Business World

Deutsche Bank seen as ‘riskiest’ among peers

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DEUTSCHE BANK AG’s status as the riskiest among its peers is worsening, based on a US regulator’s measure of leverage, adding to the lender’s woes as it braces for a settlement over mortgage securities.

Leverage ratio — a lender’s capital measured against its assets — at Deutsche Bank lags behind the rest of the world’s major banks, according to data released Tuesday by Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) Vice Chairman Thomas Hoenig. A lower ratio means the German bank has less of a cushion if a crisis arises. The figure was 2.68% as of June 30, down from a year earlier and about half the average of the eight biggest US- based firms including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc.

Hoenig — among the loudest advocates for stronger bankcapita­l requiremen­ts — every six months releases a tally of capital levels at more than two dozen of the largest banks doing business in the US While it’s not an official scoring by the FDIC, Hoenig’s calculatio­ns put more emphasis on derivative­s exposure, which he’s said is the best way to figure out the riskiness of each institutio­n. The regulator has said before that Deutsche Bank’s capital ratio is too low.

“As markets have recovered and as central banks around the world continue quantitati­ve easing programs, the incentives for increasing financial leverage have intensifie­d,” Hoenig said in a statement.

Renee Calabro, a spokeswoma­n for Deutsche Bank, declined to comment.

Headlines that the Justice Department might seek as much as $ 14 billion in sanctions against the bank’s mortgage-backed securities business sparked analyst comments that the lender could become significan­tly undercapit­alized in the event of a big settlement and may need to raise capital.

The bank’s investors welcomed recent indication­s that the Frankfurt-based firm was considerin­g the sale of some of its asset management operations. Chief Executive Officer John Cryan earlier this month told staff that the assetmanag­ement business will remain an “essential part” of the firm.

Hoenig’s tally of leverage uses the Internatio­nal Financial Reporting Standards, which he has said weighs derivative­s in a “more complete” way than calculatio­ns used by the banking agencies.

His report notes that another measure of leverage — the one used in existing capital rules — has Deutsche Bank at 3.4%, though that’s still lowest among its peers. The bank said in a document released this month that it’s aiming for 5% by 2020. Bloomberg

 ??  ?? DEUTSCHE Bank AG’s status as a risky bank is worsening.
DEUTSCHE Bank AG’s status as a risky bank is worsening.

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