Gulf News

Deutsche Bank to stop cheque clearing in euros across region

Move coincides with steps lender has taken to pare back its number of clients globally

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Deutsche Bank is to stop clearing cheques denominate­d in euros for some banks in the Middle East, according to sources familiar with the matter, joining other big banks that cut services in the region.

Cheque usage globally has been on the wane as consumers and businesses turn to faster, digital payment alternativ­es and in part because of regulator and bank concerns about their potential use in fraud, money laundering and terror financing.

The move coincides with steps Germany’s biggest lender has taken to pare back its number of clients globally and become more stringent about compliance under a restructur­ing aimed at turning around its business and raising its capital.

Stop from April

The bank has told those lenders in the Middle East that do not hold a Deutsche Bank account that it would no longer clear cheques in euros from April, a service it had previously offered, one of the sources said.

Deutsche Bank said that it had “reduced its cheque clearing services for customers with low activity levels” internatio­nally.

The bank said it was phasing out cheque clearing globally and setting up a new digital global payments platform instead, although it would keep up the cheque business with bank clients generating decent business, the source added.

Cheques accounted for just 6 per cent of the total mix of global non-cash transactio­ns in 2014, compared with 65 per cent for cards, 12 per cent for direct debits and 17 per cent for credit transfers, according to Capgemini Financial Services and the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s. But in the Middle East cheques are more common feature of commerce, are often used for big-ticket transactio­ns such as housing and other payments.

 ?? Reuters ?? Germany’s biggest lender has become more stringent about compliance under a restructur­ing aimed at turning around its business and raising its capital.
Reuters Germany’s biggest lender has become more stringent about compliance under a restructur­ing aimed at turning around its business and raising its capital.

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