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Deutsche Bank's €2b loss is 8 times analysts' estimates

Charges, job cuts and impairments help push Europe's biggest bank into the red

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Litigation and restructuring charges have pushed Deutsche Bank into a fourth-quarter loss of €2.17 billion. Photo: Reuters

Deutsche Bank, Europe's biggest bank by assets, posted a fourth-quarter loss eight times larger than expected, after the company eliminated more than 1,400 jobs and set aside €1 billion (HK$10.5 billion) for legal expenses.

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The loss of €2.17 billion, the biggest in four years, was about eight times larger than the consensus analyst forecast and a turnaround from a profit of €147 million for the same period in 2011.

The bank's co-chief executives, Juergen Fitschen and Anshu Jain, are restructuring operations and bolstering capital levels, the lowest among Europe's biggest investment banks, in their first year in charge, to help meet stricter banking rules.

Costs associated with job cuts and litigation countered an increase in trading revenue, spurred by the European Central Bank's steps to stem the sovereign debt crisis.

The loss "reflects a number of decisions we took to position Deutsche Bank," Jain said in the earnings statement. "We've galvanised Deutsche Bank around the achievement of our capital targets."

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Deutsche Bank shares were little changed at €37.15 in early Frankfurt trading.

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