besser als erwartet. ;)
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Group results
Income before income taxes (IBIT) of EUR 917 million, an increase of 16% from 2Q2013
Core Bank IBIT, which excludes the Non-Core Operations Unit (NCOU), of EUR 1.5 billion, up 2% from the prior year period
Net revenues of EUR 7.9 billion, down 4% year over year largely reflecting lower revenues in NCOU
Noninterest expenses of EUR 6.7 billion, down 4% from 2Q2013
Adjusted cost base of EUR 5.7 billion, down 3% from 2Q2013
Post-tax return on average active equity (RoE) in 2Q2014 of 1.6% for the Group and 4.9% for the Core Bank
Capital and de-leveraging
Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 11.5% on a fully loaded Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR)/Capital Requirements Directive 4 (CRD4) basis at quarter end
Fully loaded CET1 ratio benefited by 250 bps from successful EUR 8.5 billion capital raise during the quarter
Phase-in CET1 ratio of 14.7%
CRD4 fully loaded leverage of 3.4%
Leverage ratio also benefited from EUR 3.5 billion issuance of Additional Tier 1 (AT1) capital during the quarter
Risk-weighted assets (RWA) on a fully loaded CRR/CRD4 basis of EUR 399 billion, 7% higher than 1Q2014
Segment results
Corporate Banking & Securities (CB&S) 2Q2014 IBIT of EUR 885 million, 17% above 2Q2013 reflecting a 1% decline in revenues, largely due to lower net revenues in Equity Sales & Trading, offset by a 7% decline in noninterest expenses
Private & Business Clients (PBC) IBIT of EUR 403 million was down 21% from prior year largely reflecting non-recurring gains in the prior year period
Global Transaction Banking (GTB) IBIT of EUR 228 million declined 29% from 2Q2013, largely driven by a litigation related charge
Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management (DeAWM) IBIT was EUR 204 million, up from EUR 80 million in 2Q2013 on 9% growth in revenues and 3% lower noninterest expenses; net new money of EUR 11 billion
Non-Core Operations Unit (NCOU) loss before income tax was EUR 580 million compared to EUR 672 million in 2Q2013, as the current quarter included a loss of EUR 314 million in revenues from debt refinancing restructuring of Maher Terminals
Deutsche Bank (XETRA: DBKGn.DE / NYSE: DB) today reported results for 2Q2014. Group net revenues of EUR 7.9 billion declined 4% from the prior year while noninterest expenses fell 4% to EUR 6.7 billion. Income before income taxes was EUR 917 million in 2Q2014, 16% higher than 2Q2013 largely reflecting a 4% decline in noninterest expenses, particularly lower performance related expense, and lower provisions for credit losses.
Jürgen Fitschen and Anshu Jain, Co-Chief Executive Officers, said: “Deutsche Bank delivered a quarter of strong underlying performance with pre-tax profit up 16% year-on-year. In the first six months of 2014, Core Bank adjusted profits were EUR 5 billion, despite a tough operating environment and continued investments in our businesses as we implement Strategy 2015+.”
They added: “All our core businesses contributed to this result. In particular, Corporate Banking & Securities delivered robust revenues, growing profits, and for the second consecutive quarter, strong relative performance, regaining its top-3 position in global fixed income and capturing our best ever market share in corporate finance. In addition, Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management more than doubled pre-tax profits versus the prior year quarter, improved revenue quality, and attracted its best net money inflows since 2010.”
They concluded: “These results reflect progress with Strategy 2015+, which we reinforced with two capital raises in the quarter. Nonetheless, our environment is complex. The world’s economies are growing at different speeds, and this may cause differences in the pace at which interest rates normalize, creating opportunities; however, emerging geopolitical events in Ukraine and the Middle East may impact financial markets and our clients, and we continue to adapt to a fast changing regulatory framework. We remain committed to working systematically through our strategic agenda and, with enhanced capital strength, we face these challenges with greater confidence.”