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| Germany's biggest lender bank Deutsche Bank will slash around one in five of its workforce, an unprecedented round of departures for the bank (AFP Photo/Boris Roessler) |
Frankfurt am Main (AFP) - Germany's biggest lender Deutsche Bank said Sunday it would cut 18,000 jobs by 2022, as the former leading light of the country's financial sector looks to escape years of turmoil.
The
slashing of around one in five of its workforce, to 74,000 employees, is an
unprecedented round of departures for Deutsche.
The bank
said the layoffs would reduce annual costs by six billion euros ($6.7 billion)
over the same period.
"Today
we have announced the most fundamental transformation of Deutsche Bank in
decades," chief executive Christian Sewing said, dubbing the scheme
"a restart for Deutsche Bank".
The lender
did not immediately make clear where the axe would fall.
But with
executives looking to find synergies in the integration of subsidiary Postbank
and central infrastructure roles, many jobs are likely to go in home country
Germany.
The new
round of job cuts comes on top of some 6,000 already carried out over the past
yer.
Bosses expect
the restructuring plan to sap second-quarter results by some three billion
euros this year, making for a net loss of 2.8 billion.
Over the
whole year, Deutsche is likely to plunge back into the red after a brief
flirtation with profitability in 2018.
The bank
does not plan to pay out dividends this year or next.
Last
chance?
The
restructuring could be a last chance for Deutsche after much-hyped merger talks
with crosstown rival Commerzbank fell through earlier this year.
Negotiations
collapsed despite the backing of the finance ministry in Berlin, which feared
seeing a vital link in the financing of the country's economy bought up from
abroad.
Over the
past four years, the firm's market capitalisation has fallen by 75 percent,
making it a potential target for takeovers by bigger fish.
As markets
closed Friday, Deutsche was worth 15 billion euros ($17 billion), placing it
firmly at the back of the pack in a European industry dominated by the likes of
HSBC (165 billion euros), Spain's Banco Santander (69 billion) and France's BNP
Paribas (54 billion).
"Deutsche
plays in the first division, and should lay the foundations for things to stay
that way" over the weekend, urged economy minister Peter Altmaier in the
tabloid-style Bild's Sunday edition.
Since he
took the helm in early 2018, Sewing has attempted to refocus the sprawling
group on stable revenue-generating business areas, including retail banking and
so-called transaction banking for businesses.
Meanwhile
Deutsche's focus has shifted from its attempt to compete with US-based global
giants back to its home turf of Germany and Europe.
Investment banking burned
In
particular, tough cuts to the former flagship investment banking unit have been
on the agenda since May.
Sunday's
announcements target the once-proud division.
Deutsche
will stop almost all share trading activity, and is in talks with France's BNP
Paribas to sell off some of its business and staff in the field.
On Friday,
Garth Ritchie, the head of Deutsche's South African investment banking unit,
was first out of the door.
The unit's
business had fallen back by 20 percent in the first quarter of 2018 alone, and
it was no longer bringing in the fat profits of former years.
Especially
in the US, it was for years plagued by lawsuits and scandals, including some
linked to the so-called "Panama Papers" leak of sensitive documents
about offshore dealings.
On top of
the rank-and-file cuts, Deutsche is also rebuilding its board, sending away
compliance chief Sylvie Matherat and two other executives.
The group
will also create a so-called "bad bank" unit to host some 74 billion
euros of low-quality assets, notably those linked to derivatives transactions
-- highly speculative financial products.
Deutsche's
woes are a microcosm of a struggling German banking sector that was once widely
envied.
Last year,
more than 32,000 jobs were cut in the industry, or 5.4 percent of the total
workforce of 565,000, according to Barkow Consulting figures.
Bosses
complain that low interest rates in the eurozone, sluggish economic growth and
competition from new online platforms are sapping their performance.

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