The shock resignation of Deutsche Bank's two chief executives may offer Germany's biggest lender a fresh start but will not be a cure-all for its ills, observers said today.
Investors hailed the announcement that Deutsche Bank's co-chief executives, Anshu Jain and Juergen Fitschen, are stepping down as the European financial giant faces a wave of scandals and has failed to meet profit targets this year.
Deutsche Bank shares shot up nearly six percent higher on the Frankfurt stock exchange on the news in a generally weaker market.
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Supervisory board member Britain's John Cryan, 54, will initially take over from Jain in July as co-CEO and will then become sole chief executive after Fitschen steps down.
"Just like politicians, top executives' only capital is trust," the conservative daily Die Welt wrote. Jain's and Fitschen's "aura of integrity has been lost."
"The reputation of a bank that is so important for the German economy has reached rock bottom," said the daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
Gerhard Schick, financial expert for the environmentalist Green party said "there is at last a chance for the bank to make a fresh start."
The two CEOs have been in their current positions since 2012 and their contracts had been due to run through March 2017.
But at Deutsche Bank's annual meeting last month the two faced shareholder wrath over the string of scandals and poor profitability.
The group is mired in around 6,000 different litigation cases and was last month fined a record USD 2.5 billion (2.2 billion euros) for its involvement in an interest rate-rigging scandal.
It has also failed to meet its profit targets for this year so far.
Despite substantial efforts to cut costs and diversify, Deutsche Bank -- which employs a workforce of more than 98,000 and has annual revenues of some 32 billion euros -- continues to lag behind its Anglo-Saxon rivals.
Jain, a former star in the investment banking scene, has seen his image lose its lustre amid a string of scandals and alleged fraud that occurred at Deutsche Bank's investment division while he was in charge and which continue to cost the group money.