People Moves
Germany's Largest Bank Names Group Head Of Compliance In Restructure Of Roles

Deutsche Bank, Germany’s largest bank, has announced that Nadine Faruque will join as global head of compliance on 1 December.
Deutsche Bank,
Germany’s largest bank, has announced that Nadine Faruque will
join as global head of compliance on 1 December, having
previously been general counsel and group compliance officer at
Italy’s UniCredit.
Her appointment comes as part of a restructure after the former
global head of compliance and government and regulatory affairs,
Andrew Procter, left the bank in June. While Faruque takes the
mantle of global head of compliance, the latter role was filled
by Sylvia Matherat, who became a global head of government and
regulatory affairs on 1 August.
In her role, Faruque will, like Matherat, be a member of the
bank’s group executive committee which performs advisory,
coordinating, performance-monitoring and decision-preparing
functions for the management board. She reports to Stephan
Leithner, member of the management board whose functional
responsibilities include compliance.
She moves from UniCredit, where she had overall responsibility
for the legal and compliance coverage for retail banking, private
banking, asset management and corporate and investment banking.
Before joining UniCredit in 2008, she worked in senior positions
at Merrill Lynch.
Among recent moves, Deutsche Asset and Wealth Management, part of
the Frankfurt-headquartered group, has announced plans to add 300
professionals to its UK ranks over the next five years as it
gains its own separate regional status within the firm’s
organisational structure - previously it fell under the EMEA arm.
It also announced that it was making a raft of hires in its
American division across its private banking, equity and lending
and institutional businesses.
In early July it was reported that Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank
have started settlement talks with US authorities over dealings
with countries blacklisted by the US. The report, by
Reuters, quoted an unnamed source; both banks declined
to comment.