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Deutsche Bank Solves One Crisis With New CEO. Now Onto the Next

Deutsche Bank’s new CEO Sewing confronts a decision on scaling back the investment bank.

Deutsche Bank Solves One Crisis With New CEO. Now Onto the Next
A logo sits on display in front of the Deutsche Bank AG headquarters at dawn (Photographer: Ralph Orlowski/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The appointment of Christian Sewing as Deutsche Bank AG’s chief executive officer to replace an embattled John Cryan after less than three years -- and three turnaround plans -- answered just one of the questions hanging over the struggling institution.

There’s the fate of Chairman Paul Achleitner and whether a divided board can close ranks behind the new CEO. Sewing also confronts a decision on scaling back the investment bank -- both Deutsche Bank’s biggest source of revenue and a perennial laggard against U.S. giants -- and winning over long-suffering shareholders.

Deutsche Bank Solves One Crisis With New CEO. Now Onto the Next

"Without a clear strategy commitment by all parties, turning Deutsche Bank around will be difficult," according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts led by Kian Abouhossein. "Our view is that the problem is not the CEO as speculated by the press, but different stakeholders with different interests, with little evidence of commitment to changing the organization in the interests of the owners: shareholders and creditors."

The ouster of Cryan capped an embarrassing two-week run for the 148-year-old lender. Media reports highlighted tension with Achleitner and speculated that the 57-year-old CEO was on his way out. Without any response from Deutsche Bank, the Briton was essentially hung out to dry amid news of the search for a successor.

Tension Within

After sounding out external candidates -- including JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Matt Zames and Bank of America Corp.’s Christian Meissner -- the bank’s directors rushed to bring some order to the situation. Late night on Sunday, they picked Sewing, a Deutsche Bank veteran who served as co-deputy CEO with the now-departed Marcus Schenck since one of Cryan’s strategy reboots in March 2017.

"Sewing may not necessarily have been the top candidate but he was there and stood ready," Hans-Peter Burghof, a professor of banking at the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart.

In fact, Sewing’s role on Cryan’s management team fueled some skepticism about his selection. "We struggle to see how replacing Mr. Cryan with Mr. Sewing will result in a change of fortune for the bank," wrote Citigroup Inc. analysts led by Andrew Coombs. "Compared to some of the external candidates proposed in the press over the past week, his appointment could be viewed as underwhelming.”

The supervisory board wasn’t unanimous in adopting some of the measures proposed by Achleitner, according to people with knowledge of the meeting. One sticking point was the decision to name Garth Ritchie as head of the investment bank, one person said.

Low Valuation

The tumult underscored the frustration of stakeholders over the Cryan’s sputtering revival efforts. The stock lost more than half its value during his tenure and trades at about a third of the value of its assets; in contrast JPMorgan Chase & Co. trades at more than 1.5 times its book value.

Deutsche Bank Solves One Crisis With New CEO. Now Onto the Next

Deutsche Bank shares climbed 3.4 percent to 11.74 euros at noon in Frankfurt. They’re still down 26 percent so far in 2018.

The bank has struggled to recover since the financial crisis that exploded a decade ago. The company’s rapid expansion under Josef Ackermann as a global investment bank saddled it with an unwieldy structure and a culture of excessive risk-taking, critics say. Sewing will head the third leadership team since Ackermann’s 2012 departure.

Litigation Costs

Deutsche Bank has spent more than $17 billion paying fines and settling litigation since the start of 2008, according to company filings and other disclosures compiled by Bloomberg.

Sewing’s background suggests directors may keep at least one key plank of Cryan’s strategy: a greater focus on Germany. Its home market accounted for 37 percent of Deutsche Bank revenue last year, up from 35 percent in 2016, according to its annual report. The German weekly Die Zeit called for it to merge with Commerzbank AG “in the interests of bank and country.”

That would signal a scaling back of the investment bank. Davide Serra, CEO of Algebris Investments, says that Deutsche Bank lacks the scale to compete with the likes of JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs.

Once Sewing gets his team in place, his two biggest tasks will play out over months. The bank’s once-vaunted investment bank division has lagged rivals for several straight quarters now, with Chief Financial Officer James Von Moltke recently warning of headwinds last quarter.

Sewing’s Charge

"Our start to the year was solid but ‘solid’ cannot be our ambition," Sewing said in a memo to staff, his first comments since his promotion. "With regard to our revenues we have to regain our hunger for business."

The bank has launched a wide-ranging review of the division with a focus on its U.S. operations dubbed Project Colombo, people with knowledge of the matter said previously.

The corporate and investment bank will look to “free up capacity for growth by pulling back from those areas where we are not sufficiently profitable,” according to his memo to staff.

Sewing, who has experience in risk management and audit and has never worked in the investment bank, is keen to have a roughly balanced revenue share for the bank from its two core units, according to people familiar with this thinking. In practice, that suggests eliminating some businesses with staff reductions and spending cuts.

‘Guiding Hand’

Last year, the investment bank contributed 54 percent to group revenue and the retail division 38 percent. Meanwhile, income from sales and trading fell to the lowest level since the financial crisis despite repeated promises by Cryan.

The other key challenge lies in Deutsche Bank’s consumer unit. The bank last year announced the merger of its two domestic retail units, abandoning previous plans to sell one of them, Postbank.

While the bank has recently said that its plan to merge the two units remains on track for the second quarter, it has also pledged to achieve annual cost synergies of 900 million euros by the end 2020, to a large extent by cutting the workforce. Deutsche Bank’s management hopes to do away with as much as 6,000 retail bank jobs in Germany, people with knowledge said previously.

“What’s missing is the guiding hand behind this,” said Burghof. “It feels like there isn’t really a plan.”

That frustration signals why Achleitner may be vulnerable. While the board last week proposed bringing in finance-industry veterans -- including former Merrill Lynch chief John Thain and Mayree Clark, a one-time Morgan Stanley executive -- some investors said that Achleitner shared the blame for the bank’s troubles.

“He’s been in office since 2012, and as it turns out has made a lot of bad decisions,” said Andreas Meyer, who manages about 1.4 billion euros of fixed-income securities at Aramea Asset Management in Hamburg. “He should carry the responsibility for that and leave. I don’t believe it will happen, but that’s what I’d prefer.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Steven Arons in Frankfurt at sarons@bloomberg.net, Nicholas Comfort in Frankfurt at ncomfort1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dale Crofts at dcrofts@bloomberg.net, James Hertling, Christian Baumgaertel

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