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While the segmental performances are not impressive, apart from the Corporate and Investment Bank divisions, a rise in overall net revenues supports Deutsche Bank's (DB) Q4 earnings.
Market hopes for big cuts this year are unlikely to pan out, Deutsche Bank wrote. Today's economy is similar to 1995, when cuts came in below market predictions.
Deutsche Bank (DB) came out with quarterly earnings of $0.72 per share, beating the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $0.37 per share. This compares to earnings of $0.35 per share a year ago.
Deutsche Bank is cutting about 3,500 back office positions as it seeks to rein in costs even after reporting its highest profit before tax in the last 16 years.
Deutsche Bank on Thursday said it plans to slash 3,500 jobs after reporting a 30% drop in fourth-quarter profit that included heavy losses in its US real estate holdings. The layoffs come after the German banking giant hired 300 front-office staffers in the three-month period ended Dec.
Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB ) is among today's top trending stocks for multiple reasons. First off, the German banking giant recently reported impressive fourth-quarter earnings, blowing past Wall Street estimates.
Deutsche Bank CFO James von Moltke discusses the outlook for shareholder payouts, the performance of the firm's trading unit, and the interest-rate environment. "It's certainly our aim to to pass along a significant amount of the of the additional capital we found in our outlook," von Moltke said during an interview with Bloomberg's Oliver Crook.
Deutsche Bank on Wednesday reported fourth-quarter net profit of $1.4 billion, beating expectations and providing some relief for shareholders.
Deutsche Bank on Thursday posted a 30% drop in fourth-quarter profit as restructuring costs and other one-off expenses outweighed revenue gains, but the fall was not as steep as analysts feared.
Christian Nolting, global CIO of Deutsche Bank's private bank, discusses the outlook for tech stocks and his investment strategy. "I think if we see a slight correction in the market, that could be an entry point," Nolting said on Bloomberg Television.