FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE) will post its third-consecutive annual loss in its 2017 results, defying its chief executive’s expectations of a swing to profit and highlighting the difficulty of overhauling Germany’s largest lender.
CEO John Cryan has cautioned that the bank’s turnaround would be a long, hard slog but said in July he expected a return to profit in 2017.
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The bank’s announcement took investors by surprise and its shares fell sharply, closing 5.2 percent down.“The share price reaction speaks for itself,” said a trader in Frankfurt. “Investors are disappointed.”
In March, Deutsche announced an overhaul that included integrating its Postbank retail bank with its in-house consumer bank, as well as the partial sale of its asset management business.
“If the bank performs too poorly compared with its competitors, then one would need to start another debate about the strategy,” Ingo Speich, a fund manager at Union Investment, was quoted as saying by Handelsblatt newspaper.
Speich, whose fund holds Deutsche stock, said management had about two quarters to show they were delivering an improvement.
The company has struggled to keep revenue from shrinking and experienced a 10 percent drop in the third quarter. The bank had warned that the fourth quarter could be rough and confirmed that view on Friday.
“Trading conditions in the fourth quarter 2017 were characterised by low volatility in financial markets and low levels of client activity in key businesses,” Deutsche Bank said in its statement.
Revenue at Deutsche’s cash-generating bond-trading division was expected to drop 22 percent in the fourth quarter from a year ago, the bank said.
Deutsche Bank AG15.348
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The company has been recovering from multiple legal battles, ranging from its role in the marketing of U.S. mortgage-backed securities to a so-called mirror trading scheme that could be used for money laundering.
Last year, a looming $14 billion fine from the U.S. Department of Justice had unsettled clients and investors and prompted talk of a government bailout.
The lower effective tax rate would require a revision to the valuation of deferred tax assets, causing the negative hit to Deutsche’s fourth-quarter earnings, it said, adding that it would not have any cash impact.
($1 = 0.8306 euros)
Reporting by Tom Sims; Additional reporting by Andrea Lentz and Andreas Cremer; Editing by David Goodman and Edmund Blair
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