD!? Historically gold has barely outpaced inflation
How’s buying anything but uppies even make cents❓ ————————— #JPMorgan Expects To Pay $350M In Penalties For Recordkeeping Lapses *Feb 16, 2024 16:52 ET* **By Ben Glickman** J.P. Morgan Chase expects to pay $350 million in fines to U.S. regulators for recordkeeping failures in its corporate and investment bank. The bank said in its annual report on Friday that its resolution with two U.S. regulators is also expected to require remediation of the issue and the engagement of an independent consultant. J.P. Morgan said it had self-identified that some trading and order data through the its corporate and investment bank was not feeding into its trade surveillance platforms. The data gap was significant for one venue, which mostly included sponsored client access activity. The bank said it has been responding to government inquiries about its processes to inventory trading venues and confirm the completeness of certain data. The bank is also in negotiations with a third U.S. regulator, but said there could be no assurances that the talks would result in a resolution. J.P. Morgan "has completed enhancements to the CIB's venue inventory and data completeness controls, and other remediation is underway," it said in its annual report. The bank does not expect any disruption to client services. Write to Ben Glickman at ben.glickman@wsj.com
In the city I live, Caixa CIB has their trader's monitor on the first floor visible from the street. I'm pretty sure it's illegal to share data from the Bloomberg terminal
I honestly thought about the space force, for like a hot second; but you can't even where your fancy do dads like CIB and what not!
Stock | % CIB | 30 BBD | 30 TG | 30 Cash | 10
Bancolombia $CIB is a rock solid bank 🇨🇴
>Barclays Q1 23 Earnings: - Pretax Profit GBP2.60B (est GBP2.31B) \>- CIB Rev GBP3.98B (est GBP3.71B) \>- Equities Rev GBP704M (est GBP864M) \>- FICC Rev GBP1.79B (est GBP1.46B) ^First ^Squawk ^[@FirstSquawk](http://twitter.com/FirstSquawk) ^at ^2023-04-27 ^02:08:13 ^EDT-0400
Deploy all the time, get involved in combat, Purple Heart & CIB/CAB & 100% disability. Talking from personal experience. Would 100% never do it again but set for life.
And most of banking in particular is literally having a charter. After nearly a decade between retail and CIB in international and regional Banks it is funny and scary at the same time. Outside of data science teams nobody knows wtf they’re doing. I’d say more than 60% of leadership are just dangerous narcissists. My first job I saw someone on my team wire 20+ million to wrong client (trade doc wasn’t signed/executed either :D), other client kept it and it was pretty fun watching RM team try to fix that….second gig was establishing ANY beneficial ownership on hundreds and hundreds of clients with probably combined 500MM + in exposure. … this major bank literally could not tie beneficial ownership to half a billion in loans…Many were originated in countries who should’ve OFAC flagged too. So yeah, just get a bank charter and figure it out as you go. I know all the big banks you read about in the news still are :)
Can somebody who’s smarter than me tell me what they think of $EC & $CIB ecopetrol is currently trading at 2.6 PE currently trading at $9.94 with a yearly dividend of $2.50
They’re going to run down the IB. UBS is much more focused on asset management and private banking, their CIB division is not very relevant.
>BARCLAYS 4Q CIB REVENUE GBP2.58B, EST. GBP2.77B ^IGSquawk ^[@IGSquawk](http://twitter.com/IGSquawk) ^at ^2023-02-15 ^02:02:24 ^EST-0500
Nah, Charlie wants soo bad to be like JPM, Goldman Sachs etc. Their biggest focus is to expand CIB and boost their investment income/portfolio
I am from Colombia in south America and prefer to invest in companies that I know, I make shorts in local companies: CIB, CEL, TPL, EC, NCH, AVAL and others from USA of course TSN, T, VZ, EVRG, JPM and others that I have st this point. I make sure that if that companies going down it will not a problem for my to hold them, cause they are finances or primary service companies and all has dividend.
Shouldn't "We the People" go above the CIB?
Was looking into CIB 
Ecopetrol EC-has options. Partially state-owned petroleum company Bancolumbia CIB- Has options. large bank that handles several large pension funds Tecnoglass TGLS- Has options. Large glass exporter. Could see downtrend in exports if government pushes for greater domestic use.
Perhaps this might just be another bear market rally > “Both prolonged inflation and/or a sharp increase in rates from central banks will have a deep impact on growth perspectives,” Jean-François Paren, global head of market research at Credit Agricole CIB, wrote in a note. “If anything, current valuations are more the ‘exit point’ than the ‘entry point’.”
I could always own shares of an oil company but no oil company will own a CIB Gotcha Force .
I must say, your comments are very condescending. Additionally, share price performance and enterprise value over time as well as economic value added are not the result of one individual. Direct labor contributions, I agree, have an upper limit. However, what you fail to realize, maybe you do, but are not saying...is that most CEO's are actually over paid given their individual contributions to the longer value of the company's in which that manage. In finance, the key is shareholder value. That is driven buy innovation, leadership, and strategy. In the case of JPM...Jamie has not specifically done anything innovative. He has lead strategy and other initiatives but he has a whole C-suite team and fleet of banker, EVPs, SVPs, heads of corporate banking, investment banking, asset management, sales and trading, etc. Goldman is similar in that regard as well. Same with Morgan Stanley. Jamie is a beneficiary of a money center bank with stronge CIB and asset management operations and a rich history of performance long before he joined. I'm not saying that he did not and has not contributed significantly to the performance of the company over the years but he did not invent banking. Nor did he capitalize on the myriad innovations in finance within recent years. I have JPM preferred stock because it's stable and fits in my income portfolio. I also have JPM common stock in a different account so I understand and have benefited from Jamie's performance. But I worked in a commercial banking group at LaSalle Bank (acquired by Bank of America) and in the a commercial/corporate banking group at Wells Fargo. I've also worked on in the trading pits at the CBOT so I've seen people (including my self) use intellect and financial innovation to make tons of money (i.e. options which were a tool of financial innovation which started trading in the 1970s). Did Jamie invent loan syndication or leveraged lending, securitization, or futures contracts (also traded those...and trade ES futures now from time to time). Did he invent electronic trading systems such as TT (Trading Technologies software platform that we used back in the mid 2000's to trade futures and options electronically). Did he invent the bloomberg terminal (which I used when working at an asset manager to execute equity and fixed income trades). Did he invent credit default swaps or collateralized loan obligations or did he find more efficient ways to deliver capital to fund investment activities for capital markets. No, he is good at managing a large institutional bank. He is an expert in his level of understanding of financial markets, banking, and banking mechanics. But is is performance statiscally significantly different from Brian Moynihan or Lylod Blankfein? No. The system is the system and banking is banking. Also, the corporate structure and institutionalized over paid CEOs is 100% true. Now if you gave me an analysis that supported individual contributed innovation, completed projects, completed acquisitions divestitures, deals, securitizations, metrics...that he actually made that support his salary...I would be open. The problem is no CEO does that and boards and shareholders do not hold CEOs to the same annual and semi-annu performance review process as other rank and file employees. Sure, there are analysts calls, 10-Ks, 10-Qs and other statutory reporting but that is part of the job. I would do that successfully with my eyes closed. I'm not saying they should not be paid above average but the amount paid above average should be measured better and more in line with contribution, team collaboration, effective leadership, etc with 360 peer reviews along with support. Retention bonus aside, most CEOs are overpaid. I am in corporate finance now so I see everything at my company because I mange the FP&A process, budgeting, etc...among other things so trust me when I tell you...it is not equitable or justified.
Dunno CIB and EC look more like a good long breakout plays to me. Although elections. Who knows
I’m not proud of fighting where we fought. Not even a tiny bit. I am proud of the men I served with. CIB is sayin,” I killed someone”. Not something I care to be reminded of….
Weird, most infantry usually keep their CIB or crossed rifles insignia. Can’t remember a single guy that was more proud of his blue cord.
Currently trades as CIB on the NYSE, ~$37 per share. Didn’t have any luck figuring out how the acquisition affected BAM shareholders. Call your broker for help?
Any of Latin American banks: CIB, ITUB, GGAL, BCH and BAP. They have risks: 2022 uncertainty with elections. But they are nice plays for a devaluation of dollar in the mid-term and for some postponed covid recovery.
Look, in reality....I've been drinking, I've been mainly lashing out because of my own insecurities... My many, many onlyfans and Patreon top tier subscriptions... Adrien Brody's nose... Look it doesn't matter, I have 2 Princess Diana Beanie Baby's CIB on eBay, 1 with a misprint and the other with a certified blood stain of Jean Bonnie Ramsey, I have time
I did on Friday. Managed to snag up a CIB copy of Wii Sports Resort.
Thanks! I have some colombia stocks but that's it for my SA. TGLS, AVAL, CIB, and EC and some OTC.
I literally sold an almost CIB virtual boy in the box to a girl who happened to frequent this sub who found me in the r/gaming sub and private messaged me lol Not only are there women in this sub talking about GameStop, but they’re in the game related subs buying up game related things lol the lily sounds like a trash news source
The purpose of an Investment Bank is to raise funds for a company (whether or not they think the reason for fundraising is good or bad is moot). It's like if you go to a bank to borrow money for a massive boat you can barely afford. It's not the banks job to hold your hand and tell you it's a bad idea. They check to see if you're able to pay off the loan and then they lend you the money. Plus CIB and Research are separate parts of the company. You forgot to add that the case was thrown out.