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Deutsche Bank

 
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Deutsche Bank Aktiengesellschaft

(NYSE:DB) (German:DBK)
Contact Information
Deutsche Bank Aktiengesellschaft
Theodor-Heuss-Allee 70
60486 Frankfurt, Germany
Tel. +49-69-910-00
Fax +49-69-910-34-225

Type: Public
On the web: http://www.deutsche-bank.de
Employees: 102,062
Employee growth: 32.5%

Deutsche Bank AG is one of the top financial groups in the world and the largest bank in Germany, where it operates about 1,000 retail branch locations. It has another 1,000 branches in more than 70 countries in Europe, the Americas, Asia, the Pacific Rim, and Africa. Deutsche Bank operates through three primary segments: Corporate and Investment Bank, Corporate Investments, and Private Clients and Asset Management. Its massive and far-flung Deutsche Asset Management subsidiary, which includes US-based companies Deutsche Bank Securities, RREEF, and DWS Investments (formerly DWS Scudder), serves private and institutional clients and has some E700 billion (some $975 billion) in assets under management.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending December, 2010:
Sales: $55,344.3M
One year growth: (9.0%)
Net income: $3,061.2M
Income growth: (57.0%)

Officers:
Chairman Supervisory Board: Clemens A. H. Börsig
Head, Global Markets; Joint Head, Corporate and Investment Bank: Anshuman (Anshu) Jain
Chairman Management Board and Group Executive Committee: Josef Ackermann

Competitors:
Citigroup
Commerzbank
UBS

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Deutsche Bank Aktiengesellschaft

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TechEncyclopedia:

D-sub connectors

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(D-SUBminiature connectors) A family of plugs and sockets widely used in communications and computer devices. For example, the common analog VGA interface for monitors uses a D-sub 15-pin plug and socket.

Also called "DB connectors," D-sub connectors come with 9, 15, 25, 37 and 50 pins. The D-sub defines the physical structure of the connector, not the purpose of each line.

Not Always DB Either

Although the common designations for D-sub connectors are "DB connectors," the international DIN 41625 standard defines them using the letter D followed by A through E, with DB-25 being the only actual "DB" connector. The DIN designations are in parentheses in the illustration below.

DB-25

The female DB-25 connector was widely used in the past for the printer port on a PC (see printer cable). The male DB-25 was also the second serial port (COM2) on the PC when serial ports were popular. It is still widely used for various RS-232 communications devices.

DB-9 (DE-9)

The male DB-9 connector (officially the DE-9) was typically used for the first serial port on earlier PCs (COM1) as well as other communications devices. See serial port.

DB-15 (DA-15 and DE-15)

Two DB-15 connectors are widely used. The larger, two-row female DA-15 is the game port on a PC, and the smaller, three-row, female high-density DE-15 is the VGA port. See plugs & sockets.

D-Sub Connectors
D-sub connectors, or DB connectors, are widely used to hook up computer and communications devices.

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Incorporated: 1870
NAIC: 522110 Commercial Banking; 522210 Credit Card Issuing;
SIC: 6021 National Commercial Banks; 6022 State Commercial Banks; 6029 Commercial Banks Nec; 6081 Foreign Banks - Branches & Agencies; 6141 Personal Credit Institutions; 6082 Foreign Trade & International Banks; 6211 Security Brokers & Dealers; 6282 Investment Advice; 6091 Nondeposit Trust Facilities; 6733 Trusts Nec; 6722 Management Investment - Open-End; 6712 Bank Holding Companies

Deutsche Bank AG has weathered two world wars, three depressions, and a divided Germany to become one of the world's leading financial institutions, entering the 21st century as the second largest bank in the world. Its operations are divided into two customer-oriented business groups. The Corporate and Investment Bank Group serves corporate and institutional clients, offering investment banking and corporate financing services on a worldwide basis. The Private Clients and Asset Management Group focuses on retail banking, mostly in Germany, and the worldwide provision of asset management services for both individuals and institutions.

Deutsche Bank was founded in Berlin on March 10, 1870, with the approval of the king of Prussia. The company opened its doors for business a month later under the directorship of Georg von Siemens, with five million thalers in capital.

The company's creation coincided with the unification of Germany. After Germany's victory in the Franco-German War, France was required to pay an indemnity of FFr 5 billion, which greatly stimulated German industry, trade, and consumption. Deutsche Bank naturally assumed a position of leadership in the country's expanding economy. The founding of the Second German Reich in 1871 led to another important development: the thaler was replaced by the mark, a new currency based on gold.

Within two years, the bank had established domestic branches in Bremen and Hamburg and expanded into eastern Asia with offices in Shanghai and Yokohama. In 1873 it opened a London branch, and capital stood at 15 million thalers.

Many joint-stock banks, including Deutsche Bank, had been created in the wake of the liberalization of requirements for starting new companies, but many failed within a few years. During the financial crisis of 1873-75 it appeared that the entire economic system was on the verge of collapse; small shareholders as well as wealthy businesspeople were ruined, and in Berlin alone nearly 50 banks filed for bankruptcy.

But Deutsche Bank, because of its concentration on foreign operations, was largely unscathed by the financial panic. With its assets intact, the young bank began to make significant acquisitions, including Deutsche Union-Bank and the Berliner Bankverein, both completed in 1876. These purchases transformed Deutsche Bank into one of Germany's largest and most prestigious banks.

In 1877 Deutsche Bank joined a syndicate of leading private banks popularly known as the 'Prussian consortium.' The bank was also employed by the government for the issue of state loans, and it grew rapidly in both influence and assets. By 1899 it was able to offer to float, without help from other financial institutions, a 125 million mark loan for Prussia and, at the same time, a 75 million mark loan for the German Reich.

Throughout the 1880s and 1890s Deutsche Bank was a leader in electrical development. It helped to form finance and holding companies and issued bonded loans and shares for the construction of dynamos, power plants, electric railways, tramways, and municipal lighting systems. By 1897, there were 750 power plants located across Germany. The bank also invested in the Edison General Electric Company in the United States and began to build a power plant in Argentina.

During the same period, the bank was a driving force behind railway development. In 1888, Deutsche Bank obtained a concession to build an east-west railway to open up Asiatic Turkey. A decade later, 642 miles of the Anatolian railway were in operation in Turkey. At the same time, in the United States the bank participated in the financial reorganization of Northern Pacific Railroad. All of this, of course, was done in addition to contributing significantly to the development of Germany's own extensive network of surface and underground railways.

The continuity of bank operations was uninterrupted when von Siemens died in October 1901. At Deutsche Bank, like most other German banks, all decisions are made by the board of directors, and the board customarily takes credit for the company's successes. The firm has no official chairman, but selects one board member to act as 'spokesman.' Thus the absence of von Siemens had little effect on the bank, since management by consensus was the bank's guiding principle.

By the early years of the 20th century, the company had acquired interests in the Hannoversche Bank, the Oberrheinische Bank, and the Rheinische Creditbank, and in Italy, had participated in the 1894 founding of Banca Commerciale Italiana. In 1914 the acquisition of Elberfeld-based Bergische-Märkische Bank and its branches in the Rhineland-Westphalia region increased Deutsche Bank's branch network from eight outlets to 46. The bank's capital was now more than six times the amount it was founded with.

The bank then entered a period of consolidation and growth: it built up its subbranches; improved and extended customer services; paid particular attention to the deposit business; and promoted checks for personal use. In association with numerous regional banks, Deutsche Bank also became involved in a wide range of business activities, including transportation, coal, steel, and oil, as well as railways and electrification. Shortly before World War I, with 200 million marks in capital backed by a 112.5 million mark reserve and deposits and borrowed funds of 1.58 billion marks, the Frankfurter Zeitung called it the world's leading bank. Growth continued during the war with the 1917 purchase of the Schlesischer Bankverein, which was based in Breslau (which became Wroc;lPaw, Poland, following World War II).

Deutsche Bank weathered the many economic problems during World War I; at the end of the conflict, the bank had offices at 182 locations throughout Germany, and a staff of nearly 14,000. But with the war lost, the German empire gone, and the transition from monarchy to democracy threatened by revolution, Allied demands for reparations totaling 132 billion gold marks pushed the German banking system to the brink of ruin. By 1923, one gold mark was worth 1 trillion paper marks.

In 1929, as financial chaos loomed, Deutsche Bank merged with its 20-year rival, the Disconto-Gesellschaft. The new entity was called Deutsche Bank und Disconto-Gesellschaft, a name that was used until 1937 when it was changed back to simply Deutsche Bank. At the time of their merger the banks were the two largest in Germany; combined, their capital, reserves, and deposits were each at least twice as large as that of any competitor. The merger, designed to cut administrative costs by closing competing operations, was very successful, and the resulting bank had enough capital and reserves to withstand the economic crisis. Before the collapse, Deutsche Bank and Disconto-Gesellschaft had handled about 50 percent of all business conducted by Berlin banks. By 1931, the bank was relying heavily on its undisclosed reserves and had twice reduced capital, but it remained solvent and required no government aid.

Under orders from the National Socialist government that came to power in 1933, unemployed workers were put to work under a 'reemployment' plan. At first, the government concentrated only on projects that were meant to counteract the high unemployment rate; the autobahns were the chief showpiece of this strategy. But by 1936, a significant percentage of industrial production had been switched to the manufacture of weapons and munitions and 'reemployment' had become 'rearmament.' Deutsche Bank supported the program through the purchase of government securities. Also, in 1933 and 1934, three Jewish members of the board of managing directors--Oscar Wassermann, Theodor Frank, and Georg Solmssen--were forced to resign.

During World War II, the government financed its budget deficit by printing new money, a misguided practice that quickly led to spiraling inflation. The problem was artificially suppressed by questionable banking measures; more treasury paper began to appear among the bank's assets. Deutsche Bank's enormous losses were made known only when Germany surrendered to the Allies in April 1945.

After the war, Allied occupation authorities investigating possible war crimes committed by German banks found that Deutsche Bank and its rival Dresdner Bank bore substantial responsibility for the war through their lending to the Nazi government, their purchase of government securities, and the influence that they exerted over large industrial concerns through their shareholdings and corporate directorships. Both banks also had close ties to SS chief Heinrich Himmler and other Nazi officials, had exploited conquered nations by seizing the assets of their financial institutions, and had helped disenfranchise Jews in Germany. Four directors (including one Nazi Party member) and two executives of Deutsche Bank were arrested by the Allied authorities, but were never tried. Further investigations into Deutsche Bank's collaboration with the Nazis began to be conducted in the 1990s and shed additional light on this dark chapter in the bank's history.

With the division of Germany into zones of occupation, and with Berlin in the Soviet zone, Deutsche Bank closed its head office there in 1945. The bank was run out of Hamburg. It lost all of its branches in what eventually became East Germany (in 1949 they became the basis for the newly formed Berliner Disconto Bank AG). In 1947-48, the western operations of Deutsche Bank were divided into ten separate regional institutions. After lengthy negotiations with the occupying forces, these ten institutions were formed into three banks: Norddeutsche Bank AG, Rheinisch-Westfälische Bank AG, and Süddeutsche Bank AG served the northern, central, and southern areas of West Germany, respectively. In 1957, these three banks were again reorganized, this time to form a single Deutsche Bank AG with corporate headquarters in Frankfurt. At the time of its reunification, the bank employed more than 16,000 people and its assets totaled 8.4 billion marks. Hermann J. Abs, the strategist behind the reorganization of the bank and one of the key figures in West Germany's financial recovery, became its spokesman.

In the 1960s Deutsche Bank concentrated on improving services for its smaller depositors. The bank launched programs for personal loans of up to DM 2,000 and medium-sized loans up to DM 6,000 for specific purchases, as well as an overdraft facility of up to DM 1,000 for consumers. Other services included personal mortgage loans, improvements in savings facilities, and the establishment of a eurocheque system. By the end of the decade, the bank had become the largest provider of consumer credit in West Germany.

Under the direction of Abs, Deutsche Bank began to reestablish its international operations (it had lost all of its worldwide holdings after the war). It first reopened offices in Buenos Aires, Sao Paulo, and Rosario, Argentina, and then in Tokyo, Istanbul, Cairo, Beirut, and Teheran. In 1968, Deutsche Bank joined the Netherlands' Amsterdam-Rotterdam Bank, Britain's Midland Bank, and Belgium's Societé Generale de Banque in founding the European-American Bank & Trust Company in New York. In 1972 Deutsche Bank founded Eurasbank (European Asian Bank) with members of the same consortium.

When Hermann Abs retired in 1967, Karl Klusen and Franz Heinrich Ulrich took his place, becoming cospokesmen. Abs had wielded such a great concentration of economic and financial power that a special law limiting such influence was named after him-'Lex Abs' reduced the number of supervisory-board seats a single person could hold simultaneously in West Germany.

During the 1970s Deutsche Bank became the dominant financial institution in West Germany. Under the guidelines of the 'universal banking' system in place in Germany for more than a century, commercial banks were allowed to hold unlimited interests in industrial companies, underwrite and trade securities on their own, and play the foreign currency markets, in addition to providing credit and accepting deposits. Deutsche Bank took advantage of this rule during the 1960s and 1970s by investing in a wide range of industrial companies. In 1979, the bank held seats on the supervisory boards of about 140 companies, among them Daimler-Benz, Volkswagen, Siemens, AEG, Thyssen, Bayer, Nixdorf, Allianz, and Philipp Holzmann.

But the bank's extraordinary influence in West Germany aroused concern about the extent of the bank's instruments in other companies. As a result of these concerns, Deutsche Bank began to reduce its industrial holdings in the 1970s. This trend, however, was briefly interrupted in 1975 when Middle Eastern concerns flush with petrodollars supplanted the big banks as a source of capital investment. At the request of Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, Deutsche Bank purchased a 29 percent interest in Daimler-Benz from industrialist Friederich Flick to ensure that it would stay in German hands, with the understanding that the bank would resell the shares once the crisis had passed. Deutsche Bank already owned 25 percent of the famed automaker. In December of that year, it resold the shares to a consortium that included Commerzbank, Dresdner Bank, and Bayerische Landesbank.

During the 1980s, Deutsche Bank made major expansions in its foreign operations, both in commercial banking and investment banking. It opened its first U.S. branch office in New York in 1979, and by 1987 had bought out all its partners in the Eurasbank consortium and renamed it Deutsche Bank (Asia), providing 14 more branches in 12 Asian countries. At nearly the same time, the company's capital-markets branch began operating and trading in Japanese, British, and American securities. By the end of 1988, the bank had approximately 7.2 million customers at 1,530 offices, more than 200 of them outside of West Germany.

In 1980 Deutsche Bank was the only one of the West German Big Three banks to turn a healthy profit. Unlike Commerzbank and Dresdner Bank, the other two of the Big Three, Deutsche Bank did not overexpand, but remained cautious in the face of high interest rates and continued recession. In 1984 it acquired a 4.9 percent stake in Morgan Grenfell, the British securities firm; in 1985 it bought scandal-plagued industrial giant Flick Industrieverwaltung from Friederich Flick, with the intention of taking it public; and in 1988 it acquired a 2.5 percent interest in the automaker Fiat. Another sign of Deutsche Bank's aggressive pursuit of foreign markets was the fact that in the wake of the stock market crash in October 1987, at a time when massive layoffs were taking place in the securities industry, its American securities affiliate, Deutsche Bank Capital Corporation, expanded its workforce. In 1988 Deutsche Bank entered the treasury securities market at a time when many foreign firms were leaving. Two years later, the U.S. Federal Reserve recognized Deutsche Bank Government Securities Inc. as a primary dealer of government securities.

At home, Deutsche Bank took a large and controversial step toward becoming a one-stop financial service center in 1989 when it created its own insurance subsidiary to complement its commercial and investment banking businesses. Immediately, it was considered a strong rival for the Allianz Group, the West German-based company that was Europe's largest insurer.

Wilhelm Christians and Alfred Herrhausen became Deutsche Bank's new cospokesmen in 1985. When Christians retired in early 1988, Herrhausen was appointed sole spokesman for the bank. Following Herrhausen's assassination by terrorists on November 30, 1989, Hilmar Kopper became spokesman.

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Deutsche Bank bolstered its investment banking arm through additional acquisitions, aiming to become a global investment bank. After acquiring the Toronto-based investment bank McLean McCarthy Ltd. in 1988, it purchased the remainder of Morgan Grenfell in 1989 for $1.5 billion. It also took a more aggressive approach to the North American market. In 1992 Deutsche Bank North America was formed--with John A. Rolls as chief executive officer--to coordinate and manage all of Deutsche Bank's North American operations, including those in investment banking which included McLean McCarthy and C.J. Lawrence Inc., the latter a U.S. investment bank acquired in 1986. The following year Deutsche Bank Securities Corporation was formed to specifically manage such areas as investment banking, securities transactions, and asset management services.

At the same time it aimed to become a global investment bank, Deutsche Bank also pursued a strategy of extending its position as a universal bank beyond Germany. Initially, it focused on Western Europe. But with the fall of communism throughout Eastern Europe in 1989 and 1990, Deutsche Bank sought to become a Europe-wide universal bank. To that end, in 1986 it had acquired Banca d'America e d'Italia S.p.A. from the Bank of America for $603 million (in 1994 this bank was renamed Deutsche Bank S.p.A.). In 1993 Deutsche Bank increased its presence in Italy when it purchased a majority interest in Banca Popolare di Lecco. That same year, the bank purchased Banco de Madrid in Spain, later integrated into Deutsche Bank, S.A.E. By 1994 Deutsche Bank operated 260 branches in Italy and 318 branches in Spain, and in both countries it was the largest foreign bank.

Following German reunification, Deutsche Bank quickly capitalized on the opportunity by entering into a joint venture with Deutsche Kreditbank to begin to restake its claim to eastern German territory. By 1994, Deutsche Bank had more than 300 branches in eastern Germany. It also opened offices elsewhere in Eastern Europe: Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Russia.

The early 1990s were a time of rising fortunes for Deutsche Bank as net income more than doubled from 1990 to 1993. This trend was reversed in 1994 when a series of problems hit within a short period. First the bank suffered huge losses from loans of DM 1.2 billion it had made to a property group run by Jurgen Schneider, which collapsed in early 1994. Then two firms in which Deutsche Bank had invested heavily ran into trouble--Balsam filed for bankruptcy and Metallgesellschaft (MG), an engineering conglomerate, nearly collapsed after losing $1.33 billion on speculative oil trades. Kopper provoked additional controversy and public resentment when he called bills amounting to $33 million that the Schneider property group owed to construction workers 'peanuts.' Early in 1995 the former head of MG sued Deutsche Bank over who was responsible for MG's downfall. Also in early 1995, Deutsche Bank's ties to the Nazi government of Hitler were dredged up when East German files were made public for the first time.

The losses it suffered in 1994 forced Deutsche Bank to increase its loss reserves, which contributed to a reduction in net income to DM 1,360 billion. In 1995 Deutsche Bank made significant moves to further establish itself as a global investment bank. Deutsche Bank North America acquired ITT Commercial Finance Corporation for $868 million to strengthen its presence in asset-based lending. The acquisition was immediately renamed Deutsche Financial Services Corporation. Later in 1995 Deutsche Bank consolidated all of its investment banking operations into Morgan Grenfell under a new unit, Deutsche Morgan Grenfell (DMG), based in London and headed by Ronaldo Schmitz. The move shifted more than half of Deutsche Bank's business to London control rather than that of Frankfurt, a shift that the European called a 'corporate revolution.' The short-term consequence of this revolution was the creation of much bad blood between the bank's staffs in Frankfurt and London. To build up its investment banking operations, DMG poached some of the top names in investment banking from rival firms in New York and London, infuriating these companies.

In September 1995 Deutsche Bank unveiled Bank 24, the first full-service telephone bank in Germany. At the same time, the company was in the midst of a four-year effort, ending in 1996, to reduce the domestic staff by 20 percent, with much of these cuts coming from the traditional branch-based retail network. Further innovation came to the domestic operations in 1996 when Deutsche Bank opened its first supermarket banks. That same year, a scandal rocked DMG when a fund manager assigned bogus values to some securities in his portfolio. Reacting quickly, Deutsche Bank management fired four managers and spent $280 million to cover potential losses at two funds. In late 1996 Kooper announced his resignation from his position as spokesman (but remained chairman of the supervisory board), and Rolf-Ernst Breuer, who had headed up the investment banking operations, became the new spokesman in early 1997.

During 1997 Deutsche Bank sold its 48-branch operation in Argentina to BankBoston Corporation for about $255 million. That year the bank set up an independent historical commission to research its role during the Nazi era. Such investigations were becoming increasingly common in the wake of the Cold War's end and the opening up of archives in the former Communist states of Eastern Europe. In 1998 the bank admitted that it had profited from gold looted from Holocaust victims and that bank officials at the time likely knew the source of the gold. An $18 billion lawsuit was soon filed against Deutsche Bank and other German lenders in relation to such looted gold. Deutsche Bank revealed in 1999 that it had helped finance the construction of Auschwitz, the infamous Nazi death camp in Poland.

With problems continuing at DMG, Deutsche Bank in early 1998 transferred most of the management control of the investment banking operations back to Frankfurt. The Morgan Grenfell name itself began to be deemphasized. Having failed to make much headway in the important U.S. investment banking market through DMG--primarily because of a clash of cultures between DMG's American investment bankers and those hailing from Germany and England--Deutsche Bank turned to the acquisition route for another U.S. invasion. In November 1998 the company announced that it would acquire Bankers Trust Corp., a New York firm that specialized in underwriting securities for smaller companies and emerging markets. Bankers Trust was the seventh largest bank holding company in the United States. It had purchased Baltimore-based investment banking house Alex. Brown & Sons in 1997 and had subsequently renamed the unit BT Alex. Brown Inc. (under Deutsche Bank, it was rechristened Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown). Also in 1998 Deutsche Bank transferred several of its major industrial holdings, a total of DM 40 billion ($24 billion) in stock, to a separate subsidiary in an effort to increase the transparency of its holdings. Among the transferred holdings were stakes in Allianz AG (7 percent), DaimlerChrysler AG (12 percent), and Metallgesellschaft AG (9.3 percent). This move was also seen as a prelude to the eventual unloading of some of these stakes.

The EUR 9.7 billion ($10 billion) takeover of Bankers Trust was completed in June 1999 but not before Deutsche Bank had received a great deal of negative publicity about its activities during the Nazi era. Under pressure from Holocaust survivors and others, Deutsche Bank finally agreed to contribute to a fund set up to settle Holocaust-era claims. The bank refused, however, to be held liable for its holdings in industrial companies that used forced laborers during that period. With the purchase of Bankers Trust, Deutsche Bank became the largest bank in the world with assets of about $750 billion. This position of preeminence proved short-lived, however, as the company was soon surpassed by Mizuho Holdings, which was formed in 2000 from the merger of three Japanese banks.

With the integration of Bankers Trust, investment banking was becoming an increasingly important part of the Deutsche Bank operations, accounting for 56 percent of pretax operating earnings for 1999, a huge jump from the 22 percent figure of 1998. On the other hand, the company was being bogged down by its inefficient retail banking operations, which accounted for only 5 percent of operating earnings in 1999. That year, the retail network was merged with the electronic banking unit Bank 24 to form Deutsche Bank 24 (DB24), which could then offer customers an array of online, telephone, and traditional branch services.

In March 2000 Deutsche Bank appeared to have a solution to its retail banking woes, namely offloading them, through a EUR 31 billion ($30 billion) merger with its longtime archrival Dresdner Bank. The deal would have included the combination of the retail networks of the two banks under the Deutsche Bank 24 unit, which would then have been spun off within three years, with Allianz, the number two insurer in Europe, taking a majority stake. The merger unraveled within weeks of its announcement, however, over the fate of Dresdner's investment banking unit, Dresdner Kleinwort Benson (DKB). Initially, Breuer agreed to merge DKB into Deutsche Bank's investment banking operations. The bank's investment bankers, however, felt that DKB's operations overlapped too much with their own, forcing Breuer to renege on his promise to absorb DKB and to insist that the unit be divested as a precondition to the merger. The Dresdner's board refused to go along with this and pulled out of the deal.

The failed merger was a huge blow to Deutsche Bank's aspirations to become an even bigger player in global investment banking. In the immediate aftermath, the company invested heavily in its e-commerce operations and announced that it would expand DB24 throughout Europe with a combined 'clicks-and-bricks' retail structure. DB24 gained control of the bank's retail operations in Belgium, France, Italy, Poland, Portugal, and Spain, a network that included more than 2,000 branches and 21,000 employees. Another significant development was a February 2001 reorganization that divided the bank's operations into two business units: the Corporate and Investment Bank Group and the Private Clients and Asset Management Group. The former encompassed the investment banking and corporate banking units, while the latter subsumed the retail banking (including DB24), private banking, and asset management units. Through the reorganization, Deutsche Bank hoped to facilitate cross-selling among the units, such as the selling of asset-management products through DB24.

Deutsche Bank's prospects in the early 21st century were clouded somewhat by the aftereffects of the collapse of the Dresdner deal. Deutsche Bank attempted to negotiate a cooperation agreement with Allianz whereby the latter would distribute insurance products through DB24. But in March 2001 Allianz announced that it would acquire Dresdner. Deutsche Bank continued to seek partners, including negotiating with AXA, the French insurance firm, about a distribution deal. Despite the setbacks that Deutsche Bank had suffered in the late 20th century, the bank remained one of the most powerful financial institutions in the world.

Principal Subsidiaries

DB Industrial Holdings AG; DEBEKO Immobilien GmbH & Co Grundbesitz Berlin OHG; DEBEKO Immobilien GmbH & Co Grundbesitz OHG; DEUBA Verwaltungsgesellschaft mbH; Deutsche Asset Management Europe GmbH (93%); Deutsche Asset Management International GmbH; Deutsche Bank 24 Aktiengesellschaft; Deutsche Bank Bauspar-Aktiengesellschaft; Deutsche Bank Lübeck Aktiengesellschaft (94.04%); Deutsche Bank Saar Aktiengesellschaft (96.6%); Deutsche Bank Trust Aktiengesellschaft Private Banking; Deutsche Gesellschaft für Mittelstandsberatung mbH (96%); Deutsche Grundbesitz Management GmbH; Deutsche Immobilien Leasing GmbH; DWS Investment GmbH; EUROHYPO Aktiengesellschaft Europäische Hypothekenbank der Deutschen Bank (96.02%); GEFA Gesellschaft für Absatzfinanzierung mbH; Nordwestdeutscher Wohnungsbauträger GmbH; Versicherungsholding der Deutschen Bank Aktiengesellschaft (75.86%); Deutsche Bank S.A. (Argentina); Deutsche Australia Ltd.; DB (Belgium) Finance S.A./N.V.; Deutsche Bank S.A. - Banco Alemao (Brazil); Deutsche Bank (Canada); db Services SARL unipersonnelle (France); Deutsche Bank S.A. (France); Deutsche-Equities S.A. (France); Deutsche Securities Ltd. (Hong Kong); Deutsche Bank Rt. (Hungary); Deutsche Bank Società per Azioni (Italy; 93.53%); Finanza & Futuro S.p.A. (Italy; 99.99%); DMG Trust Bank Ltd. (Japan; 95%); DB Finance (Luxembourg) S.A. (99.92%); DB Re S.A. (Luxembourg); Deutsche Bank Luxembourg S.A.; Deutsche Bank (Malaysia) Berhad; Deutsche Bank de Bary N.V. (Netherlands); Deutsche New Zealand Ltd. (99.99%); Deutsche Bank Polska Spólka Akcyjna (Poland); Deutsche Bank (Portugal), S.A.; Deutsche Bank OOO (Russia); DB (Asia Pacific) Training Centre Pte. Ltd. (Singapore); Deutsche Bank Asia Pacific Holdings Pte. Ltd. (Singapore); Deutsche Capital Singapore Ltd.; Deutsche Bank, Sociedad Anónima Española (Spain; 99.63%); Deutsche Bank (Suisse) S.A. (Switzerland); DB Equity Ltd. (U.K.); DB Investments (GB) Ltd. (U.K.); Deutsche Morgan Grenfall Group plc (U.K.); Morgan Grenfell & Co. Ltd. (U.K.); Deutsche Sharps Pixley Metals Ltd. (U.K.); Deutsche Bank Financial Inc. (U.S.A.); Deutsche Sharps Pixley Metals Inc. (U.S.A.); Taunus Corp. (U.S.A.); Bankers Trust Corp. (U.S.A.); Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown LLC (U.S.A.).

Principal Operating Units

Corporate and Investment Bank; Private Clients and Asset Management.

Principal Competitors

Dresdner Bank AG; Bayerische Hypo- und Vereinsbank Aktiegesellschaft; Commerzbank AG; Goldman Sachs Group Inc.; Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.; J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.; Credit Suisse First Boston; Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co.; HSBC Holdings plc; UBS AG; Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale; Landesbank Baden-Württemberg; Bankgesellschaft Berlin AG; DG BANK Deutsche Genossenschaftsbank AG; Kreditanstalt für Wiederaubau; Bayerische Landesbank Girozentrale.

Further Reading

'Allianz and Deutsche: And They Lived Unhappily Ever After,' Economist, April 1989, p. 90.

Ball, Robert, 'A Two-Headed Bank Nibbles at the United States,' Fortune, August 24, 1981, pp. 102+.

Beckett, Paul, 'Deal Is Likely to Take Deutsche Bank on Bumpy Ride: Integrating Bankers Trust into Fold Could Be Most Difficult Challenge,' Wall Street Journal, November 27, 1998, p. B4.

Brady, Simon, 'Deutsche Makes Its Mark,' Euromoney, June 1992, pp. 24-28.

Brierley, David, 'Corporate Revolution in the Air As Deutsche Moves to London,' European, July 21, 1995, p. 17.

Carey, David, 'Under Siege,' Financial World, March 7, 1989, pp. 64+.

Coleman, Brian, and Dagmar Aalund, 'Deutsche Bank to Cash Out of Industrial Stakes,' Wall Street Journal, December 16, 1998, p. A17.

'The Competitive Spirit of Deutsche Bank,' Euromoney, July 1983, pp. 22+.

Delamaide, Darrell, 'The Deutsche Bank Juggernaut Will Keep on Rolling,' Euromoney, January 1990, p. 32.

'Deutsche Makes Its Pan-European Move,' European Banker, September 22, 2000.

'Deutsche's Wayward Wunderkind,' Economist, September 14, 1996, pp. 76-78.

Duyn, Aline van, 'A Truly Universal Bank,' Euromoney, September 1994, p. C30.

Fairlamb, David, 'Vorstandsdammerung?,' Institutional Investor, December 1995, pp. 50+.

Fairlamb, David, and Stanley Reed, 'Damage Control at Deutsche: The Failed Dresdner Deal Leaves German Banking in Turmoil,' Business Week, April 17, 2000, pp. 150-51.

Fallon, Padraic, 'The Battle Plans of Hilmar Kopper,' Euromoney, January 1994, p. 28.

Fisher, Andrew, 'Tough Guy at the Bank,' Financial Times, November 21, 1994, p. FTS4.

Fuhrman, Peter, 'A Faster Ship in a Richer Sea,' Forbes, November 26, 1990, pp. 40-41.

Gall, Lothar, 'Hermann Josef Abs and the Third Reich: `A Man for All Seasons,'?' Financial History Review 6, 1999, part 2, pp. 147-200.

Gall, Lothar, et al., Die Deutsche Bank, 1870-1995, Munich: Beck, 1995, 1,014 p.

'The German Example: Three Rich, Powerful Banks Dominate the Economy,' Business Week, April 19, 1976, p. 89.

Grant, Charles, 'Sturm und Drang at Deutsche Bank,' Euromoney, October 1985, pp. 126+.

Greenhouse, Steven, 'Deutsche Bank's Bigger Reach,' New York Times, July 30, 1989.

Grigsby, Jefferson, 'Deutsche Bank uber Alles,' Financial World, May 15, 1990, pp. 42-43.

Gumbel, Peter, 'Humbled Giant: Long Highly Praised, Deutsche Bank Finds Itself in Some Trouble,' Wall Street Journal, November 16, 1995, pp. A1+.

Guyon, Janet, 'The Emperor and the Investment Bankers: How Deutsche Lost Dresdner,' Fortune, May 1, 2000, pp. 134-36, 138, 140.

------, 'Why Deutsche Is Banking on Debt,' Fortune, January 11, 1999, p. 90.

'Herr Dobson's Fishing Trip,' Economist, May 11, 1996, pp. 67-68.

'Herrhausen's Last Deal,' Economist, December 2, 1989, pp. 87+.

James, Harold, The Deutsche Bank and the Nazi Economic War Against the Jews, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001, 254 p.

Kantrow, Yvette, 'John Rolls' Grand Plan,' Investment Dealers' Digest, August 29, 1994.

Kopper, Christopher, Zwischen Marktwirtschaft und Dirigismus: Bankenpolitik im 'Dritten Reich,' 1933-1939, Bonn: Bouvier, 1995, 400 p.

Kopper, Christopher, Manfred Pohl, and Angelika Raab-Rebentisch, Stationen, Frankfurt: W. Kramer, 1995, 111 p.

Kraus, James R., 'Changing to Make Its Mark,' American Banker, September 20, 1994.

Miller, Karen Lowry, 'Fixing Deutsche Bank,' Business Week, July 19, 1999, pp. 56-58.

Muehring, Kevin, 'The Kopper Era at Deutsche Bank,' Institutional Investor, December 1990, pp. 136-39.

'New Dreams at Deutsche Bank: Germany's Grandest Bank Has a New Vision of Its Future--A Rather More Modest One Than in the Past,' Economist, June 22, 1991, pp. 79-81.

Norman, Peter, 'Deutsche Bank Looking Abroad As West German Market Shrinks,' Wall Street Journal, September 3, 1985.

Pluenneke, John E., John Templeman, and William Glasgall, 'Deutsche Bank Makes a Bid to Become All Europe's Banker,' Business Week, December 22, 1986, p. 34.

Quint, Michael, 'German Giant's Big U.S. Plans,' New York Times, May 22, 1989, p. D1.

Reich, Cary, 'Wilfried Guth, Chairman, Deutsche Bank,' Institutional Investor, June 1987, pp. 398+.

Rescigno, Richard, 'The View from Deutsche Bank,' Barron's, November 18, 1991, pp. 8-12.

Rhoads, Christopher, 'Behind the Books: Holzmann's Woes Can't All Be Tagged on Former Managers,' Wall Street Journal Europe, December 21, 1999.

------, 'Deutsche Bank Discloses Involvement in the Financing of Nazi Death Camp,' Wall Street Journal, February 5, 1999, p. A13.

------, 'Deutsche Bank Probably Knew Nazi Gold's Source, Report Says,' Wall Street Journal, August 3, 1998, p. A11.

------, 'Deutsche Bank to Give BT `No Autonomy,' Wall Street Journal, December 1, 1998, p. A3.

------, 'Making It Work: Deutsche Bank Does What They Said Couldn't Be Done--Purchase of Bankers Trust Starting to Pay Off for World's Biggest Bank,' Wall Street Journal Europe, November 18, 1999.

Roth, Terence, and Michael R. Sesit, 'Leading Lender: As East Bloc Changes, Deutsche Bank Is Set to Play a Bigger Role,' Wall Street Journal, November 24, 1989.

Seidenzahl, Fritz, 100 Jahre Deutsche Bank, 1870-1970, Frankfurt: J. Weisbecker, 1970, 457 p.

Shirreff, David, 'Deutsche's Anglo-Saxon Gamble,' Euromoney, January 1995, pp. 24+.

Steinberg, Jonathan, The Deutsche Bank and Its Gold Transactions During the Second World War, Munich: Beck, 1999, 176 p.

Steinmetz, Greg, 'Fiscal Accounting: A German Historian Probes Nazi-Era Deeds of His Father's Bank,' Wall Street Journal, October 16, 1997, pp. A1+.

Steinmetz, Greg, and Silvia Ascarelli, 'Deutsche Bank Chairman Kopper Resigns,' Wall Street Journal, October 31, 1996, p. A18.

Templeman, John, 'Deutsche Bank Makes a Bid for Global Power,' Business Week, March 28, 1988, pp. 78+.

Templeman, John, et al., 'Deutsche Bank's Big Gamble,' Business Week, October 14, 1996, pp. 122, 124.

Walker, Marcus, 'Deutsche Bank Shuffles Its Management,' Wall Street Journal, January 26, 2001, p. A10.

------, 'Deutsche Bank to Reorganize, Cutting Number of Divisions to Two,' Wall Street Journal, December 5, 2000, p. A21.

Zweig, Phillip L., 'Deutsche Bank Goes on the Attack,' Business Week, July 17, 1995, pp. 83-84.

— Update: David E. Salamie


Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Deutsche Bank

Top
Deutsche Bank AG
Type Aktiengesellschaft
Traded as FWBDBK, NYSEDB
Industry Financial services
Founded 1870
Headquarters Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Area served Worldwide
Key people Josef Ackermann (CEO and chairman of the management board), Clemens Börsig (Chairman of the supervisory board)
Products Investment, commercial, retail and private banking, asset management
Revenue 33.2 billion (2011)[1]
Profit €4.3 billion (2011)[1]
Total assets €2.164 trillion (end 2011)[1]
Total equity €2.4 billion (end 2011)[1]
Employees 102,060 (FTE, end 2010)[2]
Website www.db.com

Deutsche Bank AG (literally "German Bank"; pronounced [ˈdɔʏtʃə ˈbaŋk]) is a global banking and financial services company with its headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany. It employs more than 100,000 people in over 70 countries, and has a large presence in Europe, the Americas, Asia Pacific and the emerging markets. Deutsche Bank is the largest foreign exchange dealer in the world with a market share of 21 percent.[3]

Deutsche Bank has offices in major financial centers including New York, London, Frankfurt, Paris, Moscow, Amsterdam, Dublin, George Town, Cayman Islands, Toronto, São Paulo, Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Sydney, Dubai, Riyadh and Mumbai.

The bank offers financial products and services for corporate and institutional clients along with private and business clients. Services include sales, trading, research and origination of debt and equity; mergers and acquisitions (M&A); risk management products, such as derivatives, corporate finance, wealth management, retail banking, fund management, and transaction banking.[4]

Deutsche Bank’s Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Group Executive Committee is Josef Ackermann since May 2002. He agreed at the end of 2009 to continue as chief executive of Deutsche Bank for another three years until 2013.[5] On July 26, 2011, along with its second quarter earnings report, Deutsche Bank reported that Anshu Jain, head of investment banking and Jürgen Fitschen, head of the German business, will replace Josef Ackermann as co-CEOs starting next year.[6] Fears that Deutsche Bank could neglect its German roots and expand risk-taking activities prompted key members of the supervisory board to opt for the dual CEO model.[7] Deutsche Bank is listed on both the Frankfurt (FWB) and New York stock exchanges (NYSE).

Contents

History

The Deutsche Bank Twin Towers, the headquarters of Deutsche Bank, in the banking district of Frankfurt
Deutsche Bank, Sydney

1870-1919

Deutsche Bank was founded in Berlin in 1870 as a specialist bank for foreign trade.[8] The bank's statute was adopted on 22 January 1870, and on 10 March 1870 the Prussian government granted it a banking license. The statute laid great stress on foreign business: "The object of the company is to transact banking business of all kinds, in particular to promote and facilitate trade relations between Germany, other European countries and overseas markets."[9]

The bank's first domestic branches, inaugurated in 1871 and 1872, were opened in Bremen[10] and Hamburg.[11] Its first foray overseas came shortly afterwards, in Shanghai[12] (1872) and London[13] (1873). Already, at this early stage, the bank was looking further afield, making investments in North and South America, Asia, and Turkey.

Major projects in the early years of the bank included the Northern Pacific Railroad in the US[14] and the Baghdad Railway[15] (1888). In Germany, the bank was instrumental in the financing of bond offerings of steel company Krupp (1879) and introduced the chemical company Bayer to the Berlin stock market.

Deutsche Bank's early decades were a period of rapid expansion. Issuing business began to grow in importance in the 1880s, and in the 1890s it really took off. The bank played a major part in the development of Germany's electrical-engineering industry, but it also gained a strong foothold in iron and steel. A solid base in Germany permitted the financing of business abroad, which in some cases kept the bank occupied for years, the best-known example being the Baghdad Railway.

The second half of the 1890s saw the beginning of a new period of expansion at Deutsche Bank. The bank formed alliances with large regional banks, giving itself an entrée into Germany's main industrial regions. Joint ventures were symptomatic of the concentration then under way in the German banking industry. For Deutsche Bank, domestic branches of its own were still something of a rarity at the time; the Frankfurt branch[16] dated from 1886 and the Munich branch from 1892, while further branches were established in Dresden and Leipzig[17] in 1901.

In addition, the bank rapidly perceived the value of specialist institutions for the promotion of foreign business. Gentle pressure from the Foreign Ministry played a part in the establishment of Deutsche Ueberseeische Bank[18] in 1886 and the stake taken in the newly established Deutsch-Asiatische Bank[19] three years later, but the success of those companies in showed that their existence made sound commercial sense.

When in spring 1914 the "Frankfurter Zeitung" told its readers that Deutsche Bank was "the biggest bank in the world",Frankfurter Zeitung, Erstes Morgenblatt, 5 March 1914. The claim marked the highpoint but at the same time the end of an era. During World War I, the source of the visionary vigor that had driven many a determined company to succeed gradually dried up.

1919-1933

The immediate postwar period was a time of liquidations. Having already lost most of its foreign assets, Deutsche Bank was obliged to sell other holdings. A great deal of energy went into shoring up what had been achieved. But there was new business, too, some of which was to have an impact for a long time to come. The bank played a significant role in the establishment of the film production company, UFA, and the merger of Daimler and Benz.

The bank merged with other local banks in 1929 to create Deutsche Bank und DiscontoGesellschaft, at that point the biggest ever merger in German banking history. Increasing costs were one reason for the merger. Another was the trend towards concentration throughout the industry in the 1920s. The merger came at just the right time to help counteract the emerging world economic and banking crisis. In 1937, the company name changed back to Deutsche Bank.

The crisis was, in terms of its political impact, the most disastrous economic event of the century. The shortage of liquidity that paralyzed the banks was fuelled by a combination of short-term foreign debt and borrowers no longer able to pay their debts, while the inflexibility of the state exacerbated the situation. For German banks, the crisis in the industry was a watershed. A return to circumstances that might in some ways have been considered reminiscent of the "golden age" before World War I was ruled out for many years.

1933-1945

After Adolf Hitler came to power, instituting the Third Reich, Deutsche Bank dismissed its three Jewish board members in 1933. In subsequent years Deutsche Bank took part in the aryanization of Jewish-owned businesses: according to its own historians, the bank was involved in 363 such confiscations by November 1938.[20] During the war, Deutsche Bank incorporated other banks that fell into German hands during the occupation of Eastern Europe. Deutsche provided banking facilities for the Gestapo and loaned the funds used to build the Auschwitz camp and the nearby IG Farben facilities. Deutsche Bank revealed its involvement in Auschwitz in February 1999.[21] In December 1999 Deutsche, along with other major German companies, contributed to a $5.2 billion compensation fund following lawsuits brought by Holocaust survivors.[22][23] The history of Deutsche Bank during the Second World War has been documented by independent historians commissioned by the Bank.[20]

During World War II, Deutsche Bank became responsible for managing the Bohemian Union Bank in Prague, with branches in the Protectorate and in Slovakia, the Bankverein in Yugoslavia (which has now been divided into two financial corporations, one in Serbia and one in Croatia), the Albert de Barry Bank in Amsterdam, the National Bank of Greece in Athens, the Creditanstalt-Bankverein in Austria and Hungary, the Deutsch-Bulgarische Kreditbank in Bulgaria, and Banca Commercial Romana in Bucharest. It also maintained a branch in Istanbul, Turkey.

Post-WWII

Following Germany's defeat in World War II, the Allied authorities, in 1948, ordered Deutsche Bank's break-up into ten regional banks. These 10 regional banks were later consolidated into three major banks in 1952: Norddeutsche Bank AG; Süddeutsche Bank AG; and Rheinisch-Westfälische Bank AG. In 1957, these three banks merged to form Deutsche Bank AG with its headquarters in Frankfurt.

In 1959, the bank entered retail banking by introducing small personal loans. In the 1970s, the bank pushed ahead with international expansion, opening new offices in new locations, such as Milan (1977), Moscow, London, Paris and Tokyo. In the 1980s, this continued when the bank paid US$603 million in 1986 to acquire Banca d’America e d’Italia, the Italian subsidiary that Bank of America had established in 1922 when it acquired Banca dell'Italia Meridionale. The acquisition represented the first time Deutsche Bank had acquired a sizeable branch network in another European country.

In 1989, the first steps towards creating a significant investment-banking presence were taken with the acquisition of Morgan Grenfell, a UK-based investment bank. By the mid-1990s, the build up of a capital-markets operation had got under way with the arrival of a number of high-profile figures from major competitors. Ten years after the acquisition of Morgan Grenfell, the U.S. firm Bankers Trust was added.

Deutsche continued to build up its presence in Italy with the acquisition in 1993 of Banca Popolare di Lecco from Banca Popolare di Novara for about US$476 million.

In October 2001, Deutsche Bank was listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). This was the first NYSE listing after interruption due to 9/11. The following year, Deutsche Bank strengthened its U.S. presence when it purchased Scudder Investments. Meanwhile, in Europe, Deutsche Bank increased its private-banking business by acquiring Rued Blass & Cie (2002) and the Russian investment bank United Financial Group (2006). In Germany, further acquisitions of Norisbank, Berliner Bank and Postbank strengthened Deutsche Bank’s retail offering in its home market. This series of acquisitions was closely aligned with the bank’s strategy of bolt-on acquisitions in preference to so-called “transformational” mergers. These formed part of an overall growth strategy that also targeted a sustainable 25% return on equity, something the bank achieved in 2005.

Spying scandal

From as late as 2001 to at least 2007, the Bank engaged in covert espionage on its critics. The bank has admitted to episodes of spying in 2001 and 2007 directed by its corporate security department, although characterizing them as "isolated."[24] According to the Wall Street Journal's page one report, Deutsche Bank had prepared a list of names of 20 people who it wished investigated for criticism of the bank, including Michael Bohndorf (an activist investor in the bank) and Leo Kirch (a former media executive in litigation with bank).[24] Also targeted was the Munich law firm of Bub Gauweiler & Partner, which represents Kirch. According to the Wall Street Journal, the bank's legal department was involved in the scheme along with its corporate security department.[24] The bank has since hired Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, a New York law firm, to investigate the incidents on its behalf. The Cleary firm has concluded its investigation and submitted its report, which however has not been made public.[24] According to the Wall Street Journal, the Cleary firm uncovered a plan by which Deutsche Bank was to infiltrate the Bub Gauweiler firm by having a bank "mole" hired as an intern at the Bub Gauweiler firm. The plan was allegedly cancelled after the intern was hired but before she started work.[24] Peter Gauweiler, a principal at the targeted law firm, was quoted as saying "I expect the appropriate authorities including state prosecutors and the bank's oversight agencies will conduct a full investigation."[24]

In May 2009 Deutsche Bank informed the public that the executive management learned about possible violations which occurred in past years of the bank's internal procedures or legal requirements in connection with activities involving the bank's corporate security department. Deutsche Bank immediately retained the law firm Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton in Frankfurt to conduct an independent investigation[25] and informed the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin). The principal findings by the law firm, published in July 2009,[26] are as follows: Four incidents that raise legal issues such as data protection or privacy concerns have been identified. In all incidents, the activities arose out of certain mandates performed by external service providers on behalf of the Bank's Corporate Security Department. The incidents were isolated and no systemic misbehaviour has been found. And there is no indication that present members of the Management Board have been involved in any activity that raise legal issues or have had any knowledge of such activities.[26] This has been confirmed by the Public Prosecutor’s Office in Frankfurt in October 2009.[27] Deutsche Bank has informed all persons affected by the aforementioned activities and expressed its sincere regrets. BaFin found deficiencies in operations within Deutsche Bank’s security unit in Germany but found no systemic misconduct by the bank.[28] The Bank has initiated steps to strengthen controls for the mandating of external service providers by its Corporate Security Department and their activities.[26]

Housing credit bubble and CDO market

Internal email from 2005 describing Deutsche CDO traders view of the bubble

Deutsche Bank was one of the major drivers of the collateralized debt obligation (CDO) market during the housing credit bubble from 2004–2008, creating ~$32,000,000,000 worth. The 2011 US Senate Permanent Select Committee on Investigations report on Wall Street and the Financial Crisis analyzed Deutsche Bank as a 'case study' of investment banking involvement in the mortgage bubble, CDO market, credit crunch, and recession. It concluded that even as the market was collapsing in 2007, and its top global CDO trader was deriding the CDO market and betting against some of the mortgage bonds in its CDOs, Deutsche bank continued to churn out bad CDO products to investors.[29]

The report focused on one CDO, Gemstone VII, made largely of mortgages from Long Beach, Fremont, and New Century, all notorious subprime lenders. Deutsche Bank put risky assets into the CDO, like ACE 2006-HE1 M10, which its own traders thought was a bad bond. It also put in some mortgage bonds that its own mortgage department had created but couldn't sell, from the DBALT 2006 series. The CDO was then aggressively marketed as a good product, with most of it being described as having A level ratings. By 2009 the entire CDO was almost worthless and the investors (including Deutsche Bank itself) had lost most of their money.[29]

Gregg Lippman, head of global CDO trading, was betting against the CDO market, with approval of management, even as Deutsche was continuing to churn out product. He was a large character in Michael Lewis' "The Big Short", which detailed his efforts to find 'shorts' to buy Credit Default Swaps for the construction of Synthetic CDOs. He was one of the first traders to foresee the bubble in the CDO market as well as the tremendous potential that CDS offered in this. As portrayed in the book "The Big Short" of Michael Lewis, Lipmann in the mid of the CDO and MBS frenzy was orchestrating presentations to investors, demonstrating his bearish view of the market, offering them the idea to start buying CDS, especially to AIG in order to profit from the forthcoming collapse. As regards the Gemstone VII deal, even as Deutsche was creating and selling it to investors, Lippman emailed colleagues that it 'blew', and he called parts of it 'crap' and 'pigs' and advised some of his clients to bet against the mortgage securities it was made of. Lippman called the CDO market a 'ponzi scheme', but also tried to conceal some of his views from certain other parties because the bank was trying to sell the products he was calling 'crap'. Lippman's group made money off of these bets, even as Deutsche overall lost money on the CDO market.[29]

Deutsche was also involved with Magnetar Capital in creating its first Orion CDO. Deutsche had its own group of bad CDOs called START. It worked with Elliot Advisers on one of them; Elliot bet against the CDO even as Deutsche sold parts of the CDO to investors as good investments. Deutsche also worked with John Paulson, of the Goldman Sachs Abacus CDO controversy, to create some START CDOs. Deutsche lost money on START, as it did on Gemstone.[29]

Performance

Year 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003
Net Income €4.3bn €2.3bn €5.0bn €-3.9bn €6.5bn €6.1bn €3.5bn €2.5bn €1.4bn
Revenues €33.2bn €28.6bn €28.0bn €13.5bn €30.7bn €28.5bn €25.6bn €21.9bn €21.3bn
Return on Equity - 5% 18% -29% 30% 26% 16% 1% 7%
Dividend - 0.75 0.75 0.5 4.5 4.0 2.5 1.7 1.5

Deutsche Bank has been transformed over the past five years, moving from a German-centric organisation that was renowned for its retail and commercial presence to a global investment bank that is less reliant on its traditional markets for its profitability.

The bank has been widely recognized for this change and was named International Financing Review's Bank of the Year twice in a three year period, in 2003 and 2005. It has also won the prize in 2010.

For the 2008 financial year, Deutsche Bank reported its first annual loss in five decades.[citation needed], despite receiving billions of dollars from its insurance arrangements with AIG, including $11.8bn from funds provided by US taxpayers to bail out AIG.[30]

October 2011: Based on a preliminary estimation from the European Banking Authority (EBA), Deutsche Bank AG needs to raise capital about 1.2 billion euros ($1.7 billion) as part of a required 9 percent core Tier 1 ratio after sovereign debt writedown starting in mid-2012.[31]

Management Structure

Until recently, there was no CEO at Deutsche Bank. The board was represented by a “speaker of the board.” Today, Deutsche Bank has a Management Board whose members are: Josef Ackermann (Chairman and CEO); Hugo Bänziger (Chief Risk Officer); Anshu Jain (Corporate and Investment Banking); Jürgen Fitschen (Regional Management); Rainer Neske (Private & Business Clients); Hermann-Josef Lamberti (Chief Operating Officer) and Stefan Krause (Chief Financial Officer).

The Group Executive Committee is the Management Board plus the heads of the bank’s other business areas, namely: Kevin Parker (Asset Management); and Pierre de Weck (Private Wealth Management).

The Supervisory Board of the bank is chaired by Clemens Börsig.

Structure

The New York Stock Exchange on August 9, 2011, when Deutsche Bank's db-X Group commenced trading on NYSE Arca.

Deutsche Bank’s mission statement is: “We compete to be the leading global provider of financial solutions, creating lasting value for our clients, our shareholders, our people and the communities in which we operate” The bank’s business model rests on two pillars: the Corporate & Investment Bank (CIB) and Private Clients & Asset Management (PCAM).

CIB

In little over a decade,[when?] Deutsche Bank’s Corporate and Investment Bank (CIB) has established itself as one of the world’s leading investment banking houses.[citation needed] CIB comprises the bank’s market-leading Global Markets and Global Banking Divisions.

Until recently,[when?] Global Markets contributed a major slice of Deutsche Bank’s profitability and revenues. The business sells and trades debt and equity, derivatives, and other innovative products.[which?] Global Markets’ prowess in bond markets, foreign exchange and derivatives has brought many awards and accolades over the past five years.

However, from 2004/5 Deutsche Bank embarked on a programme of cost reduction, initially axing 6,400 jobs in London, Frankfurt and elsewhere.[32] In November 2008, acting in response to the credit crisis, the Bank announced a further staff reduction, axing 1 in 7 of its traders, a loss of 900 jobs, mainly in London and New York.[33]

Global Banking comprises a major Merger & Acquisitions (M&A) practice that has grown significantly over the past five years. In 2007, the bank’s M&A business, in competition with banks and institutions with long-standing and well-established M&A reputations, made further strides in building a world-class franchise. Global Banking also includes a global capital markets business that has a significant and innovative presence in the European initial public offering, equity, debt and high-yield markets. Coverage of clients is also housed in Global Banking.

Global Transaction Banking, which forms part of Global Banking, deals with cash management, clearing, trade finance and trust & securities services. This business has grown fivefold in recent years and as of 2010 has become an industry leader. Deutsche Bank has won numerous awards for the quality of its transaction banking service, especially in the area of cash management. It is now one of the largest divisions of the Bank ranked by IBIT.

CIB’s clients are mainly private and public sector institutions, including sovereign states, supranational bodies, global and multinational companies and medium-sized and small businesses.

PCAM

Private Clients & Asset Management (PCAM) is composed of Private Wealth Management, Private & Business Clients and Asset Management. This trio of business divisions include Deutsche Bank’s investment management business for private and institutional clients, together with retail banking activities for private clients and small and medium-sized businesses.

Private Wealth Management

Private Wealth Management functions as the bank’s private banking arm, serving high net worth individuals and families worldwide. The division has a strong presence in the world's private banking hotspots, including Switzerland, Luxembourg, the Channel Islands, the Caymans and Dubai.

Communication

Early understanding of modern communication tools has contributed to create the international recognition Deutsche Bank enjoys As of 2010. In 1972 the bank created the world-known blue logo "Slash in a Square" - designed by Anton Stankowski and intended to represent growth within a risk-controlled framework.[34]

Acquisitions

Notable current and former employees

Public service

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Deutsche Bank reported net income of EUR 4.3 billion for the full year 2011". Deutsche Bank. http://www.db.com/medien/en/content/3862_4016.htm. Retrieved 2 February 2011. 
  2. ^ ""AR2010"". Deutsche Bank. http://www.db.com/ir/en/download/Deutsche_Bank_Annual_Report_2010_entire.pdf. Retrieved 2 February 2012. 
  3. ^ Börsen-Zeitung (German financial paper) of May 22, 2009.
  4. ^ Fins.com. "Deutsche Bank AG Overview". http://www.fins.com/Finance/Companies/3078/Deutsche-Bank-AG. Retrieved 2010-07-12. 
  5. ^ Ackermann to stay as Deutsche Bank CEO until 2013 AFX News
  6. ^ Ewing, Jack (2011-07-26). "Deutsche Bank Posts Disappointing Profit - NYTimes.com". Dealbook.nytimes.com. http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/07/26/its-leaders-chosen-deutsche-reports-flat-profit/. Retrieved 2011-08-17. 
  7. ^ "Deutsche Bank names Anshu Jain, Juergen Fitschen to become co-CEOs". Economictimes.indiatimes.com. 2011-07-26. http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international-business/Deutsche-Bank-names-Anshu-Jain-Juergen-Fitschen-to-become-co-CEOs/articleshow/9364591.cms. Retrieved 2011-08-17. 
  8. ^ For the history of Deutsche Bank in general see Lothar Gall (et al.), The Deutsche Bank 1870-1995, London (Weidenfeld & Nicolson) 1995.
  9. ^ Statut der Deutschen Bank Aktien-Gesellschaft, Berlin 1870, p.3-4.
  10. ^ Manfred Pohl / Angelika Raab-Rebentisch, Die Deutsche Bank in Bremen 1871-1996, Munich, Zurich (Piper) 1996.
  11. ^ Manfred Pohl / Angelika Raab-Rebentisch, Die Deutsche Bank in Hamburg 1872-1997, Munich, Zurich (Piper) 1997.
  12. ^ Deutsche Bank in China, Munich (Piper) 2008.
  13. ^ Manfred Pohl / Kathleen Burk, Deutsche Bank in London 1873-1998, Munich, Zurich (Piper) 1998.
  14. ^ Christopher Kobrak, Banking on Global Markets. Deutsche Bank and the United States, 1870 to the Present, New York (Cambridge University Press) 2008.
  15. ^ A Century of Deutsche Bank in Turkey, Istanbul 2008, pp.21-27.
  16. ^ Historische Gesellschaft der Deutschen Bank (ed.), Die Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt am Main, Munich, Zurich (Piper) 2005.
  17. ^ Manfred Pohl / Angelika Raab-Rebentisch, Die Deutsche Bank in Leipzig 1901-2001, Munich, Zurich (Piper) 2001.
  18. ^ Manfred Pohl, Deutsche Bank Buenos Aires 1887-1987, Mainz (v. Hase & Koehler) 1987.
  19. ^ Maximilian Müller-Jabusch, 50 Jahre Deutsch-Asiatische Bank 1890-1939, Berlin 1940.
  20. ^ a b History[dead link]
  21. ^ Schmid, John. Deutsche Bank Linked To Auschwitz Funding, The New York Times, February 5, 1999. Accessed January 28, 2010.
  22. ^ "$5.2 Billion German Settlement". Web.archive.org. 2004-12-15. http://web.archive.org/web/20041215182317/treasurer.ca.gov/holocaust/germanbank.htm. Retrieved 2011-08-17. 
  23. ^ For a detailed account of Deutsche Bank's involvement with the Nazis see: Harold James. The Nazi Dictatorship and the Deutsche Bank. Cambridge University Press, 2004, 296pp., ISBN 0-521-83874-6.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Crawford, David; Karnitschnig, Matthew. Bank Spy Scandal Widens, The Wall Street Journal, August 3, 2009. Accessed January 27, 2010.
  25. ^ Deutsche Bank undertakes independent investigation, May 22, 2009. Accessed January 28, 2010.
  26. ^ a b c Deutsche Bank gives update on inquiries, July 22, 2009. Accessed January 27, 2010.
  27. ^ Press release Public Prosecutor's Office in Frankfurt, October 8, 2009. Accessed October 14, 2010.
  28. ^ Deutsche Bank Probe Finds Individual Misconduct, The Wall Street Journal, December 18, 2009. Accessed October 14, 2010.
  29. ^ a b c d Levin-Coburn report on WALL STREET AND THE FINANCIAL CRISIS, US Senate PERMANENT SUBCOMMITTEE ON INVESTIGATIONS, 2011 Apr 13
  30. ^ Javers, Eamon. AIG ships billions in bailout abroad, Politico, March 15, 2009. Accessed January 27, 2010.
  31. ^ "Deutsche Bank Said to Be Ordered by EU to Close $1.7 Billion Capital Gap". October 28, 2011. http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-28/deutsche-bank-said-told-to-close-1-2-billion-euro-capital-gap?category=%2Fnews%2Fbonds%2F. 
  32. ^ Gow, David. Deutsche Bank cuts 6,400 jobs, The Guardian, February 4, 2005. Accessed January 27, 2010.
  33. ^ Halstrick, Philipp. Deutsche Bank to axe one in seven traders, Reuters, November 19, 2008. Accessed January 27, 2010.
  34. ^ "Deutsche Bank Logo: Design and History". http://www.famouslogos.us/deutsche-bank-logo/. Retrieved 2011-08-18. 
  35. ^ "Acquisition of Bankers Trust Successfully Closed". Deutsche-bank.de. http://www.deutsche-bank.de/ir/en/index.html?contentOverload=http://www.deutsche-bank.de/ir/en/releases_766.shtml&loadFlash=/ir/en/1613.html. Retrieved 2011-08-17. 
  36. ^ Deutsche Bank to acquire RREEF for $490 million. National Real Estate Investor, Mar 7, 2002
  37. ^ "interstitials | Business solutions from". AllBusiness.com. http://www.allbusiness.com/operations/facilities-commercial-real-estate/4411750-1.html. Retrieved 2011-08-17. 
  38. ^ "Acquisition of Chapel Funding". Deutsche-bank.de. 2006-09-12. http://www.deutsche-bank.de/presse/en/content/press_releases_2006_3175.htm?month=4. Retrieved 2011-08-17. 
  39. ^ "Acquisition of MortgageIT Holdings". Deutsche-bank.de. 2011-07-28. http://www.deutsche-bank.de/ir/index.html?contentOverload=http://www.deutsche-bank.de/ir/releases_3015.shtml&loadFlash=/ir/1613.html. Retrieved 2011-08-17. 
  40. ^ http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/601c6480-f94b-11df-a4a5-00144feab49a.html#axzz1Y0Sn9ThD

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