The German lender’s top management will be in the line of fire when executives gather in Frankfurt on Thursday.
Lawmakers on Wednesday reviewed bills that would prevent transgender people from using bathrooms that match their gender identity.
The bank is freezing a plan to create 250 new jobs in the state citing a controversial law targeting LGBT residents.
After a week of growing unease, Germany’s largest lender sought to reassure investors with a $5 billion debt buyback.
The region's markets responded to comments from the U.S. Fed chair, which included concerns about China's economic slowdown.
Deutsche Bank shares have recovered some ground after hitting 30-year lows. But concern about the health of Europe’s banks is growing.
A day after investors pummeled financials in the U.S. and Europe, shares in major banks saw an upswing in early trading Wednesday.
Japan government bond yields turned negative on Tuesday, underscoring risk aversion, following drops in U.S. stocks.
Stocks slumped in Japan and Australia early Tuesday while markets elsewhere in the region remained closed for Lunar New Year.
The German lender announced it would not award bonuses to its board in 2015, amid mounting restructuring and litigation costs.
Bank of New York Mellon Corp. and units of Deutsche Bank AG, HSBC Holdings PLC and Wells Fargo & Co. were named in the lawsuits.
These trades have allegedly allowed investors to move money from one country to another in violation of sanctions placed on Russia after its annexation of Crimea.
The Fed's decision Wednesday to raise the benchmark interest rate reflects how much the country has healed since the Great Recession.
Europe’s top investment banks are restructuring, but one thing won’t change: Bonuses for their top executives will rise.
Switzerland’s largest bank pushed its profitability target by two years, as stricter regulations back home and ongoing lawsuits hampered growth.
The German lender, which reported a $6.5 billion third-quarter loss Thursday, also approved sweeping austerity measures, including slashing 35,000 jobs.
The investigation is one of the first by U.S. regulators into a possible breach of Western sanctions against Russia, the Financial Times reported.
The error has brought the German lender's operational and risk-control deficiencies under the scanner.
While Chinese markets were shielded from heavy losses by hopes of government stimulus, other markets around the world remained unaffected.
The shake-ups come as Deutsche Bank is embroiled in investigations and legal issues regarding allegations that the company was rigging global interest rate benchmark Libor.
Deutsche Bank announced in September that it will close its investment banking operations in Russia, to “reduce complexity, costs, risks and capital consumption.”
News hit investors Thursday that Credit Suisse was seeking extra risk-absorbing capital, a day after Deutsche Bank announced massive writedowns.