Jane Fraser: Difference between revisions

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| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1967}}
| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1967}}
| birth_place = [[St Andrews]], Scotland, United Kingdom
| birth_place = [[St Andrews]], Scotland, United Kingdom
| nationality = British, American
| nationality = British
| occupation = Banking executive
| occupation = Banking executive
| known_for = CEO of [[Citigroup]], first woman to lead a major [[Wall Street]] bank
| known_for = CEO of [[Citigroup]]; first woman to lead a major [[Wall Street]] bank
| employer = [[Citigroup]]
| employer = [[Citigroup]]
| title = Chief Executive Officer
| title = Chief Executive Officer
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'''Jane Fraser''' (born 1967) is a British-American banking executive who serves as the chief executive officer of [[Citigroup]], the third-largest bank in the United States by assets. In March 2021, Fraser became the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank, a milestone in the history of American finance. Born in [[St Andrews]], Scotland, Fraser built her career across multiple continents and business lines before ascending to Citi's top role. Since becoming CEO, she has embarked on a sweeping transformation of the institution, restructuring its operations, divesting consumer banking businesses in multiple international markets, and pushing an agenda centered on cost discipline, performance accountability, and the integration of artificial intelligence across the firm. As of early 2026, Fraser leads an organization of more than 200,000 employees, overseeing a firm that operates in nearly 160 countries and jurisdictions and serves as one of the world's preeminent cross-border banking institutions.
'''Jane Fraser''' (born 1967) is a British-American banking executive who serves as the [[chief executive officer]] of [[Citigroup]], one of the largest financial institutions in the world. Appointed to the role in February 2021, she became the first woman to lead a major [[Wall Street]] bank, a milestone in an industry long dominated by men. Born in [[St Andrews]], Scotland, Fraser built her career across multiple continents and business lines, rising through the ranks at Citigroup after earlier stints in management consulting. As CEO, she has undertaken a sweeping restructuring of the bank, including organizational simplification, cost reduction through job cuts, and significant investment in [[artificial intelligence]] and technology to modernize the institution's operations. Her tenure has been defined by an effort to shed underperforming businesses, sharpen the bank's focus on its core strengths in global cross-border banking, and instill a culture of higher performance expectations across Citigroup's workforce of more than 200,000 employees. Fraser's leadership has drawn sustained attention from the financial press and business community, both for the historic nature of her appointment and for the scale of the transformation she has pursued at one of America's most prominent financial firms.


== Early Life ==
== Early Life ==


Jane Fraser was born in 1967 in [[St Andrews]], Scotland, a historic university town on the east coast of [[Fife]]. She grew up in the United Kingdom and developed an early interest in economics and business. Details of her parents and family background have remained largely private. Fraser has spoken publicly about growing up in Scotland and has referenced her British roots in interviews throughout her career.
Jane Fraser was born in 1967 in [[St Andrews]], Scotland, a coastal town known for its university and its association with the sport of golf. She grew up in Scotland and later pursued higher education in the United Kingdom before eventually relocating to the United States for graduate studies. Details about her parents and family background during her childhood years are not extensively documented in public sources.


Fraser spent her formative years in the United Kingdom before pursuing higher education and eventually relocating to the United States, where she would build the entirety of her career in financial services.
Fraser has spoken in various public forums about her Scottish upbringing and the values it instilled in her, including a strong work ethic and a pragmatic approach to problem-solving. Her early years in Scotland shaped an international outlook that would later prove central to her career in global banking.


== Education ==
== Education ==


Fraser studied economics at the [[University of Cambridge]], where she earned her undergraduate degree. She subsequently obtained a [[Master of Business Administration]] (MBA) from [[Harvard Business School]], one of the most selective graduate business programs in the world. Her education at both Cambridge and Harvard provided the academic foundation for a career that would take her through management consulting and into the upper echelons of global banking.
Fraser pursued her undergraduate studies at [[Cambridge University]] in England, where she studied economics. She subsequently earned a [[Master of Business Administration]] (MBA) from [[Harvard Business School]] in the United States, a credential that positioned her for a career in management consulting and, later, in financial services. Her educational background at two of the world's most prominent academic institutions provided a foundation in both economic theory and business strategy.


== Career ==
== Career ==
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=== Early Career and McKinsey ===
=== Early Career and McKinsey ===


Before entering banking, Fraser worked at [[McKinsey & Company]], the global management consulting firm, for approximately a decade. At McKinsey, she gained experience advising financial services firms and developed expertise in corporate strategy and organizational transformation—skills that would prove central to her later work at Citigroup. Her consulting background gave her a cross-functional perspective on how large financial institutions operate, a viewpoint she has frequently cited as influential in shaping her approach to management.
Before entering the banking industry, Fraser worked at [[McKinsey & Company]], the global management consulting firm. At McKinsey, she gained experience advising major corporations on strategy and operations, work that exposed her to a broad range of industries and business challenges. Her time in consulting helped develop the analytical and strategic skills that she would later apply in senior leadership roles within financial services.


=== Rise Through Citigroup ===
=== Rise at Citigroup ===


Fraser joined [[Citigroup]] in 2004 and held a series of increasingly senior positions across the firm's various divisions. Over the course of nearly two decades, she worked in strategy, investment banking, private banking, and consumer banking across multiple regions, accumulating experience that few executives at the bank could match in breadth.
Fraser joined [[Citigroup]] in 2004 and held a succession of increasingly senior roles over the next decade and a half. Her positions at the bank spanned multiple business units and geographies, giving her a comprehensive view of the institution's sprawling global operations. She served in leadership roles in Citi's strategy and mergers and acquisitions functions, and later took on responsibility for major business lines.


Among her notable roles, Fraser served as CEO of Citi's [[Latin America]] division, where she oversaw the firm's operations across one of its most important international markets. She also led Citi's U.S. consumer and commercial banking business and served as head of the global private bank. Each of these assignments exposed her to different segments of Citi's sprawling and often complex organizational structure.
Among her prominent roles at Citigroup, Fraser served as CEO of Citi's [[Latin America]] division, where she oversaw the bank's operations across a complex and diverse region. She also served as president of Citigroup and CEO of the bank's Global Consumer Banking division, positions that placed her among the most senior executives at the firm and positioned her as a leading candidate to eventually take the top job.


In 2019, Fraser was named president of Citigroup and head of the firm's global consumer banking division, a position that placed her in the direct line of succession to then-CEO [[Michael Corbat]]. The appointment was viewed within the financial industry as a signal that Citi's board of directors was preparing Fraser for the top role.
Her ascent through the organization was marked by her involvement in several strategic initiatives, including efforts to streamline Citi's consumer banking operations and to exit markets where the bank lacked competitive scale. These experiences directly informed the strategic vision she would later articulate as CEO.


=== Appointment as CEO ===
=== Appointment as CEO ===


In September 2020, Citigroup announced that Fraser would succeed Michael Corbat as CEO, effective March 2021. The announcement made international headlines, as Fraser became the first woman to be named CEO of any of the major Wall Street banks—a group that includes [[JPMorgan Chase]], [[Bank of America]], [[Goldman Sachs]], and [[Morgan Stanley]], in addition to Citigroup. The appointment was seen as a landmark moment for gender representation in the financial services industry.
In September 2020, Citigroup announced that Fraser would succeed [[Michael Corbat]] as CEO, effective February 2021. The appointment made her the first woman to lead any of the major Wall Street banks — a group that includes [[JPMorgan Chase]], [[Bank of America]], [[Goldman Sachs]], and [[Morgan Stanley]], among others. The announcement was met with significant media coverage and was noted as a landmark moment for gender representation in the upper echelons of global finance.


Fraser formally assumed the role of CEO in February 2021, several weeks ahead of the originally planned March transition.
Fraser took the helm of Citigroup at a challenging time for the institution. The bank had been subject to regulatory actions related to risk management and internal controls, and its stock price had lagged behind those of its major competitors for years. These challenges set the stage for the ambitious restructuring program that would come to define Fraser's tenure as CEO.


=== Strategic Transformation ===
=== Restructuring and Transformation ===


Upon taking the helm, Fraser launched what she described as a comprehensive transformation of Citigroup, aimed at simplifying the bank's sprawling global operations, improving returns for shareholders, and addressing longstanding regulatory and operational deficiencies. The transformation has been one of the defining features of her tenure.
Upon becoming CEO, Fraser embarked on what has been described as one of the most extensive organizational overhauls in Citigroup's recent history. The restructuring has involved multiple dimensions: simplifying the bank's organizational structure, divesting non-core consumer banking operations in several international markets, reducing headcount, and investing in technology and compliance infrastructure.


A central element of Fraser's strategy involved exiting consumer banking markets in multiple countries across [[Asia]] and [[Europe]], including operations in markets such as [[Australia]], [[India]], [[South Korea]], [[China]], and others. By divesting these retail banking operations, Fraser sought to refocus Citigroup on its institutional businesses—particularly its strength in cross-border corporate banking, treasury and trade solutions, and wealth management—while retaining consumer banking operations primarily in the United States and a handful of other key markets.
A central element of Fraser's strategy has been the decision to exit consumer banking markets in Asia and other regions where Citigroup's retail operations were not generating sufficient returns. By narrowing the bank's focus, Fraser sought to concentrate resources on areas where Citigroup possesses distinct competitive advantages, particularly in institutional banking, global transaction services, and cross-border financial flows.


The restructuring also involved a significant reorganization of Citi's internal management structure. Fraser eliminated layers of management and reorganized the bank's reporting lines to create a flatter, more accountable organizational hierarchy. The changes were intended to reduce bureaucracy and speed up decision-making at a firm that had long been criticized for its complexity.
In a conversation with [[McKinsey & Company]] published in February 2026, Fraser articulated her vision for Citigroup as a "human-centered global bank" that would harness emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence and [[tokenization]] while continuing to invest in cross-border services — an area she identified as a core strength of the institution.<ref>{{cite web |title='Having a human bank is very important': A conversation with Citi CEO Jane Fraser |url=https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/having-a-human-bank-is-very-important-a-conversation-with-citi-ceo-jane-fraser |publisher=McKinsey & Company |date=2026-02-19 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


=== Cost Discipline and Job Reductions ===
The restructuring has also involved substantial reductions in headcount. In January 2026, [[Bloomberg News]] reported that Citigroup was set to cut approximately 1,000 jobs in a single week as part of Fraser's ongoing effort to control costs and improve the bank's financial performance.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-12 |title=Citi to Cut About 1,000 Jobs This Week as Fraser Trims Costs |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-12/citi-to-cut-about-1-000-jobs-this-week-as-fraser-trims-costs |work=Bloomberg.com |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> These cuts were part of a broader pattern of workforce reductions that had been underway for several years under Fraser's leadership, reflecting her stated priority of running a leaner and more efficient organization.


A recurring theme of Fraser's tenure has been a focus on cost reduction and operational efficiency. In January 2026, Citigroup cut approximately 1,000 jobs as part of Fraser's ongoing effort to control expenses and improve the bank's financial performance.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-12 |title=Citi to Cut About 1,000 Jobs This Week as Fraser Trims Costs |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-12/citi-to-cut-about-1-000-jobs-this-week-as-fraser-trims-costs |work=Bloomberg |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The cuts were part of a broader pattern during Fraser's leadership, during which the bank reduced its total headcount by tens of thousands from its peak levels.
=== "The Bar Is Raised" Memo ===


In a memo to staff in January 2026, Fraser signaled that further changes were forthcoming. The memo, titled "The bar is raised," was sent to Citigroup's more than 200,000 employees and outlined Fraser's expectations for higher performance standards across the organization.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-14 |title=Citi's CEO Jane Fraser warns staff in memo: old habits are out, and performance is in |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/citi-jane-fraser-memo-old-habits-performance-job-cuts-transformation-2026-1 |work=Business Insider |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> In the memo, Fraser stated, "We are not graded on effort," emphasizing that the bank would measure employees by results rather than activity.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-14 |title=Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser warns of job cuts and says it's time to raise the bar in memo to staff |url=https://fortune.com/2026/01/14/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-job-cuts-ai-bad-old-ways-restructuring/ |work=Fortune |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
In January 2026, Fraser sent an internal memo to Citigroup's more than 200,000 employees titled "The bar is raised," which attracted widespread media attention. In the memo, Fraser set out higher performance expectations for the firm's workforce and signaled that further job cuts could follow. She wrote that the bank would no longer tolerate what she characterized as "old, bad habits" and emphasized that employees would be evaluated on results rather than effort alone.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-14 |title=Citi CEO Warns of More Job Cuts, Calls Time on 'Old, Bad Habits' |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-14/citi-ceo-warns-of-more-job-cuts-calls-time-on-old-bad-habits |work=Bloomberg.com |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


In related remarks, Fraser called time on what she described as "old, bad habits" at the institution, signaling a cultural shift aimed at moving the bank away from practices she viewed as impediments to competitiveness.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-14 |title=Citi CEO Warns of More Job Cuts, Calls Time on 'Old, Bad Habits' |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-14/citi-ceo-warns-of-more-job-cuts-calls-time-on-old-bad-habits |work=Bloomberg |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
The memo was reported on by multiple outlets. [[Fortune (magazine)|Fortune]] noted that Fraser told staff, "We are not graded on effort," and that the communication reflected her determination to accelerate the pace of the bank's cultural and operational transformation.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-14 |title=Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser warns of job cuts and says it's time to raise the bar in memo to staff |url=https://fortune.com/2026/01/14/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-job-cuts-ai-bad-old-ways-restructuring/ |work=Fortune |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> [[Business Insider]] similarly reported that the memo emphasized that "old habits are out, and performance is in," underscoring Fraser's intent to change the firm's internal culture as part of the broader restructuring.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-14 |title=Citi's CEO Jane Fraser warns staff in memo: old habits are out, and performance is in |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/citi-jane-fraser-memo-old-habits-performance-job-cuts-transformation-2026-1 |work=Business Insider |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


=== Recruitment and Leadership Team ===
The memo and its public reception illustrated both the urgency Fraser brought to the transformation effort and the scrutiny that accompanied her decisions regarding workforce reductions.


As part of the transformation, Fraser recruited a number of senior executives from rival firms to fill key leadership positions at Citigroup. These hires were described by ''Business Insider'' as Fraser's "star recruits" and were seen as central to her ability to execute on the bank's strategic goals.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01 |title=How Jane Fraser's 'star recruits' are helping Citi push ahead |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/citi-executives-jane-fraser-raghavan-sieg-ryan-2026-1 |work=Business Insider |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The publication noted that under Fraser's leadership, Citi had moved beyond what it characterized as the "dog days" of the bank's earlier struggles and was adopting a more aggressive posture heading into 2026, with Fraser laying out high expectations for the year ahead.<ref name="bi-star">{{cite news |date=2026-01 |title=How Jane Fraser's 'star recruits' are helping Citi push ahead |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/citi-executives-jane-fraser-raghavan-sieg-ryan-2026-1 |work=Business Insider |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
=== Talent Recruitment and Leadership Team ===


=== Artificial Intelligence Strategy ===
As part of her restructuring effort, Fraser recruited a number of senior executives from outside Citigroup to help lead the bank's transformation. In January 2026, Business Insider reported on how Fraser's "star recruits" were helping Citigroup push ahead with its strategic agenda, as the CEO laid out expectations for the bank's performance in 2026 and beyond. The report indicated that Fraser credited the bank with having moved past what she described as the "dog days" of the early restructuring phase and was entering a period of more offensive strategic positioning.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01 |title=How Jane Fraser's 'star recruits' are helping Citi push ahead |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/citi-executives-jane-fraser-raghavan-sieg-ryan-2026-1 |work=Business Insider |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


Fraser has placed significant emphasis on the adoption of [[artificial intelligence]] (AI) across Citigroup's operations. In January 2026, she disclosed that the company was training 175,000 employees—a substantial majority of its workforce—to work with AI tools and to prepare for changes in how their roles would function in an AI-augmented environment.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-27 |title=As AI wipes out desk jobs, Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser says the company is training 175,000 employees to 'reinvent themselves' before their roles change forever |url=https://fortune.com/2026/01/27/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-employees-trained-reinvent-themselves-with-ai-before-tech-changes-roles-forever/ |work=Fortune |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> Fraser framed the initiative as an effort to help employees "reinvent themselves" before technology altered the nature of their work permanently.<ref name="fortune-ai">{{cite news |date=2026-01-27 |title=As AI wipes out desk jobs, Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser says the company is training 175,000 employees to 'reinvent themselves' before their roles change forever |url=https://fortune.com/2026/01/27/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-employees-trained-reinvent-themselves-with-ai-before-tech-changes-roles-forever/ |work=Fortune |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
The recruitment of new senior leaders was seen as a significant element of Fraser's strategy, reflecting her belief that fresh perspectives and external talent were necessary to drive the kind of change she envisioned for the institution.


In a February 2026 conversation published by [[McKinsey & Company]], Fraser discussed her vision for Citi's future, describing the bank's evolution into what she called "a focused, human-centered global bank." She highlighted the role of AI, [[tokenization]], and cross-border financial services as key pillars of the bank's strategy going forward, while also emphasizing that maintaining a human element remained essential. "Having a human bank is very important," Fraser stated in the interview.<ref>{{cite web |title='Having a human bank is very important': A conversation with Citi CEO Jane Fraser |url=https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/having-a-human-bank-is-very-important-a-conversation-with-citi-ceo-jane-fraser |publisher=McKinsey & Company |date=2026-02-19 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
=== AI and Workforce Training ===
 
A prominent theme of Fraser's leadership has been the integration of [[artificial intelligence]] into Citigroup's operations. In January 2026, Fortune reported that Fraser disclosed the company was training 175,000 of its employees to "reinvent themselves" in anticipation of AI-driven changes to their roles. Fraser acknowledged that AI was expected to eliminate certain desk jobs and emphasized that the bank was proactively preparing its workforce for this transition rather than waiting for the technology to displace workers without warning.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-27 |title=As AI wipes out desk jobs, Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser says the company is training 175,000 employees to 'reinvent themselves' before their roles change forever |url=https://fortune.com/2026/01/27/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-employees-trained-reinvent-themselves-with-ai-before-tech-changes-roles-forever/ |work=Fortune |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
 
The scale of the training initiative — encompassing the majority of Citigroup's global workforce — was noted as one of the largest AI reskilling efforts in the banking sector. Fraser framed the initiative as part of a broader effort to ensure that Citigroup's employees could adapt to a rapidly changing technological landscape, positioning the bank to benefit from AI adoption while mitigating the disruption to individual workers.
 
In her conversation with McKinsey, Fraser further elaborated on her technology strategy, discussing the potential of [[tokenization]] — the use of blockchain-based digital tokens to represent traditional financial assets — alongside AI as transformative forces in global banking.<ref name="mckinsey">{{cite web |title='Having a human bank is very important': A conversation with Citi CEO Jane Fraser |url=https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/having-a-human-bank-is-very-important-a-conversation-with-citi-ceo-jane-fraser |publisher=McKinsey & Company |date=2026-02-19 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


=== Compensation ===
=== Compensation ===


In February 2026, ''The Wall Street Journal'' reported that Fraser's total compensation for 2025 was approximately $42 million, representing an increase of roughly $7.5 million over her 2024 pay.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02 |title=Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser's Pay Jumped to $42 Million in 2025 |url=https://www.wsj.com/business/citigroup-ceo-jane-frasers-pay-jumped-to-42-million-in-2025-8f443528 |work=The Wall Street Journal |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The increase reflected the bank's board assessment of Fraser's progress in executing the multi-year transformation plan.
Fraser's compensation as CEO of Citigroup has been a subject of public reporting. In February 2026, [[The Wall Street Journal]] reported that Fraser's total pay for 2025 had risen to $42 million, an increase of approximately $7.5 million over her 2024 compensation.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02 |title=Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser's Pay Jumped to $42 Million in 2025 |url=https://www.wsj.com/business/citigroup-ceo-jane-frasers-pay-jumped-to-42-million-in-2025-8f443528 |work=The Wall Street Journal |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The increase in pay was reported in the context of the bank's ongoing restructuring and the performance benchmarks set by Citigroup's board of directors. CEO compensation at major banks is closely watched by investors, regulators, and the public as an indicator of how boards assess executive performance relative to institutional results.


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Fraser holds both British and American citizenship. She has been based in the United States for the majority of her professional career. Fraser is married and has two children. She has spoken publicly about the challenges of balancing senior leadership responsibilities with family life and has been an advocate within Citi for flexible work arrangements. In 2021, shortly after becoming CEO, Fraser announced a company-wide initiative called "Citi Reset Day," which designated certain Fridays as free from internal video calls in an effort to combat the burnout associated with remote work during the [[COVID-19 pandemic]].
Jane Fraser holds both British and American citizenship. She has spoken publicly about the challenges of balancing a demanding career in finance with family responsibilities, a topic that has received attention given her position as the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank. Fraser has been open about the fact that she took a career break earlier in her professional life to spend time with her family, a decision she has described in interviews as important to her personal well-being.


Fraser has maintained a relatively private personal life despite her high-profile position. She resides in the [[New York City]] metropolitan area.
Fraser is known to reside in the United States. She has two children. Beyond these publicly documented facts, Fraser has generally maintained a degree of privacy regarding her personal and family life, consistent with the norms of many senior executives in the financial sector.


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==


Fraser's appointment as CEO of Citigroup in 2021 was recognized as a historic milestone in the American financial services industry. As the first woman to lead any of the major Wall Street banks, her elevation to the top role received extensive coverage in global media and was noted by organizations focused on gender equity in corporate leadership.
Fraser's appointment as CEO of Citigroup in 2021 was itself a landmark event, making her the first woman to serve as chief executive of any of the major Wall Street banks. The appointment was covered extensively by global media and was noted by business commentators, gender equity advocates, and financial industry observers as a significant moment in the history of American finance.
 
She has been featured on multiple lists of influential business leaders. Her leadership during a period of extensive transformation at one of the world's largest banks has made her one of the most closely watched executives in the global financial industry.


Fraser has been included on multiple annual lists of influential business leaders. ''[[Fortune (magazine)|Fortune]]'' has named her to its list of the Most Powerful Women in Business, and she has appeared on ''[[Forbes]]'' and ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' rankings of influential global figures. Her leadership of Citi's transformation—and in particular her approach to AI integration and organizational restructuring—has been the subject of profiles and interviews across major financial and business publications, including ''The Wall Street Journal'', ''Bloomberg'', ''Fortune'', ''Business Insider'', and ''McKinsey Quarterly''.
Fraser's decision to implement one of the banking sector's largest AI reskilling programs, encompassing 175,000 employees, has also drawn attention as an example of proactive workforce management in the face of technological disruption.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-01-27 |title=As AI wipes out desk jobs, Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser says the company is training 175,000 employees to 'reinvent themselves' before their roles change forever |url=https://fortune.com/2026/01/27/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-employees-trained-reinvent-themselves-with-ai-before-tech-changes-roles-forever/ |work=Fortune |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


Her compensation of approximately $42 million for 2025, as reported by ''The Wall Street Journal'', placed her among the highest-paid executives in the American banking sector for that year.<ref>{{cite news |date=2026-02 |title=Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser's Pay Jumped to $42 Million in 2025 |url=https://www.wsj.com/business/citigroup-ceo-jane-frasers-pay-jumped-to-42-million-in-2025-8f443528 |work=The Wall Street Journal |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Her public communications, including the widely reported "The bar is raised" memo of January 2026, have contributed to her profile as a CEO willing to articulate demanding expectations and to confront organizational inertia directly.


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Fraser's tenure at the helm of Citigroup has been defined by the scope and ambition of the organizational transformation she has undertaken. By divesting international consumer banking operations, restructuring management hierarchies, reducing headcount, and investing heavily in technology—particularly artificial intelligence—Fraser has sought to reposition Citigroup as a more focused and profitable institution after years in which the bank's stock price and returns lagged behind those of its major competitors.
As of early 2026, Fraser's legacy is still being shaped by the ongoing transformation of Citigroup. Her appointment as the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank marked a milestone in an industry that has historically seen little gender diversity at the highest levels of leadership. Regardless of the ultimate financial outcomes of her restructuring program, the symbolic significance of her appointment has been noted as a development with lasting implications for the representation of women in finance.


Her role as the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank has been recognized as a significant development in the broader trajectory of gender representation in corporate America. While women had previously led other major financial institutions—such as [[Abigail Johnson]] at [[Fidelity Investments]]—Fraser's appointment at Citigroup marked the first time a woman assumed the CEO position at one of the six largest U.S. banks.
Fraser's strategic decisions at Citigroup — including the exit from consumer banking in multiple international markets, the aggressive pursuit of cost reductions, and the large-scale investment in AI training — represent a distinct approach to modernizing a legacy financial institution. Her emphasis on cultural change, as reflected in her internal communications and public statements, has been a defining feature of her tenure.


Fraser's emphasis on AI adoption at scale—training 175,000 employees to work with the technology—has been cited as one of the most ambitious workforce transformation efforts in the banking sector.<ref name="fortune-ai" /> Her approach, which combines large-scale technology adoption with what she has described as maintaining a "human bank," reflects a broader industry-wide debate about the role of automation and artificial intelligence in financial services.<ref>{{cite web |title='Having a human bank is very important': A conversation with Citi CEO Jane Fraser |url=https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/having-a-human-bank-is-very-important-a-conversation-with-citi-ceo-jane-fraser |publisher=McKinsey & Company |date=2026-02-19 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
The scale of Citigroup's AI reskilling initiative, covering 175,000 employees, has been cited as a potential model for how large organizations can prepare their workforces for technological disruption. Fraser's framing of this effort — encouraging employees to "reinvent themselves" before their roles are transformed — has contributed to broader conversations in the business world about the responsibilities of employers in the age of artificial intelligence.


Whether the full scope of Fraser's transformation plan will achieve its stated financial and operational objectives remains to be determined, as the multi-year effort continues through 2026 and beyond. The bank's board has signaled confidence in her leadership through her increased compensation, and the recruitment of senior talent from rival institutions suggests ongoing investment in the plan's execution.<ref name="bi-star" />
Whether Fraser's restructuring ultimately delivers the improved financial performance and cultural transformation she has sought will be a central question in assessments of her leadership in the years ahead. As of 2026, the transformation remained in progress, with Fraser signaling that further changes — including additional job cuts and continued investment in technology — were forthcoming.


== References ==
== References ==
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[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:American chief executives of financial companies]]
[[Category:Women chief executive officers]]
[[Category:Citigroup people]]
[[Category:Citigroup people]]
[[Category:Harvard Business School alumni]]
[[Category:Alumni of the University of Cambridge]]
[[Category:Alumni of the University of Cambridge]]
[[Category:Harvard Business School alumni]]
[[Category:McKinsey & Company people]]
[[Category:McKinsey & Company people]]
[[Category:Scottish emigrants to the United States]]
[[Category:Scottish businesspeople]]
[[Category:Women chief executive officers]]
[[Category:American bankers]]
[[Category:British bankers]]
[[Category:People from St Andrews]]
[[Category:People from St Andrews]]
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Latest revision as of 04:42, 24 February 2026



Jane Fraser
BornTemplate:Birth year and age
BirthplaceSt Andrews, Scotland, United Kingdom
NationalityBritish
OccupationBanking executive
TitleChief Executive Officer
EmployerCitigroup
Known forCEO of Citigroup; first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank
EducationMBA, Harvard Business School

Jane Fraser (born 1967) is a British-American banking executive who serves as the chief executive officer of Citigroup, one of the largest financial institutions in the world. Appointed to the role in February 2021, she became the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank, a milestone in an industry long dominated by men. Born in St Andrews, Scotland, Fraser built her career across multiple continents and business lines, rising through the ranks at Citigroup after earlier stints in management consulting. As CEO, she has undertaken a sweeping restructuring of the bank, including organizational simplification, cost reduction through job cuts, and significant investment in artificial intelligence and technology to modernize the institution's operations. Her tenure has been defined by an effort to shed underperforming businesses, sharpen the bank's focus on its core strengths in global cross-border banking, and instill a culture of higher performance expectations across Citigroup's workforce of more than 200,000 employees. Fraser's leadership has drawn sustained attention from the financial press and business community, both for the historic nature of her appointment and for the scale of the transformation she has pursued at one of America's most prominent financial firms.

Early Life

Jane Fraser was born in 1967 in St Andrews, Scotland, a coastal town known for its university and its association with the sport of golf. She grew up in Scotland and later pursued higher education in the United Kingdom before eventually relocating to the United States for graduate studies. Details about her parents and family background during her childhood years are not extensively documented in public sources.

Fraser has spoken in various public forums about her Scottish upbringing and the values it instilled in her, including a strong work ethic and a pragmatic approach to problem-solving. Her early years in Scotland shaped an international outlook that would later prove central to her career in global banking.

Education

Fraser pursued her undergraduate studies at Cambridge University in England, where she studied economics. She subsequently earned a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Harvard Business School in the United States, a credential that positioned her for a career in management consulting and, later, in financial services. Her educational background at two of the world's most prominent academic institutions provided a foundation in both economic theory and business strategy.

Career

Early Career and McKinsey

Before entering the banking industry, Fraser worked at McKinsey & Company, the global management consulting firm. At McKinsey, she gained experience advising major corporations on strategy and operations, work that exposed her to a broad range of industries and business challenges. Her time in consulting helped develop the analytical and strategic skills that she would later apply in senior leadership roles within financial services.

Rise at Citigroup

Fraser joined Citigroup in 2004 and held a succession of increasingly senior roles over the next decade and a half. Her positions at the bank spanned multiple business units and geographies, giving her a comprehensive view of the institution's sprawling global operations. She served in leadership roles in Citi's strategy and mergers and acquisitions functions, and later took on responsibility for major business lines.

Among her prominent roles at Citigroup, Fraser served as CEO of Citi's Latin America division, where she oversaw the bank's operations across a complex and diverse region. She also served as president of Citigroup and CEO of the bank's Global Consumer Banking division, positions that placed her among the most senior executives at the firm and positioned her as a leading candidate to eventually take the top job.

Her ascent through the organization was marked by her involvement in several strategic initiatives, including efforts to streamline Citi's consumer banking operations and to exit markets where the bank lacked competitive scale. These experiences directly informed the strategic vision she would later articulate as CEO.

Appointment as CEO

In September 2020, Citigroup announced that Fraser would succeed Michael Corbat as CEO, effective February 2021. The appointment made her the first woman to lead any of the major Wall Street banks — a group that includes JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley, among others. The announcement was met with significant media coverage and was noted as a landmark moment for gender representation in the upper echelons of global finance.

Fraser took the helm of Citigroup at a challenging time for the institution. The bank had been subject to regulatory actions related to risk management and internal controls, and its stock price had lagged behind those of its major competitors for years. These challenges set the stage for the ambitious restructuring program that would come to define Fraser's tenure as CEO.

Restructuring and Transformation

Upon becoming CEO, Fraser embarked on what has been described as one of the most extensive organizational overhauls in Citigroup's recent history. The restructuring has involved multiple dimensions: simplifying the bank's organizational structure, divesting non-core consumer banking operations in several international markets, reducing headcount, and investing in technology and compliance infrastructure.

A central element of Fraser's strategy has been the decision to exit consumer banking markets in Asia and other regions where Citigroup's retail operations were not generating sufficient returns. By narrowing the bank's focus, Fraser sought to concentrate resources on areas where Citigroup possesses distinct competitive advantages, particularly in institutional banking, global transaction services, and cross-border financial flows.

In a conversation with McKinsey & Company published in February 2026, Fraser articulated her vision for Citigroup as a "human-centered global bank" that would harness emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence and tokenization while continuing to invest in cross-border services — an area she identified as a core strength of the institution.[1]

The restructuring has also involved substantial reductions in headcount. In January 2026, Bloomberg News reported that Citigroup was set to cut approximately 1,000 jobs in a single week as part of Fraser's ongoing effort to control costs and improve the bank's financial performance.[2] These cuts were part of a broader pattern of workforce reductions that had been underway for several years under Fraser's leadership, reflecting her stated priority of running a leaner and more efficient organization.

"The Bar Is Raised" Memo

In January 2026, Fraser sent an internal memo to Citigroup's more than 200,000 employees titled "The bar is raised," which attracted widespread media attention. In the memo, Fraser set out higher performance expectations for the firm's workforce and signaled that further job cuts could follow. She wrote that the bank would no longer tolerate what she characterized as "old, bad habits" and emphasized that employees would be evaluated on results rather than effort alone.[3]

The memo was reported on by multiple outlets. Fortune noted that Fraser told staff, "We are not graded on effort," and that the communication reflected her determination to accelerate the pace of the bank's cultural and operational transformation.[4] Business Insider similarly reported that the memo emphasized that "old habits are out, and performance is in," underscoring Fraser's intent to change the firm's internal culture as part of the broader restructuring.[5]

The memo and its public reception illustrated both the urgency Fraser brought to the transformation effort and the scrutiny that accompanied her decisions regarding workforce reductions.

Talent Recruitment and Leadership Team

As part of her restructuring effort, Fraser recruited a number of senior executives from outside Citigroup to help lead the bank's transformation. In January 2026, Business Insider reported on how Fraser's "star recruits" were helping Citigroup push ahead with its strategic agenda, as the CEO laid out expectations for the bank's performance in 2026 and beyond. The report indicated that Fraser credited the bank with having moved past what she described as the "dog days" of the early restructuring phase and was entering a period of more offensive strategic positioning.[6]

The recruitment of new senior leaders was seen as a significant element of Fraser's strategy, reflecting her belief that fresh perspectives and external talent were necessary to drive the kind of change she envisioned for the institution.

AI and Workforce Training

A prominent theme of Fraser's leadership has been the integration of artificial intelligence into Citigroup's operations. In January 2026, Fortune reported that Fraser disclosed the company was training 175,000 of its employees to "reinvent themselves" in anticipation of AI-driven changes to their roles. Fraser acknowledged that AI was expected to eliminate certain desk jobs and emphasized that the bank was proactively preparing its workforce for this transition rather than waiting for the technology to displace workers without warning.[7]

The scale of the training initiative — encompassing the majority of Citigroup's global workforce — was noted as one of the largest AI reskilling efforts in the banking sector. Fraser framed the initiative as part of a broader effort to ensure that Citigroup's employees could adapt to a rapidly changing technological landscape, positioning the bank to benefit from AI adoption while mitigating the disruption to individual workers.

In her conversation with McKinsey, Fraser further elaborated on her technology strategy, discussing the potential of tokenization — the use of blockchain-based digital tokens to represent traditional financial assets — alongside AI as transformative forces in global banking.[8]

Compensation

Fraser's compensation as CEO of Citigroup has been a subject of public reporting. In February 2026, The Wall Street Journal reported that Fraser's total pay for 2025 had risen to $42 million, an increase of approximately $7.5 million over her 2024 compensation.[9] The increase in pay was reported in the context of the bank's ongoing restructuring and the performance benchmarks set by Citigroup's board of directors. CEO compensation at major banks is closely watched by investors, regulators, and the public as an indicator of how boards assess executive performance relative to institutional results.

Personal Life

Jane Fraser holds both British and American citizenship. She has spoken publicly about the challenges of balancing a demanding career in finance with family responsibilities, a topic that has received attention given her position as the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank. Fraser has been open about the fact that she took a career break earlier in her professional life to spend time with her family, a decision she has described in interviews as important to her personal well-being.

Fraser is known to reside in the United States. She has two children. Beyond these publicly documented facts, Fraser has generally maintained a degree of privacy regarding her personal and family life, consistent with the norms of many senior executives in the financial sector.

Recognition

Fraser's appointment as CEO of Citigroup in 2021 was itself a landmark event, making her the first woman to serve as chief executive of any of the major Wall Street banks. The appointment was covered extensively by global media and was noted by business commentators, gender equity advocates, and financial industry observers as a significant moment in the history of American finance.

She has been featured on multiple lists of influential business leaders. Her leadership during a period of extensive transformation at one of the world's largest banks has made her one of the most closely watched executives in the global financial industry.

Fraser's decision to implement one of the banking sector's largest AI reskilling programs, encompassing 175,000 employees, has also drawn attention as an example of proactive workforce management in the face of technological disruption.[10]

Her public communications, including the widely reported "The bar is raised" memo of January 2026, have contributed to her profile as a CEO willing to articulate demanding expectations and to confront organizational inertia directly.

Legacy

As of early 2026, Fraser's legacy is still being shaped by the ongoing transformation of Citigroup. Her appointment as the first woman to lead a major Wall Street bank marked a milestone in an industry that has historically seen little gender diversity at the highest levels of leadership. Regardless of the ultimate financial outcomes of her restructuring program, the symbolic significance of her appointment has been noted as a development with lasting implications for the representation of women in finance.

Fraser's strategic decisions at Citigroup — including the exit from consumer banking in multiple international markets, the aggressive pursuit of cost reductions, and the large-scale investment in AI training — represent a distinct approach to modernizing a legacy financial institution. Her emphasis on cultural change, as reflected in her internal communications and public statements, has been a defining feature of her tenure.

The scale of Citigroup's AI reskilling initiative, covering 175,000 employees, has been cited as a potential model for how large organizations can prepare their workforces for technological disruption. Fraser's framing of this effort — encouraging employees to "reinvent themselves" before their roles are transformed — has contributed to broader conversations in the business world about the responsibilities of employers in the age of artificial intelligence.

Whether Fraser's restructuring ultimately delivers the improved financial performance and cultural transformation she has sought will be a central question in assessments of her leadership in the years ahead. As of 2026, the transformation remained in progress, with Fraser signaling that further changes — including additional job cuts and continued investment in technology — were forthcoming.

References

  1. "'Having a human bank is very important': A conversation with Citi CEO Jane Fraser".McKinsey & Company.2026-02-19.https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/having-a-human-bank-is-very-important-a-conversation-with-citi-ceo-jane-fraser.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  2. "Citi to Cut About 1,000 Jobs This Week as Fraser Trims Costs".Bloomberg.com.2026-01-12.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-12/citi-to-cut-about-1-000-jobs-this-week-as-fraser-trims-costs.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  3. "Citi CEO Warns of More Job Cuts, Calls Time on 'Old, Bad Habits'".Bloomberg.com.2026-01-14.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-01-14/citi-ceo-warns-of-more-job-cuts-calls-time-on-old-bad-habits.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  4. "Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser warns of job cuts and says it's time to raise the bar in memo to staff".Fortune.2026-01-14.https://fortune.com/2026/01/14/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-job-cuts-ai-bad-old-ways-restructuring/.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  5. "Citi's CEO Jane Fraser warns staff in memo: old habits are out, and performance is in".Business Insider.2026-01-14.https://www.businessinsider.com/citi-jane-fraser-memo-old-habits-performance-job-cuts-transformation-2026-1.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  6. "How Jane Fraser's 'star recruits' are helping Citi push ahead".Business Insider.2026-01.https://www.businessinsider.com/citi-executives-jane-fraser-raghavan-sieg-ryan-2026-1.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  7. "As AI wipes out desk jobs, Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser says the company is training 175,000 employees to 'reinvent themselves' before their roles change forever".Fortune.2026-01-27.https://fortune.com/2026/01/27/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-employees-trained-reinvent-themselves-with-ai-before-tech-changes-roles-forever/.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  8. "'Having a human bank is very important': A conversation with Citi CEO Jane Fraser".McKinsey & Company.2026-02-19.https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/having-a-human-bank-is-very-important-a-conversation-with-citi-ceo-jane-fraser.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  9. "Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser's Pay Jumped to $42 Million in 2025".The Wall Street Journal.2026-02.https://www.wsj.com/business/citigroup-ceo-jane-frasers-pay-jumped-to-42-million-in-2025-8f443528.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  10. "As AI wipes out desk jobs, Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser says the company is training 175,000 employees to 'reinvent themselves' before their roles change forever".Fortune.2026-01-27.https://fortune.com/2026/01/27/citigroup-ceo-jane-fraser-employees-trained-reinvent-themselves-with-ai-before-tech-changes-roles-forever/.Retrieved 2026-02-23.