The German bank pulled off what Swiss rivals failed to: avoid major losses from the collapse of the family office-hedge fund.
Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank swung to a net profit of 908 million euros ($1.1 billion) in the first quarter, from a loss of 43 million euros year-ago, it said in a statement on Wednesday. The result was powered by its investment bank, which is still feeding its business with revenue.
In doing so, the German bank largely avoided what is now more than $10 billion in losses from Archegos, which hit Credit Suisse the worst but didn't leave UBS unscathed either. CEO Christian Sewing is now in his fourth year of reviving Deutsche Bank, following years of outsize risk-taking.
Quick Offload
The bank had quickly offloaded roughly $4 billion in collateral against Archegos' business before others, «Bloomberg» reported last month. On Tuesday, Deutsche reported investment banking revenue surged by nearly one-third in the last three months, illustrating that Deutsche is still heavily reliant on Wall Street.
By contrast, revenue in its wealth management arm overseen by Claudio de Sanctis edged two percent lower. The unit won 7 billion euros of fresh money into investments products and lent 2 billion euros more to clients in the quarter.
Swiss Hits
Deutsche's international private bank hiked overall assets to 267 billion euros, from 252 billion euros at year-end. The bank's quarter overall represents its healthiest in seven years, according to the «Financial Times» (behind paywall).
It comes against the backdrop of Credit Suisse sliding deeper into crisis: the Swiss bank took the biggest Archegos hit on Wall Street – 4.4 billion Swiss francs ($4.7 billion) – or nearly half the total which has surfaced publicly so far. UBS took a $774 million one, it reported on Tuesday, as well as another $87 million in the coming quarter.