Banking & Finance
Deutsche Bank CEO Slashes 18,000 Jobs in $8.3 Billion Revamp
(Bloomberg) — Deutsche Bank AG unveiled a radical overhaul that will see the lender exit its equities business, post a 2.8 billion-euro ($3.1 billion) second-quarter loss and cut the workforce by a fifth to reverse a slide in profitability.
Read: Deutsche Bank AG Seeks to Rebuild in Middle East After Cost Cutting
Chief Executive Officer Christian Sewing will shelve the dividend this year and next and take restructuring charges of 7.4 billion euros through 2022 to pay for an overhaul that shrinks the German lender’s once-mighty investment bank along with its global footprint and key fixed-income business.
Read: Deutsche Bank May Cut Bonuses If Revenue Stalls, CFO Says
Deutsche Bank shares were down 0.7% in Frankfurt trading as of 12:35 p.m. after climbing as much as 4.4% earlier. The lender’s riskiest bonds also reversed earlier gains, with perpetual notes down about 0.5 euro cents to around 90 cents on the dollar and notes callable in 2022 down 0.4 cents. Analysts said that while the restructuring was broader than expected, the newly announced targets will be tough to achieve.
“Today we have announced the most fundamental transformation of Deutsche Bank in decades,” Sewing said in a statement on Sunday. “We are tackling what is necessary to unleash our true potential.”
The scale of the revamp underscores the failure of Sewing and his recent predecessors to solve the fundamental problem: costs were too high and revenue too low. After government-brokered merger talks with Commerzbank AG collapsed in April, the CEO had few alternatives to bolster market confidence. His plan was approved by the board at a meeting Sunday.
Some of the financial targets set out in the plan look overly optimistic and the goal of achieving a return on tangible equity of 8% by 2022 looks “highly improbable,” Citigroup analysts including Andrew Coombs, Nicholas Herman wrote in a note to investors.
Non-Core Unit
About 74 billion euros of risk-weighted assets will become part of a new non-core unit and the lender’s capital buffer will be reduced as part of the plan. With the stock price down by half in the past two years, selling new shares wasn’t an option and the bank said it does not plan a capital increase to pay for the overhaul.
Instead, Sewing is tapping into the bank’s capital cushion to fund what he’s billed as the bank’s biggest restructuring in decades — which means he needs to be strategic with the scarce financial resources he can generate. It will be the first time since at least 1993 that Deutsche Bank won’t distribute a dividend.
Key points of the plan and the bank’s financial estimates
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Departures
The bank said retail chief Frank Strauss and Chief Regulatory Officer Sylvie Matherat, both board members, will leave this month. The departure of investment bank head Garth Ritchie was announced on Friday.
Other executives will be on the rise. Stefan Hoops was named to oversee the new “corporate bank” unit that will combine the transaction bank and the lender’s corporate-clients unit. Three management board members where appointed: Christiana Riley is taking over responsibilities for the Americas, Bernd Leukert, formerly of SAP AG, will join Sept. 1 and be responsible for data and innovation. Stefan Simon will become chief administrative officer and oversee regulatory and legal affairs.
The investment bank is the focus of the overhaul. The unit, which accounts for roughly half of Deutsche Bank’s revenue and which was the cause of its decline, will be broken in two.
What Bloomberg Intelligence Says
Deutsche Bank’s plan to downsize its investment bank, revamp management and cut costs while investing in controls and technology could open the most promising path yet to boosting profitability, according our early analysis, after years of piecemeal changes that failed to deliver. Execution will be critical, with added details sought July 8.
— Alison Williams, Neil Sipes, banking analysts
Deutsche Bank is accelerating its shift away from institutional trading clients, like hedge funds and asset managers, and will instead focus on servicing big companies, offering them cash management, trade finance and hedging.
The change is designed to accelerate the shift away from acting as the first port of call for institutional clients such as asset managers and hedge funds toward selling cash management, trade finance and hedging products to corporate clients. The new division, headed by Hoops, will be at the heart of the lender’s future business model.
“We remain committed to our global network and will help companies to grow and provide private and institutional clients with the best solutions and advice for their respective needs – in Germany, Europe and around the globe,” Sewing said on Sunday.
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