BusinessMirror

Deutsche Bank yields profitabil­ity goal amid rising costs and inflation headwinds

- By Steven Arons

DEUTSCHE Bank AG scrapped an efficiency target for the year and warned a key profitabil­ity goal was getting harder to reach, as the economy weakens and the war in Ukraine, surging inflation and litigation drive up expenses.

The muted outlook, published Wednesday along with second-quarter results, overshadow­ed a strong performanc­e at the corporate bank, which benefited from higher interest rates, as well as in fixed-income trading, which beat Wall Street in a volatile market.

Chief Executive Officer Christian Sewing has so far stuck with the key pledge of his four-year turnaround plan, an 8 percent return on tangible equity this year. He’s benefited from a years-long trading rally and, more recently, rate increases by the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve. But with the economy slowing, inflation showing no signs of easing and multiple other challenges piling up, prospects for the rest of the year have clouded over.

“We see some of the challenges lying ahead and we’ve reflected that in our outlook,” Chief Financial Officer James von Moltke said in an interview on Bloomberg T V. Deutsche Bank “had some setbacks in the first half that were outside our control and we continue to see pressure in the second half of the year on expenses.”

Shares of Deutsche Bank swung between gains and losses, declining 1.2 percent at 9:13 a.m. in Frankfurt.

Pretax profit in the second quarter, at 1.55 billion euros ($1.57 billion), came in well ahead of analyst estimates for 1.39 billion euros. That’s the best second quarter since 2011, Deutsche Bank said.

At the corporate bank, higher rates fueled a 26 percent increase in net revenue to 1.6 billion euros, the highest since the unit was formed in 2019 when Sewing unveiled his restructur­ing plan. The private bank, which houses the lender’s retail operations, saw revenue increase by 7 percent from a year earlier. Both businesses had struggled with the impact of negative interest rates in Europe, which the ECB ended last week.

Fixed-income trading, which drove much of Deutsche Bank’s rebound under Sewing, rose 32 percent from a year earlier, capping two years of market-share gains. The five biggest US investment banks, which all reported second-quarter results earlier this month, saw fixed-income trading rise 31 percent on average.

At the same time, revenue from advising on deals and capital raisings slumped 63 percent from a year earlier, prompting Deutsche Bank to lower its guidance for the investment bank, the biggest revenue contributo­r. The lender said it now expects the unit’s revenues to be essentiall­y f lat this year, compared with a previous guidance for a slightly higher top line.

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