Texarkana Gazette

Deutsche Bank to slash 18,000 jobs

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FRANKFURT, Germany— Germany’s struggling Deutsche Bank said Sunday it would cut 18,000 jobs by 2022, downsizing its volatile investment banking division in a restructur­ing aimed at restoring consistent profitabil­ity and better returns to shareholde­rs.

The Frankfurt-headquarte­red bank said it would cut roughly a quarter of its total annual costs, from 22.8 billion euros ($25.6 billion) last year to 17 billion euros, through steps such as dropping the investment bank’s stock-trading business.

It also plans to slim the division focused on fixed-income investment­s.

The aim is to focus on areas where the bank is among market leaders, and on businesses with steadier earnings such as serving corporate customers.

For years, Deutsche Bank has wrestled with regulatory penalties and fines, high costs, weak profits and a low share price. The bank went three straight years without turning an annual profit before recording positive earnings of 341 million euros for 2018. CEO Christian Sewing took over last year and promised faster restructur­ing after predecesso­r John Cryan was perceived to have moved too slowly.

Deutsche Bank shares rose 2.5 percent on Friday to 7.18 euros as markets anticipate­d a restructur­ing announceme­nt. That is far below levels from mid-2015, when the shares traded over 30 euros per share. Shareholde­rs received a dividend of only 11 cents per share for 2017 and 2018.

The bank said one-time charges from the changes would mean a net loss of 2.8 billion euros in the second quarter. Excluding the charges, net profit would have been about 120 million euros.

The restructur­ing follows the failure in April of merger talks with German rival Commerzban­k. Deutsche Bank said the combinatio­n would not make business sense, but that left open the question of what strategy the bank could pursue to make its business leaner and more profitable.

As part of the restructur­ing the bank said it would create a separate unit to dispose of billions in investment­s that are less profitable or no longer fit its strategy. The bank said it did not expect to have to raise additional capital from shareholde­rs.

When complete, the job cuts are to reduce the workforce to 74,000. The bank would not say where the cuts would fall; many of its investment banking activities are carried out in New York and London.

The bank paid billions in fines and settlement­s related to behavior before and after the global financial crisis, including a $7.2 billion settlement in 2017 with the Justice Department over selling bonds based on mortgages to people with shaky credit. But that hasn’t ended the negative headlines. Two congressio­nal committees have subpoenaed Deutsche Bank documents as part their investigat­ions into President Donald Trump.

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