Deutsche Bank profit falls in second quarter amid restructure

Chief executive upbeat on lender’s future prospects: ‘we’re headed in the right direction’

Deutsche Bank is trying to bounce back from three consecutive years of losses. Photograph: iStock
Deutsche Bank is trying to bounce back from three consecutive years of losses. Photograph: iStock

Deutsche Bank on Wednesday posted a 14 per cent drop in net profit in the second quarter from a year earlier, as Germany's largest bank restructures under new leadership.

Deutsche last week already flagged that net profit would be more than double analysts’ forecasts in a rare piece of good news for the bank, which is cutting costs to revive profitability.

Net profit in the second quarter was €401 million, down from €466 million last year. Revenues were flat at €6.6 billion, halting a steep decline from previous years.

The better-than-expected profit and revenue are a positive sign for new chief executive Christian Sewing, who took over in April and has embarked on plans to cut more than 7,000 jobs in an overhaul of the bank.

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Deutsche Bank, trying to bounce back from three consecutive years of losses, has had a run of negative headlines, including an abrupt management reshuffle, a downgrade by Standard & Poor’s and failing the US Federal Reserve’s stress test.

“We’re making important changes to our core businesses as promised, we’re headed in the right direction on costs, and our balance sheet quality is strong,” Mr Sewing said on Wednesday.

At the investment bank, revenue was partly helped by a one-time gain of €57 million from a disposal in the quarter.

Revenue at its cash-cow bond-trading division dropped by 17 per cent despite more volatile markets.

By contrast, some big US banks posted sharp increases in profit as volatility caused by escalating trade tensions and central bank policy changes stirred a rise in trading volumes across Wall Street.

Goldman Sachs Group reported a 44 per cent rise in second-quarter profit on Tuesday, driven by strength in its investment banking and fixed income trading businesses. – Reuters