Which Wall Street bank accidentally sent $81 TRILLION to a customer's account?

Which Wall Street bank accidentally sent $81 TRILLION to a customer's account?
And it wasn't the only time a 'near miss' happened, report says.
FEB 28, 2025

A major Wall Street bank made a colossal error in 2024, when a customer whose account was due a credit of 280 bucks was accidentally sent $81 TRILLION!

An anonymous insider has spilled the beans on the incident, which they say was reported to the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, according to a report from the FT. The incident happened in 2024 but has only just come to light.

The report says that Citigroup’s error was not picked up by either a payments employee or by an official was tasked with checking the transaction before it was processed. The mistake was picked up and reversed when a third employee noticed a problem with the bank’s account balances, around 90 minutes of the credit being made.  

Citi says that it would not have been possible for the erroneous transaction to have sent funds outside of the bank due to detective controls that identified an error between two ledgers.

However, the report quotes the bank as highlighting the advantages of automation over manual processes: “While there was no impact to the bank or our client, the episode underscores our continued efforts to continue eliminating manual processes and automating controls.”

It’s not the first time that Citi has been involved in one of these so-called ‘near misses’ as in 2020 it sent $900 million to Revlon lenders instead of a planned interest payment. With some refusing to return the funds, legal action followed and the mistake proved costly for Citi which recovered $400 million but lost $500 million as a judge ruled the recipients could keep it.

The FT report says that it wasn’t Citi’s only near miss of 2024 either. It cites an internal report revealing 10 such errors last year that involved at least $1 billion, down from 13 in 2023. Banks are not required to report these errors to regulators so public records are far from comprehensive.

Other notable near misses include $6 billion sent to a US hedge fund by a junior employee at Deutsche Bank in 2015 due to a clerical error. All of the money was recovered the next day. Deutsche also accidentally transferred $35 billion to an external account in 2018. Again, all of the funds were recovered.

Latest News

Advisors handicap the brewing battle between Trump and Powell
Advisors handicap the brewing battle between Trump and Powell

It's a showdown for the ages as wealth managers assess its impact on client portfolios.

Savvy Wealth wooes Commonwealth advisors with Fidelity advantage
Savvy Wealth wooes Commonwealth advisors with Fidelity advantage

CEO Ritik Malhotra is leveraging Savvy Wealth's Fidelity partnership in offers to Commonwealth advisors, alongside “Acquisition Relief Boxes” filled with cookies, brownies, and aspirin.

Elder fraud complaints surge past $4.8 billion as investment scams lead losses
Elder fraud complaints surge past $4.8 billion as investment scams lead losses

Fraud losses among Americans 60 and older surged 43 percent in 2024, led by investment schemes involving crypto and social manipulation.

Apollo ramps up retail push with 'New Markets' division
Apollo ramps up retail push with 'New Markets' division

The alternatives giant's new unit, led by a 17-year veteran, will tap into four areas worth an estimated $60 trillion.

Commonwealth advisors, employees, let it all hang out on Reddit
Commonwealth advisors, employees, let it all hang out on Reddit

"It's like a soap opera," says one senior industry executive.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.

SPONSORED Advisory firms confront crossroads amid historic wealth transfer

As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.