Business Day

Deutsche CEO struggles to turn bank around as stock slumps

- Steven Arons Frankfurt

Deutsche Bank CEO Christian Sewing has given himself one year to turn around the lender.

Six months into his tenure, urgent questions about are becoming louder as the stock slumps to record lows.

After disappoint­ing investors by posting the lowest thirdquart­er revenue in eight years and abandoning some targets, the stock rout worsened, producing Deutsche Bank’s worst week since late March.

Contractio­n at the investment bank, the biggest contributo­r to the top line, and failure to reinvigora­te growth are adding to signs that Sewing is struggling to stop the decline.

“The appalling year-on-year trends in sales and trading seem to confirm what we have feared for some time: the franchise has been hurt by cost-cutting,” Kepler Cheuvreux analysts said on Thursday.

“Even though the restructur­ing programme seems to be on track, it will not be enough.”

The stock’s decline limits Deutsche Bank’s strategic options for now, though it could accelerate the potential tie up with rival Commerzban­k, said to be the favoured option of the German government.

Policy makers in Berlin were also open to the bank merging with a European player once the banking, fiscal and capital-markets union was complete, people familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified.

The bank’s shares fell 3% in Frankfurt on Friday, extending the weekly slump to 11%, as a broader market sell-off added to the earnings disappoint­ment. The stock had declined for seven straight trading days and trades at a record low.

Sewing has ruled out mergers for as long as the bank is unprofitab­le and the supervisor­y board in September gave its blessing to his short-term strategy that’s focused on cuts while shying away from transforma­tive decisions.

Deutsche Bank now predicts a slight decline for the full year, after earlier guiding for a flat result. Sewing said the focus now has to be on growing the top line without compromisi­ng controls something his predecesso­r John Cryan pledged twice but failed to deliver.

Investment bank revenue had been hit by the cost cuts, CFO James von Moltke said on the earnings call, though he emphasised that, in a quarterove­r-quarter comparison, the decline was “in line with the broader market”.

“The latest results have tarnished management’s credibilit­y. Sewing needs to show now how he wants to grow revenue,” said Michael Huenseler, a funds manager at Assenagon Asset Management.

“The low share price is locking Deutsche Bank deeper into its vicious circle.”

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