Reports
Deutsche Bank Records Highest Full-Year Profit Since 2011

Shares in the lender, which operates in multiple regions, rose yesterday. Within the private bank, revenues and business volumes rose.
Deutsche Bank
yesterday said that it had reported its highest full-year net
profit since 2011, standing at €3.4 billion ($3.78 billion) and a
rise of more than three times from the previous year, vindicating
a lender that has had to restructure and cut risk exposures.
The Frankfurt-listed group, which operates in multiple regions,
said that its fourth-quarter earnings showed pre-tax profit of
€82 million. Net profit for the full year rose more than
four-fold to €2.5 billion.
Private bank net revenues were €8.2 billion in 2021, up by 1 per
cent on a year before, or up 2 per cent if adjusted for forgone
revenues resulting from the German Federal Court of Justice (BGH)
April 2021 ruling on customer consent for pricing changes on
current accounts and the non-recurrence of a negative prior-year
impact from the sale of Postbank Systems AG.
The private bank generated business volume growth of €45 billion
in 2021, 50 per cent above its target threshold, including €23
billion in net inflows into investment products and €15 billion
in net new client loans.
In the fourth quarter, private bank net revenues were €2.0
billion, up 4 per cent. Revenues in Private Bank Germany rose 8
per cent, or were down 2 per cent if adjusted for the prior year
impact of Postbank Systems and the BGH ruling.
Revenues in the international private bank were down 2 per cent,
or up 6 per cent if adjusted for the non-recurrence of prior-year
revenues relating to Sal Oppenheim workout activities. (Sal
Oppenheim is a German wealth manager which was integrated into
the Deutsche business in 2017.)
Shares in Deutsche Bank were up 4.8 per cent in late-afternoon
trade in Frankfurt.
“The IPB delivered another solid performance for the bank during
the fourth quarter, while continuing to successfully execute on
our strategy,” Claudio de Sanctis, head of the IPB and chief
executivie, EMEA, said.
The IPB business unit recorded positive net inflows in assets
under management for the eighth straight quarter, bringing full
year inflows to €17.3 billion.
In Q4, the IPB launched the Bank for Entrepreneurs in Spain
following a rollout in Italy earlier in the year. More than 150
relationship and investment managers have joined client-facing
teams.
Other group results
The bank as a whole had a Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio
of 13.2 per cent at the end of 2021.
Earlier this week, the bank said it was providing total capital
distributions to shareholders of about €700 million. Deutsche
Bank said this represents the first step towards its
previously-announced commitment to gradually return €5 billion of
capital to shareholders.
“All four core businesses performed at or ahead of our plan, and
our reduction of legacy assets progressed faster than expected.
We are delighted to be resuming capital distributions to our
shareholders as we promised in the summer of 2019. Our
transformation progress and financial performance in 2021
provided a strong step-off point to achieve our target of a
return on tangible equity of 8 per cent in 2022,” chief executive
Christian Sewing said.
The bank has been restructuring, repairing its balance sheet and
reducing risk-weighted assets (RWAs). The Capital Release Unit –
set up as part of the process – “delivered another year of
significant portfolio reduction while further reducing the cost
of de-leveraging in 2021,” it said.
At the end of the year RWAs were cut to €28 billion from €34
billion at the end of 2020, ahead of Deutsche Bank’s end-2022
target of €32 billion.
Investment bank net revenues rose 4 per cent to €9.6 billion in
2021 while corporate bank revenues were flat.
Asset management net revenues grew 21 per cent to €2.7 billion in
2021, reflecting growth in both management fees and performance
fees, it added.