The Phnom Penh Post

Shock profit for Deutsche Bank in Q3

- Tom Barfield

TROUBLED German lender Deutsche Bank yesterday reported a surprise profit in the third quarter, confoundin­g expectatio­ns of further expensive legal pain for the Frankfurt institutio­n.

“We continued to make good progress on restructur­ing the bank,” chief executive John Cryan said in a statement.

“The results for the quarter demonstrat­e well the strengths of our operating businesses”.

Deutsche booked 256 million ($279 million) in profit attributab­le to shareholde­rs between July and September.

That far outdid the forecasts of analysts surveyed by Factset, who had predicted a 949 million loss. Deutsche’s financial health has been in the spotlight ever since the US Department of Justice last month asked for an unaffordab­le $14 billion fine over its role in the subprime mortgage crisis – sparking fears it might have to raise fresh capital.

Deutsche saw a loss of more than 6 billion over the July-September period last year, the first full quarter of Cryan’s tenure at the helm, as it launched a mammoth restructur­ing, wrote down assets and set out to tackle some 8,000 legal cases against the bank.

CEO Cryan acknowledg­ed the “unsettling” effect of the US fine demand, news of which sent Deutsche’s share price to historic lows of 9.90 in late September.

“The bank is working hard on achieving a resolution of this issue as soon as possible,” Cryan said.

Revenues increased

Thursday’s “surprising­ly positive” release “catches all those who saw the windingdow­n of Deutsche Bank as a sure thing flat-footed,” said analyst Ingo Frommen of LBBW bank.

Deutsche said revenues increased to 7.5 billion, slightly up from 2015’s third quarter, driven by 10 percent growth in its trading division.

Revenues declined in a l l other business areas, which the group said was largely down to the “impact of the ongoing low interest env ironment”.

Cryan said the bank would have to deal with “challengin­g” interest rates and tighter capital requiremen­ts for some time to come.

“We need to restructur­e and modernise the bank faster and wit h higher intensit y,” he told reporters i n a conference ca ll.

Burdened with a painful overhaul and a web of costly legal problems, Deutsche was labelled “the most important net contributo­r to systemic rate risks in the global banking system” by the IMF in June.

Fig ures released yesterday show Deutsche has a war chest of around 5.9 bil lion in prov isions to cover reg ulator y fines and lega l costs, an increase of 400 million since June.

Shares little changed

A source close to the matter said in late September t he bank was in ta lks wit h t he DoJ to reduce its fine from $14 billion to around $ 5.4 billion, a lt hough the final figure could change.

Chief financial officer Markus Schenck said discussion­s on reaching a settlement with the US authoritie­s were “ongoing”.

“However, the time lines are not completely in the bank’s hands alone. It also depends on the Department of Justice,” he said in the conference call.

Deutsche shares were little changed on the upbeat results, up 0.08 percent to

13.31 around mid-day trading in Frankfurt.

 ?? DANIEL ROLAND/AFP ?? The headquarte­rs of Germany's biggest lender, Deutsche Bank, in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. The troubled lender reported a surprise profit in the third quarter, confoundin­g expectatio­ns.
DANIEL ROLAND/AFP The headquarte­rs of Germany's biggest lender, Deutsche Bank, in Frankfurt am Main, Germany. The troubled lender reported a surprise profit in the third quarter, confoundin­g expectatio­ns.

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