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Deutsche Bank to cut thousands of staff in investment bank revamp

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Reuters FRANKFURT

By Tom Sims

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Deutsche Bank will cut global staff numbers by more than 7,000 in the first major move by its new CEO to reduce costs and restore profitability after years of false starts.

Germany's biggest bank said on Thursday it would reduce global headcount to well below 90,000 from the current 97,000, with staff numbers in equities sales and trading falling by 25 percent. The bulk of those jobs are in New York and London.

After an abrupt management reshuffle last month, Deutsche Bank said it aimed to scale back its global investment bank and refocus on Europe and its home market after three consecutive years of losses. It had flagged cuts to U.S. bond trading, equities, and the business that serves hedge funds.

 

"We remain committed to our Corporate & Investment Bank and our international presence - we are unwavering in that," Chief Executive Christian Sewing said in a statement on Thursday.

"We are Europe's alternative in the international financing and capital markets business. However, we must concentrate on what we truly do well," he said.

The reductions will reduce the investment bank's leverage exposure by 100 billion euros ($117 billion), or 10 percent, with most of the cuts to take place this year, the bank said.

It didn't provide a specific number of job cuts, but a person with knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Wednesday the bank was aiming to axe 10,000 positions.

The bank said 2018 would incur restructuring costs of 800 million euros, a figure the bank had flagged last month.

The details on the bank's strategy come ahead of its annual general meeting on Thursday.

Shareholders, fed up with a languishing share price and dwindling revenues, said they would call on the bank's management to speed up the recovery process.

The shareholder meeting comes after months of turmoil for the loss-making lender.

Deutsche Bank Chairman Paul Achleitner last month abruptly replaced CEO John Cryan with Sewing amid investor complaints the bank was falling behind in executing a turnaround plan.

The bank's shares, down more than 31 percent this year, opened 0.4 percent higher.

Deutsche Bank is also under pressure from credit ratings agencies. Standard & Poor's is expected to say by the end of the month whether it will cut Deutsche Bank's rating after putting it on "credit watch" in April.

($1 = 0.8543 euros)

(Reporting by Tom Sims; Editing by Kim Coghill and Mark Potter)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: May 24 2018 | 12:48 PM IST

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