Deutsche Bank AG
F:DBK
Decide at what price you'd be comfortable buying and we'll help you stay ready.
|
D
|
Deutsche Bank AG
F:DBK
|
DE |
|
M
|
Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc
XETRA:MSN
|
US |
|
Mettler-Toledo International Inc
NYSE:MTD
|
US |
|
M3 Inc
OTC:MTHRY
|
JP |
|
3i Group PLC
LSE:III
|
UK |
|
Flutter Entertainment PLC
NYSE:FLUT
|
IE |
|
argenx SE
XBRU:ARGX
|
NL |
|
A
|
Abercrombie & Fitch Co
XBER:AFT
|
US |
|
H
|
HomeServe PLC
F:XHSB
|
UK |
|
M
|
Mastercard Inc
XBER:M4I
|
US |
|
S
|
Sigdo Koppers SA
SGO:SK
|
CL |
|
I
|
IQVIA Holdings Inc
SWB:QTS
|
US |
|
LG Electronics Inc
KRX:066570
|
KR |
|
K
|
Kuehne und Nagel International AG
OTC:KHNGY
|
CH |
|
F
|
Fabrinet
F:FAN
|
KY |
|
U
|
Universal Health Services Inc
XBER:UHS
|
US |
|
Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri AS
IST:TCELL.E
|
TR |
|
Vonovia SE
XETRA:VNA
|
DE |
|
H
|
Holcim AG
XBER:HLBN
|
CH |
|
Harmony Gold Mining Company Ltd
LSE:0J39
|
ZA |
|
Newtek Business Services Corp
NASDAQ:NEWT
|
US |
Deutsche Bank AG
Deutsche Bank AG is a large German bank that serves companies, institutions, and private clients. It takes deposits, lends money, helps clients move and manage cash, and gives advice on financing, mergers, foreign exchange, and capital markets. For everyday customers, it also offers checking, savings, cards, mortgages, and wealth management services through its private bank business. The bank makes money mainly from interest on loans, fees for payment and transaction services, advisory fees, trading and capital markets activity, and asset and wealth management charges. Its biggest customers are multinational companies, financial institutions, governments, and higher-income individuals who need cross-border banking and investment services. What makes Deutsche Bank different is its role as a full-service international bank with a strong foothold in Europe and a deep reach into global corporate and investment banking. That mix lets it sit between companies that need funding and market access, and investors or clients that need banking, trading, and custody services across borders.
Deutsche Bank AG is a large German bank that serves companies, institutions, and private clients. It takes deposits, lends money, helps clients move and manage cash, and gives advice on financing, mergers, foreign exchange, and capital markets. For everyday customers, it also offers checking, savings, cards, mortgages, and wealth management services through its private bank business.
The bank makes money mainly from interest on loans, fees for payment and transaction services, advisory fees, trading and capital markets activity, and asset and wealth management charges. Its biggest customers are multinational companies, financial institutions, governments, and higher-income individuals who need cross-border banking and investment services.
What makes Deutsche Bank different is its role as a full-service international bank with a strong foothold in Europe and a deep reach into global corporate and investment banking. That mix lets it sit between companies that need funding and market access, and investors or clients that need banking, trading, and custody services across borders.
Strong quarter: Deutsche Bank reported record net profit, with revenue of EUR 8.7 billion, post-tax return on tangible equity of 12.7%, and a cost/income ratio of 58.9%.
Guidance reaffirmed: Management reaffirmed its 2026 outlook, including around EUR 33 billion of revenue, around EUR 14 billion of net interest income in key banking book segments and other funding, and full-year credit loss guidance.
Capital stays strong: CET1 ended the quarter at 13.8%, within the bank’s 13.5% to 14% operating range, while around 60% of the EUR 1 billion buyback announced last quarter has already been completed.
Mix shift improving: Management said the business mix is shifting toward more predictable, asset-gathering activities, with strong inflows in Private Bank and Asset Management and improving profit contribution outside investment banking.
Costs and AI: The bank said it is self-funding investments through efficiencies, saw around EUR 100 million of operating efficiencies in Q1, and expects AI to help drive additional productivity gains beyond its 2028 plan.
Credit and CRE: Provision for credit losses was EUR 519 million, driven mainly by a single-name CRE exposure and a EUR 90 million macro overlay tied to Middle East uncertainty; management said underlying portfolio trends remain strong.