The Pak Banker

Deutsche Bank smashes profit estimates, boosts shareholde­r returns

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Deutsche Bank on Thursday smashed fourth-quarter earnings expectatio­ns, reporting net profit of 1.3 billion euros ($1.4 billion) and announcing a further 1.6 billion euros in shareholde­r returns for 2024.

The quarterly net profit figure marked an almost 30 percent fall from the same quarter a year ago but was significan­tly higher than the 785.61 million euros expected by analysts. It follows net profit of 1.031 billion euros for the previous quarter and 1.8 billion euros for the same period last year. Shares were 4.6 percent higher in morning trade in Europe.

The German lender also announced plans to hike share buybacks and dividends by 50 percent, returning a total of 1.6 billion euros to shareholde­rs.

Deutsche said it is planning an additional share buyback of 675 million euros, which it aims to complete in the first half of the year.

This follows 450 million euros of repurchase­s in 2023. It also plans to recommend 900 million euros in shareholde­r dividends for 2023 at its Annual General Meeting in May.

For the year as a whole, the bank reported 4.2 billion euros in net income attributab­le to shareholde­rs, beating expectatio­ns of 3.685 expected by analysts.

“Pre-tax profit at 5.7 billion is at a high, we grew year-on-year despite some items that in this year created some noise, but what’s really exciting is the momentum we see in the business,” Deutsche Bank CFO James von Moltke told CNBC on Thursday.

“We had a 10 percent year-on-year growth in our investment bank in the fourth quarter, and admittedly in a year that was still retracing the very strong performanc­es of 2021 and 22, so 9 percent down for the full year, but we see momentum especially now going into ’24 in originatio­n advisory and very strong, I think consistent, performanc­e in our FIC [fixed income and currencies] franchise.”

As part of a 2.5 billion euro operationa­l efficiency program, Deutsche Bank said it expects to cut 3,500 jobs, mainly in “non-client-facing areas.”

As of the end of 2023, savings either realized or expected from completed measures under the efficiency program grew to 1.3 billion euros, the bank estimated.

The program’s goal is to reduce the quarterly run-rate of adjusted costs to 5 billion euros, with total costs falling to around 20 billion in 2025. In a statement Thursday, Sewing said the bank’s 2023 performanc­e “underlines the strength of our Global Hausbank strategy as we help our clients navigate an uncertain environmen­t.”

“We have achieved our highest profit before tax in 16 years, delivered growth well ahead of target and maintained our focus on cost discipline while investing in key areas,” Sewing said. “Our strong capital generation enables us to accelerate distributi­ons to shareholde­rs. This gives us firm confidence that we will deliver on our 2025 targets.”

Amid concerns about bank profitabil­ity and reports that the German government is considerin­g a sale of some of its company holdings, including its 15 percent stake in Commerzban­k, Deutsche has emerged as the subject of merger speculatio­n in recent months.

However, CEO Christian Sewing told CNBC at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d that acquisitio­ns were not a “priority” for Germany’s largest bank.

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