Media Release
April 25, 2024
Deutsche Bank reports 10% year-on-year growth in profit before tax to € 2.0 billion in the first quarter of 2024
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Eduard Stipic Deutsche Bank AG Media Relations +49(69)910-41864 eduard.stipic@db.com
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Investor Relations +49 800 910-8000 (Frankfurt) db.ir@db.com
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Christian Streckert Deutsche Bank AG Media Relations +49(69)910-38079 christian.streckert@db.com
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Charlie Olivier Deutsche Bank AG, Media Relations +44 (207) 54-57866 charlie.olivier@db.com
Profit growth over prior year quarter drives progress towards key targets
Revenues resilient in a stabilizing interest rate environment
Delivery on cost commitments
Solid capital supports shareholder distributions; credit risk remains contained
Continued delivery of Global Hausbank strategy in the quarter
Deutsche Bank (XETRA: DBGn.DB / NYSE: DB) today announced profit before tax of € 2.0 billion for the first quarter of 2024, up 10% year on year. Post-tax profit was also up 10% year on year, to € 1.5 billion.
Deutsche Bank’s target ratios improved compared to the first quarter of 2023. Post-tax return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (RoTE)¹ was 8.7%, up from 8.3% in the first quarter of 2023, as profit growth more than offset higher tangible shareholders’ equity driven by organic capital generation. Post-tax return on average shareholders’ equity (RoE)¹ was 7.8% in the quarter, up from 7.4% in the prior year quarter. The cost/income ratio improved to 68%, from 71% in the prior year quarter. Diluted earnings per share improved to € 0.69, from € 0.61 in the prior year quarter.
“This was a quarter of delivery on commitments,” said James von Moltke, Chief Financial Officer. “Our revenue and franchise momentum reflects our investments in capital-light businesses and close partnership across the Group to support clients. Tight management of costs, capital and balance sheet, combined with continued investments in technology and controls, is the result of execution discipline right across our platform.”
Continued delivery of the Global Hausbank strategy
Deutsche Bank maintained its momentum in executing on its Global Hausbank strategy during the first quarter. This included:
Revenue growth in challenging conditions
Net revenues were € 7.8 billion, up 1% over the prior year quarter at Group level and up 3% overall in the bank’s four operating businesses². Growth of 11% in commissions and fee income, reflecting management’s objective to grow capital-light business areas, was partly offset by a year-on-year decline in net interest income, as anticipated, in an environment of stabilizing interest rates. Revenue development in the bank’s businesses was as follows:
Expenses: delivery in line with commitment on quarterly adjusted costs
Noninterest expenses were € 5.3 billion in the quarter, down 3% compared to the prior year quarter. A 6% reduction in adjusted costs to € 5.0 billion, consistent with the bank’s guidance for the quarterly run-rate in 2024, more than offset higher nonoperating costs versus the prior year quarter.
Adjusted costs of € 5.0 billion, down 6%, primarily reflected lower bank levies, which more than offset a rise of 9% in compensation and benefits expenses compared to the prior year quarter. This development was driven in part by an increase of 3,611 full-time equivalents (FTEs) in the internal workforce compared to the first quarter of 2023, reflecting investments in business growth, including the acquisition of Numis in the UK, together with further investments in technology and controls and the continued internalization of external staff. Investments and internalizations were partly offset by headcount reductions as part of the bank’s Operational Efficiency program.
Nonoperating costs were € 262 million, up from € 89 million in the first quarter of 2023. Litigation charges were € 166 million, up from € 66 million in the prior year quarter, and restructuring and severance charges were € 95 million, compared to € 23 million in the prior year quarter and driven in part by the implementation of the bank’s Operational Efficiency program.
Credit provisions lower quarter on quarter, with full-year guidance reaffirmed
Provision for credit losses was € 439 million, or 37 basis points of average loans, down from € 488 million in the fourth quarter of 2023. Provision for non-performing (Stage 3) loans was € 471 million, up 3% from € 457 million in the previous quarter, driven by provisions in the Private Bank, including provisions relating to the operational backlog which are expected partly to reverse in future quarters as the backlog is processed; and in the Investment Bank which, as previously communicated, continues to be affected by provisions on commercial real estate exposures.
This development was more than offset by net releases of performing (Stage 1 and 2) loans of € 32 million, driven by improved macro-economic forecasts as well as model recalibration effects, compared to provisions of € 30 million in the previous quarter. For the full year 2024, provisions for credit losses are expected to remain at the higher end of the previously communicated guidance range of 25-30 basis points of average loans.
Solid capital ratio supports distributions to shareholders and business growth
The Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) capital ratio was 13.4% at the end of the first quarter of 2024, compared to 13.7% at the end of the fourth quarter of 2023. Organic capital generation through strong first-quarter earnings partly offset deductions for the € 675 million share buyback program approved by the ECB in January 2024, and for future capital distributions in line with the bank’s commitment to a 50% payout ratio in respect of the financial year 2024, together with an RWA increase of € 5 billion to € 355 billion in the quarter, largely driven by business growth.
The Leverage ratio was 4.5% at the end of the first quarter, essentially unchanged from the end of the previous quarter. Leverage exposure was € 1,254 billion, also essentially unchanged, as higher trading related exposures were offset by lower cash balances.
The Liquidity Coverage Ratio was 136% at the end of the quarter, compared to 140% at the end of the fourth quarter of 2023, above the regulatory requirement of 100% and representing a surplus of € 58 billion. High Quality Liquid Assets were € 222 billion at the end of the quarter, up slightly from the end of the previous quarter. The Net Stable Funding Ratio was 123%, above the bank’s target range of 115-120%, representing a surplus of € 112 billion above required levels. Customer deposits rose by € 13 billion to € 635 billion during the quarter.
For Deutsche Bank’s Annual General Meeting on May 16, 2024, the Management Board and the Supervisory Board have proposed the payment of a cash dividend of € 0.45 per share in respect of the financial year 2023, up 50% over 2022.
Sustainable Finance: cumulative volumes since 2020 reach € 300 billion
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG)-related financing and investment volumes ex-DWS³ were € 21 billion in the quarter, bringing the cumulative total since January 1, 2020 to € 300 billion. In the first quarter of 2024, Deutsche Bank’s businesses contributed as follows:
During the first quarter, Deutsche Bank participated in a € 4.4 billion non-recourse project financing for Automotive Cells Company to enable the development of three gigafactories for lithium-ion battery cell production across Europe. The bank also published its revised Sustainable Finance Framework, which includes updated criteria for classifying financings as sustainable, as well as a new Sustainable Instruments Framework for the issuance of social bonds. The rating agency ISS ESG granted this framework its highest possible assessment grade.
Deutsche Bank received a rating upgrade from the non-profit rating agency CDP (formerly Carbon Disclosure), indicating that the bank is above industry average in all categories. At the bank’s 2024 Annual General Meeting, management will discuss with shareholders its proposal to link parts of Management Board compensation for 2024 to the carbon emission sectoral targets for the corporate loan portfolio.
Group results at a glance
¹ For a description of this and other non-GAAP financial measures, see ‘Use of non-GAAP financial measures’ on pp 15-20 of the first quarter 2024 Financial Data Supplement and “Non-GAAP financial measures” on pp. 50-53 of the Earnings Report, as of March 31, 2024, respectively.
² The Corporate Bank; the Investment Bank; the Private Bank; and Asset Management
³ Cumulative ESG volumes include sustainable financing (flow) and investments (stock) in the Corporate Bank, Investment Bank and Private Bank from January 1, 2020 to date, as set forth in Deutsche Bank’s Sustainability Deep Dive of May 20, 2021. Products in scope include capital market issuance (bookrunner share only), sustainable financing and period-end assets under management. Cumulative volumes and targets do not include ESG assets under management within DWS, which are reported separately by DWS.
ESG Classification
We defined our sustainable financing and investment activities in the “Sustainable Financing Framework – Deutsche Bank Group” which is available at investor-relations.db.com. Given the cumulative definition of our target, in cases where validation against the Framework cannot be completed before the end of the reporting quarter, volumes are reported upon completion of the validation in subsequent quarters. In Asset Management, DWS introduced its ESG Product Classification Framework (“ESG Framework”) in 2021 taking into account relevant legislation (including Regulation (EU) 2019/2088 – SFDR), market standards and internal developments. The ESG Framework is further described in the Annual Report 2021 of DWS under the heading ”Our Product Suite – Key Highlights / ESG Product Classification Framework” which is available at https://group.dws.com/ir/reports-and-events/annual-report/. There is no change in the ESG Framework in the first quarter of 2024. DWS will continue to develop and refine its ESG Framework in accordance with evolving regulation and market practice.
Further details on first quarter performance in Deutsche Bank’s businesses are available in the Earnings Report of March 31, 2024.
Analyst call
An analyst call to discuss first-quarter 2024 financial results will take place at 11:00 CEST today. An Earnings Report, Financial Data Supplement (FDS), presentation and audio webcast for the analyst conference call are available at: www.db.com/quarterly-results
A fixed income investor call will take place on April 26, 2024, at 15:00 CEST. This conference call will be transmitted via internet: www.db.com/quarterly-results
Read the full media release as PDF document.
About Deutsche Bank
Deutsche Bank provides retail and private banking, corporate and transaction banking, lending, asset and wealth management products and services as well as focused investment banking to private individuals, small and medium-sized companies, corporations, governments and institutional investors. Deutsche Bank is the leading bank in Germany with strong European roots and a global network.
Forward-looking statements
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 Deutsche 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 we derive a substantial portion of our revenues and in which the bank holds a substantial portion of our assets, the development of asset prices and market volatility, potential defaults of borrowers or trading counterparties, the implementation of our strategic initiatives, the reliability of our risk management policies, procedures and methods, and other risks referenced in our filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Such factors are described in detail in the bank’s 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.
Basis of Accounting
Results are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (“IASB”) and endorsed by the European Union (“EU”), including, from 2020, application of portfolio fair value hedge accounting for non-maturing deposits and fixed rate mortgages with pre-payment options (the “EU carve-out”). Fair value hedge accounting under the EU carve-out is employed to minimize the accounting exposure to both positive and negative moves in interest rates in each tenor bucket thereby reducing the volatility of reported revenue from Treasury activities.
For the three-month period ended March 31, 2024, application of the EU carve-out had a positive impact of € 403 million on profit before taxes and of € 287 million on profit. For the same time period in 2023, the application of the EU carve-out had a negative impact of € 97 million on profit before taxes and of € 70 million on profit. The Group’s regulatory capital and ratios thereof are also reported on the basis of the EU carve-out version of IAS 39. As of March 31, 2024, the application of the EU carve-out had a negative impact on the CET1 capital ratio of about 33 basis points compared to a positive impact of about 2 basis points as of March 31, 2023. In any given period, the net effect of the EU carve-out can be positive or negative, depending on the fair market value changes in the positions being hedged and the hedging instruments.
Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures
This report and other documents the bank has published or may publish contain non-GAAP financial measures. Non-GAAP financial measures are measures of the bank’s historical or future performance, financial position or cash flows that contain adjustments that exclude or include amounts that are included or excluded, as the case may be, from the most directly comparable measure calculated and presented in accordance with IFRS in Deutsche Bank’s financial statements. Examples of our non-GAAP financial measures, and the most directly comparable IFRS financial measures, are as follows:
Non-GAAP Financial Measure
Most Directly Comparable IFRS Financial Measure
Profit (loss) attributable to Deutsche Bank shareholders for the segments, Profit (loss) attributable to Deutsche Bank shareholders and additional equity components for the segments
Profit (loss)
Revenues excluding specific items, Revenues on a currency-adjusted basis
Net revenues
Adjusted costs, Costs on a currency-adjusted basis, Nonoperating costs
Noninterest expenses
Net assets (adjusted)
Total assets
Tangible shareholders’ equity, Average tangible shareholders’ equity, Tangible book value, Average tangible book value
Total shareholders’ equity (book value)
Post-tax return on average shareholders’ equity (based on Profit (loss) attributable to Deutsche Bank shareholders after AT1 coupon), Post-tax return on average tangible shareholders’ equity (based on Profit (loss) attributable to Deutsche Bank shareholders after AT1 coupon),
Post-tax return on average shareholders’ equity
Tangible book value per basic share outstanding, Book value per basic share outstanding
Book value per share outstanding
Revenues and costs on a currency-adjusted basis are calculated by translating prior period revenues that were generated or incurred in non-euro currencies into euros at the foreign exchange rates that prevailed during the current period. These adjusted figures, and period-to-period percentage changes based thereon, are intended to provide information on the development of underlying business volumes.
Adjusted costs are calculated by deducting (i) impairment of goodwill and other intangible assets, (ii) net litigation charges and (iii) restructuring and severance, in total referred to as nonoperating costs, from noninterest expenses under IFRS.
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