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The digital currency’s price has rebounded to over $8,000 as a new ETF is in the works; three deals may indicate a resurgence of small bank M&A.
July 25 -
David Solomon is officially named as Blankfein’s successor; the British bank is under pressure from an activist shareholder to boost its stock price.
July 17 -
The struggling Frankfurt-based bank expects to report net income of $468 million when it issues second-quarter results nine days from now, but it's unclear exactly where the earnings beat is coming from and whether the performance is sustainable.
July 16 -
The moves are seen as setting the stage for CEO James Gorman’s eventual retirement; banks outside the U.S. are suffering from the greenback’s recent rise.
July 11 -
JPMorgan Chase denied a report in the German magazine WirtschaftsWoche that it's interested in acquiring a stake in Deutsche Bank, after the lender's share price slumped.
July 6 -
The banker made $140,000 in illegal trading profits; the German bank faces Fed stress test and “living will” examination soon.
June 1 -
Deutsche Bank's U.S. business was put on a Federal Reserve list of problem banks and added to a group of troubled lenders monitored by the FDIC, according to a person familiar with the matter.
May 31 -
Deutsche Bank Chief Executive Officer Christian Sewing said the lender is committed to the U.S., seeking to dispel "rumors" to the contrary as the firm cuts back in some businesses there.
May 30 -
Otting wants banks to make small loans to consumers; the German bank will reduce headcount by at least 7,000.
May 24 -
Banks feeling the pressure in commerical lending from lightly-regulated, cash-flush competitors; financial institutions take "an increasingly militarized approach" to fighting cybercrime.
May 21 -
Christian Sewing doesn’t only have to reshape the company, revive profits and improve morale, he has to get regulators off Deutsche Bank’s back.
May 17 -
Marcus unit will start taking deposits in the U.K. next month; the bank uses the technology to complete a trade finance letter of credit for Cargill.
May 14 -
The German banking giant isn’t targeting a specific level of cuts in the U.S. and the final figure will depend on each business line’s decisions, a source said. The U.S. makes up about one-tenth of its global workforce.
May 9 -
Ryan, McConnell say they have a deal on a bipartisan Dodd-Frank rollback; New York won more than $5 billion in settlements from big banks under the former AG.
May 9 -
The bank and European air carriers are hoping to cut into air fare payment fees that are as high as $8 billion per year.
May 7 -
Overseas firms have been subject to nonpublic versions of the Federal Reserve reviews, but observers say some foreign banks may be tripped up by the public version.
May 1 -
Agencies are examining regulating cybercurrencies not named bitcoin; is Paul Achleitner to blame for the German bank’s problems?
May 1 -
The measures will lead to a “significant reduction” in the roughly 97,100-person workforce this year, the German banking giant said.
April 26 -
Bank’s net income plunges, will focus on Europe growth; FTC says the company charged hidden fees.
April 26 -
All 12 directors win nearly 90% of the vote, as does longtime auditor KPMG; Mulvaney says records haven’t been vetted by the agency and shouldn’t be released.
April 25
















