Financial Results
Deutsche Bank's Q2, First-Half Results Shine

While some banks' results have been affected by adverse market events, the Frankfurt-listed group reported a broadly stronger set of numbers today, including at its private bank.
Deutsche Bank
today said that its private banking arm logged a pre-tax profit
of €463 million ($469 million), versus a €15 million loss a year
ago.
Private bank net revenues were €2.2 billion, rising 7 per cent on
a year earlier, or 4 per cent if adjusted for effects such as a
cut in foregone revenues from a German court ruling and lower
revenues linked to workout activities from its acquired Sal
Oppenheim business. Within the German private bank, the group
said revenues rose 11 per cent, although the gain was only
3 per cent if adjusted for the reduced impact of the BGH
ruling. (This relates to 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.)
At the international private bank, revenues rose 2 per cent, or 6
per cent if adjusted for the effect on revenues of
Sal Oppenheim workout activities.
The German lender said its private bank logged net new business
volumes of €11 billion in the quarter. This included net inflows
of €7 billion, including inflows into investment products of €5
billion and new deposits of €2 billion, and net new client loans
of €4 billion.
For the Frankfurt-listed group, it said pre-tax profit rose 33
per cent to €1.5 billion. Its cost-income ratio narrowed to 73
per cent from 80 per cent a year earlier. Its Common Equity Tier
1 ratio – a standard international measure of a bank’s capital
buffer – was 13.0 per cent, up from 12.8 per cent in the first
quarter of 2022.
For the first six months, profit before tax was €3.2 billion, up
16 per cent.
“With the best half-year profits since 2011, we have proven –
once again – that we can deliver growth and rising profits in a
challenging environment,” Christian Sewing, chief executive,
said. “We are particularly pleased with the progress of our
corporate bank and private bank. Thanks to our successful
transformation, we’re well on track to deliver sustainable and
well-balanced returns through our four-strong core
businesses.”
Provision for credit losses was €233 million in Q2, up from €75
million in the second quarter of 2021, it added.