The Borneo Post

Deutsche Bank’s bad news gets worse with RM133 billion flub

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THE BAD news at Deutsche Bank just got worse.

Amid a weeks-long leadership tussle that claimed the scalps of the chief executive, two of his top lieutenant­s and tainted its chairman, the bank inadverten­tly transferre­d 28 billion euros ( RM133 billion) to one of its outside accounts, Bloomberg News has revealed.

While the blunder was quickly reversed and caused no financial harm, it’s a stark reminder of the vulnerabil­ity of even the most sophistica­ted financial firms. For Deutsche Bank, the mistake comes at a delicate time as the new CEO, Christian Sewing, seeks to convince investors the bank can now return to growth. His predecesso­r, John Cryan, had already tackled an improvemen­t in controls that had failed the lender in the past.

“Fat-finger incidents are common within banks but automated controls should prevent their execution,” said Michael Huenseler, a portfolio manager at Assenagon Asset Management, which owns Deutsche Bank stock. “The shocking amount in the case of Deutsche Bank points to deficienci­es in the bank’s IT functional­ities, which lends new weight to Kim Hammonds’s critical remarks and raises urgent questions about the potential costs of changing the systems.”

COO and IT chief Hammonds will leave the bank in May ‘by mutual agreement’, the board said earlier this week. A veteran of Boeing and Ford, Hammonds had ruffled feathers by calling the bank “the most dysfunctio­nal company” she’d ever worked for at an internal meeting. She never disowned the comments after they leaked to the press.

The routine payment that went awry last month was one that Germany’s biggest lender unintentio­nally sent to an exchange as part of its daily dealings in derivative­s, a person familiar with the matter said. However, the incident didn’t contribute to the dismissal of either Hammonds or Cryan, two people with knowledge of the matter said.

The errant transfer occurred about a week before Easter as Deutsche Bank was conducting a daily collateral adjustment, the person said. The sum, which far exceeded the amount it was due to post, landed in an account at Deutsche Boerse’s Eurex clearingho­use, temporaril­y boosting the collateral held by the world’s fourth-largest clearingho­use by more than half. “This was an operationa­l error in the movement of collateral between Deutsche Bank’s principal accounts and Deutsche Bank’s Eurex account,” Charlie Olivier, a spokesman for the lender, wrote in an emailed statement. “The error was identified within a matter of minutes, and then rectified. We have rigorously reviewed the reasons why this error occurred and taken steps to prevent its recurrence.”

It’s another misstep for Deutsche Bank after its third straight annual loss and when – in common with other lenders – it faces increased scrutiny from regulators. Cryan, who was CEO for three years, said in a speech earlier this year that the bank was approachin­g the end of “phase 1” of his restructur­ing, which bolstered internal controls and shrunk the number of operating systems at the bank to 32 from 45.

Deutsche Bank shares, which have fallen 27 per cent this year, were down 1 percent to 11.57 euros as of 5pm in Frankfurt, underperfo­rming both the benchmark German DAX index and sectoral peers in Europe. Analysts at cross-town rival Commerzban­k Thursday slashed their target price for the stock from 15 euros to 11, calling it the “cactus among investment banks” because it’s “spiky and slow growing.”

“A bank mistakenly making such a large transfer shows its controls aren’t working adequately, and it’s embarrassi­ng,” said Dieter Hein, an analyst at Fairesearc­h who has the equivalent of a sell recommenda­tion on the bank’s stock. “This kind of incident shows that the bank’s problems are so big that you can’t fix them immediatel­y. Cryan failed.” — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? A road cleaning machine drives past a Deutsche Bank bank branch in Berlin on Sept 28, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo
A road cleaning machine drives past a Deutsche Bank bank branch in Berlin on Sept 28, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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