Media Release Frankfurt am Main, April 23, 2024

“This way for modern banking”: Deutsche Bank logo turns 50

The first Deutsche Bank advertisement to feature the new logo appeared on April 25, 1974. Fifty years later, the logo continues to shape the bank’s global brand presence.

Logo construction

In 1972, Deutsche Bank invited eight internationally renowned graphic design studios to take part in a competition to design a new logo. A total of 140 different designs were submitted and the winning logo was an upward oblique stroke inside a square created by Stuttgart-based artist and graphic designer Anton Stankowski. Employees were asked to give the logo a name, with “signpost” chosen as the best suggestion.

First Deutsche Bank advert with the new logo: „Ja! Ihr Wegweiser zum modernen Geld- und Kreditverkehr“ (Yes! Showing the way to modern money and credit transactions)

The bank presented the new logo to the public for the first time at its annual media conference on April 2, 1974 and a few weeks later, on April 25, 1974, the logo appeared in an advert in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Playing with the idea of the logo looking a little like a signpost, the advert presented the logo to the world with the statement: This way for modern banking.

Dynamic growth in a stable environment

“Deutsche Bank’s logo stands for dynamic growth within a stable environment – the slash symbolising growth and the square-shaped frame standing for security and stability. The concept behind the logo might be turning 50 but in a complex and volatile global landscape, it is precisely this stability and resilience that our clients are looking for,” says Tim Alexander, Chief Marketing Officer and Chief Experience Officer at Deutsche Bank. “It’s not just our services but also our brand that should convey to our clients across the world the security that we offer them as their Global Hausbank.”

The logo attracts attention with its easily recognisable, enduring and clean design, shaping Deutsche Bank’s identity. The colour blue stands for trust. The angle of the slash is 53 degrees. The tips of the oblique beam are aligned with the inner corners of the square on the top right and bottom left.

Logo creator Anton Stankowski

The logo’s creator, Anton Stankowski, who died in 1998, described Deutsche Bank’s logo as follows: “The visual motif is the polarity between the solid base and a future-oriented dynamism. The staggered diagonal seems to be symmetrical but is in fact asymmetrical. The sloping forward slash is arranged in such a way that it does not divide the square diagonally. That is what is so special about it. The attention value of the graphic arrangement consists in this unexpected visual shift.”

Anton Stankowski created numerous logos during his life and is regarded as a modern pioneer in graphic design. Many of the iconographic symbols he developed have not lost any of their visual power to this day. He not only created memorable images and designs as a commercial artist but also as a photographer, painter, illustrator and graphic artist. He always said art and design were inextricably linked. The Deutsche Bank logo is arguably his best-known logo worldwide.

Deutsche Bank logos prior to 1974

When the bank was founded in 1870, there was no logo at all. Even the company name Deutsche Bank would appear in different fonts within a single document. It wasn’t until the turn of the century that the bank introduced its “imperial eagle” with the initials DB. Strikingly similar to the Prussian and German eagle, people often thought Deutsche Bank was a state institution. In 1937, the bank started using the letters DB as the logo, often in parallel with the eagle.

Largest brand advertisement on the roof of Deutsche Bank Park

Deutsche Bank installed its largest brand advertisement worldwide in 2020 on the roof of the home ground of German Bundesliga club Eintracht Frankfurt, at Deutsche Bank Park. Consisting of the word Deutsche Bank and the logo, the Deutsche Bank Park lettering is 73 metres long and the three-dimensional letters are illuminated with more than 25,000 LEDs. The largest letters are 5 metres high and the logo measures 8.46 metres, which is about the height of a two-storey house.

Information on Deutsche Bank’s logo is also available in an article on the bank’s website.

About Deutsche Bank

Deutsche Bank provides commercial and investment banking, retail banking, transaction banking and asset and wealth management products and services to corporations, governments, institutional investors, small and medium-sized businesses, and private individuals. Deutsche Bank is Germany’s leading bank, with a strong position in Europe and a significant presence in the Americas and Asia Pacific.

Forward-looking statements contain risks

This release contains forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are statements that are not historical facts; they include statements about the bank’s beliefs and expectations and the assumptions underlying them. These statements are based on plans, estimates and projections as they are currently available to the management of Deutsche Bank. Forward-looking statements therefore speak only as of the date they are made, and the bank undertakes no obligation to update publicly any of them in the light of new information or future events.

By their very nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties. A number of important factors could therefore cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement. Such factors include the conditions in the financial markets in Germany, in Europe, in the United States and elsewhere from which Deutsche Bank derives a substantial portion of the bank’s revenues and in which it holds a substantial portion of its assets, the development of asset prices and market volatility, potential defaults of borrowers or trading counterparties, the implementation of the bank’s strategic initiatives, the reliability of its risk management policies, procedures and methods, and other risks referenced in the filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Such factors are described in detail in our SEC Form 20-F of March 14, 2024 under the heading “Risk Factors”. Copies of this document are readily available upon request or can be downloaded from www.db.com/ir 

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