Citigroup stock price whipsaws as Middle East conflict hits risk appetite; jobs report next

March 2, 2026
Citigroup stock price whipsaws as Middle East conflict hits risk appetite; jobs report next

New York, March 2, 2026, 12:01 EST — Regular session

  • Citigroup added roughly 0.8%, after shares bounced in a more than 6% range from the session’s bottom to its peak.
  • Citi has instructed certain employees in the Middle East to work remotely, citing heightened tensions, according to the bank.
  • Oil, inflation cues, and Friday’s U.S. jobs numbers are on traders’ radar for what comes next.

Citigroup Inc rose roughly 0.8% to $111.09 late Monday morning, bouncing around between $106.20 and $113.18 after starting from a previous close of $110.19. 1

This shift arrives while traders weigh the latest Middle East flare-up, which has pushed investors toward havens and sparked a fast surge in oil. That combination can upend inflation and rate expectations in a hurry. Bank stocks, especially, often move quickly when rate sentiment changes. 2

With tensions spiking during the U.S.-Israeli air campaign against Iran, both Citi and JPMorgan told their Middle East staff to stay home, according to two sources who spoke to Reuters. Citigroup commented, “We are continuing to take measures to help keep our employees and their families safe,” and noted that contingency plans are in place to maintain client service. 3

Stocks slipped on Wall Street earlier, with financials feeling the squeeze as investors assessed the potential for broader fallout on growth and inflation. “The market is taking it relatively well,” said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist at LPL Financial. The CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX — a popular measure of demand for downside hedges — climbed to a three-month peak, hovering close to 22. 4

Fresh economic numbers offered little relief. The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing PMI slipped to 52.4 in February, just barely indicating growth. But the prices-paid index told a different story, surging to 70.5 — a level not seen since October 2022 — hinting that input costs are accelerating. 5

Banks such as Citi know this drill. Higher yields might boost net interest income, but if inflation sticks around, borrowers feel the pinch and loan loss expectations start climbing. Toss in choppy markets and sluggish deal activity, and fee income becomes a moving target.

Friday brings the U.S. payrolls data, the next big macro hurdle for investors. According to a Reuters poll, economists are looking for a 60,000-job gain in February. Paul Nolte, senior wealth adviser and market strategist at Murphy & Sylvest Wealth Management, flagged a key worry: “the concern is that January is a one-off.” 6

The release comes before the rate path. The Federal Reserve is set to meet next on March 17-18, per the central bank’s calendar. 7

Citi’s shares on Monday showed just how fast geopolitical tensions can ripple through markets. Higher oil and wider credit spreads? That’s a steeper challenge for banks—risk tolerance shrinks, deal-making cools, and scrutiny grows around both consumer and business lending.

Citigroup Global Markets Holdings Inc., with a guarantee from Citigroup Inc, filed details on new autocallable, equity-linked notes pegged to major U.S. stock indexes and maturing in 2029. The move, outlined in a separate filing, underscores that structured products like these keep coming to market, despite the uptick in volatility. 8

Citi’s next big moment comes Friday at 8:30 a.m. ET, with the U.S. Labor Department set to publish the February jobs report. 9