× Startups Business News Education Health Finance Technology Opinion Wealth Rankings Politics Leadership Sport Travels Careers Design Environment Energy Luxury Retail Lifestyle Automotives Photography International Press Release Article Entertainment
×

Citigroup Mistakenly Credits Customer with $81 Trillion in Major Banking Error

March 12, 2025

By Evans Momodu
Published 16:35 UK GMT



Citigroup made a stunning banking blunder, mistakenly depositing $81 trillion into a customer's account instead of the intended $280. The transaction error, which took hours to reverse, highlights ongoing operational challenges facing the financial giant, according to a report from the Financial Times (FT).

The erroneous transaction, which occurred in April 2024, initially went undetected by both the payments employee processing the transaction and a second official assigned to verify it. The mistake was only caught 1.5 hours later by a third employee, prompting an urgent reversal process that took several hours to complete.

Despite the massive error, no funds actually left Citigroup, according to the FT report. The bank disclosed the incident to U.S. financial regulators, including the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).

Citigroup’s Response to the Banking Error

In an emailed statement to Reuters, Citi confirmed that its “detective controls” promptly identified the inputting mistake between two ledger accounts and that the error was quickly corrected. The bank emphasized that the incident had no impact on its operations or the affected client.

This is not the first operational mishap for Citigroup. According to an internal report, Citi experienced 10 ‘near-miss’ errors involving $1 billion or more in 2024, down from 13 incidents in the previous year. The bank declined to comment further on these figures.

Citi’s History of Regulatory Issues and Compliance Failures

Citigroup has faced ongoing scrutiny over its risk management and compliance shortcomings.

  • In July 2024, Citi was fined $136 million for failing to make sufficient progress in addressing risk management and data governance issues.
  • In 2020, the bank paid a $400 million fine for similar regulatory failures.

Citi CFO Acknowledges Need for Improved Systems

Last month, Citigroup CFO Mark Mason acknowledged the bank's need for greater investment in data security, compliance, and operational risk management.

“We saw the need to invest more in transformation—on data, on technology, and on improving the quality of regulatory reporting,” Mason stated.

With continued financial penalties and mounting regulatory pressure, Citi is now making major investments to strengthen its internal controls and prevent similar errors from happening again.

 

As regulators increase pressure on Citi to improve internal controls, the banking giant must address its system vulnerabilities to avoid future high-risk errors. The $81 trillion mistake serves as a wake-up call for the financial industry, emphasizing the need for robust auditing, real-time monitoring, and stronger compliance frameworks.
Source: CNN