Deutsche Bank’s 20% Fixed-Income Gain Beats Wall Street

Deutsche Bank AG saw revenue from fixed-income trading rise by about a fifth in the final quarter of last year, a bigger jump than most of its Wall Street rivals as Chief Executive Officer Christian Sewing increasingly leans on the unit to drive growth.

The bank’s traders generated approximately 1.4 billion euros ($1.7 billion) in the period, a person familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified discussing preliminary figures before the company reports earnings this week. That compares with an average increase of 10% at the five biggest Wall Street banks.

A spokesman for Deutsche Bank declined to comment.

The gain caps a bumper year for the German bank’s trading unit, a business Sewing shrank in his revamp of the lender, but which has bounced back in the market volatility caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. With negative interest rates weighing on the traditional lending business, the CEO has staked his medium-term profitability target on achieving stronger growth in the trading unit than he previously anticipated.

Deutsche Bank said in December that debt trading revenue increased by 10% in October and 23% in November, and Sewing has guided that at least some of the revenue growth the unit saw throughout 2020 will carry over into this year. The fixed-income unit is still smaller than most U.S. peers, which averaged $2.46 billion of revenue in the quarter. The lender exited equities trading in 2019.

The bank was considering raising bonuses for traders by an average of 10% as a way to attract and retain talent, Bloomberg reported in December. That figure may rise given the fourth-quarter performance, one person said.

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