Reports
Revenues Rise At Deutsche's Wealth Arm

The German bank provides wealth management services in multiple regions, including North America.
Deutsche Bank,
which a few days ago flagged that it will log market-beating
results, today said that its wealth management arm logged a 9 per
cent year-on-year rise in revenues to €466 million ($506 million)
in the first quarter. The German bank provides wealth management
services in multiple regions, including North America.
Pre-tax profit across the whole private banking segment – in
which wealth management sits - fell to €132 million from €214
million, falling by 38 per cent.
Core revenues in the wealth arm, which exclude the workout of the
acquired Sal Oppenheim private banking business in Germany, rose
by 17 per cent. Without that impact, revenues rose by 9 per cent
on a year earlier, the bank said in a statement.
“The wealth business had strong growth across all regions, in
particular in capital market products in the emerging markets
region, which includes Asia-Pacific, the Middle East and Africa,
in January and February. It had net inflows in investment
products of €3 billion," the bank said in a statement.
In the private banking arm, Deutsche Bank said Q1 net revenues of
€2.2 billion increased by 2 per cent from a year earlier.
Excluding specific revenue items, net revenues grew by 3 per
cent.
Revenues in the German private banking segment fell by 1 per cent
as continued deposit margin compression as well as higher funding
and liquidity cost allocations were broadly offset by growth in
investment product revenues and loan volumes.
Private and international commercial business rose by 3 per cent
as growth in loan and investment product revenues, combined with
repricing measures, more than offset the interest rate headwinds
and first impacts of COVID-19 on client activity, mainly in Italy
and Spain.