Deutsche Bank beats on profit, warns on capital buffers

Bank expects to report quarterly net income of €66m on revenue of €6.4 bn

Deutsche said it remained committed to keeping a “significant buffer” above its regulatory requirements
Deutsche said it remained committed to keeping a “significant buffer” above its regulatory requirements

Deutsche Bank beat first quarter earnings forecasts, lifting its shares, though the German lender warned it might miss its capital requirement target this year as it extends credit and defaults spike due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

In an unscheduled statement late on Sunday, Deutsche Bank said it expected to report quarterly net income of €66 million on revenue of €6.4 billion. Provisions for credit losses hit €500 million, more than three times higher than a year ago.

Deutsche Bank said it would give full details of the results as planned on Wednesday.

Analysts had expected the bank to post a net loss in the quarter and revenue of €5.7 billion. The figures indicate that Deutsche, like its competitors on Wall Street, got a revenue lift from a surge in trading as markets swung wildly.

READ SOME MORE

Its shares jumped almost 12 per cent on Monday morning in Frankfurt. . Andreas Thomae, a fund manager with Deka Investment, said the profit and revenue figures look "very positive" and that the loan loss provisions were still reasonable.

Deutsche Bank has been trying to engineer a turnaround, and some executives and investors privately fear that the pandemic could stall the bank’s restructuring efforts.

"We are firmly committed to mobilising our balance sheet to support our clients, who need us now even more," chief executive Christian Sewing said.

CREDIT EXTENSION

Germany’s biggest lender said it was possible that the bank would fall “modestly and temporarily” below its previous common equity tier 1 (CET 1) target of at least 12.5 per cent due to the current global recession sparked by the coronavirus.

The ratio was 12.8 per cent at the end of the first quarter, down from 13.6 per cent at the end of 2019, including 30 basis points of negative impact from a revised securitisation framework and approximately 40 basis points due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“This revised outlook acknowledges that credit extension to support clients at this time could increase risk weighted assets for several quarters,” it said, adding that pending regulatory changes could also improve the bank’s reported CET 1 ratio.

Deutsche said it remained committed to keeping a “significant buffer” above its regulatory requirements.

Andreas Plaesier, an analyst with Warburg Research, said that the bank needs to make sure the ratio doesn't fall toward 11 per cent. "This could lead to renewed questions about capital strength and speculation about a capital increase," he said.

The bank said it was also unlikely to reach its 2020 fully-loaded leverage ratio target of 4.5% without regulatory adjustments to the leverage ratio calculation.

It confirmed its other financial targets, including for 2020 adjusted costs excluding transformation charges and reimbursable expenses of €19.5 billion.

Deutsche Bank already warned last month that the impact of the coronavirus outbreak may affect its ability to meet its financial targets as the bank undergoes a major revamp after years of losses.

Last year, Deutsche posted a €5.7 billion loss, its fifth in a row, as the cost of its latest turnaround attempt hit earnings.

Until the outbreak of the coronavirus in Europe, things had been looking up for Deutsche this year. Its shares had rallied, it successfully issued a risky bond, regained market share in Germany and added a new top investor.

Europe’s banks are expected to have to set aside billions for potential loan losses because of the coronavirus crisis when

Credit ratings agencies have lowered their outlooks for banks in Germany and throughout Europe.

S&P last week tweaked its outlook for Deutsche to negative from stable, noting the bank’s restructuring was “fundamentally on track” but acknowledged “substantial downside risks”.

- Reuters