As Deutsche Bank goes, so go Europe’s banks? As Europe’s banks go, so goes Europe? As Europe goes, so goes the rest of the world? We’ll see. SLL has been keeping its eye on Deutsche Bank (see “Deutsche Bank CEO May Have Lied To Bundesbank About Rate Rigging, BaFin Says,” “Is Deutsche Bank The Next Lehman?” and “A Derivatives Bomb Exploded Within The Last Two Weeks”). From Tyler Durden at zerohedge.com:
Earlier this week in “The Inside Story Of How Deutsche Bank ‘Deals With’ Whistleblowers,” we gave you a play-by-play account of how the bank summarily dismissed Dr. Eric Ben-Artzi after the former Goldmanite raised questions about how Deutsche valued its crisis-era derivatives book.
In short, the story is a reflection of what some say is a hopelessly corrupt corporate culture and indeed, recent events at the bank underscore the extent to which it is reeling from expensive settlements and rampant defections. Here’s a recap of Deutsche Bank’s recent trials and travails:
In April, Deutsche settled rate rigging charges with the DoJ for $2.5 billion (or about $25,474 per employee). A month later, the bank paid $55 million to the SEC (an agency that’s been run by former Deutsche Bank employees and their close associates for years) in connection with allegations it deliberately mismarked its crisis-era LSS book to the tune of at least $5 billion. On May 8, the bank’s head of structured finance Elad Shraga — who was instrumental in helping Deutsche become “an award-winning arranger of asset- and mortgage-backed debt — left the firm after 15 years. Then on June 5, US Attorney General Loretta Lynch announced the Justice Department would pursue new settlements with European banks over crisis-era MBS sales. Four days later, the bank’s headquarters were raided by authorities in connection with possible client tax evasion and on June 15, the firm’s global head of commercial real estate, Jonathan Pollack, defected to Blackstone.
Oh, and both CEOs resigned on June 7.
On June 26, FT revealed that BaFin, Germany’s financial “watchdog”, had raised serious questions about whether outgoing co-CEO Anshu Jain had misled the Bundesbank about who knew what and when with regard to the bank’s participation in the manipulation of LIBOR among other possible infractions. Summarizing, we said that BaFin apparently thinks Anshu Jain might have known his traders were manipulating LIBOR and also might have taken around a half decade or so to punish a trader who PIMCO apparently caught manipulating IR swaps.
Now, the entire BaFin report (which was sent to Deutsche Bank in May) has leaked. Here’s WSJ:
BaFin, the German financial watchdog, sent the report to Deutsche Bank’s management board on May 11, less than a month before the German lender unexpectedly announced that its co-chief executives, Anshu Jain and Jürgen Fitschen, planned to resign. Deutsche Bank officials said in June that the resignations weren’t the result of regulatory pressure.
Mr. Jain, whose resignation took effect June 30 and who is still employed by Deutsche Bank as a consultant, is singled out for especially harsh criticism in the letter for allegedly providing inadequate leadership and failing to stop manipulation of the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, and other market benchmarks.
To continue reading: Deutsche Bank Stunner