Office address: One Columbus Circle, New York, NY 10019
Website: db.com
Year established: 1979
Company type: financial services
Employees: 89,700+ (global)
Expertise: investment banking, capital markets, fixed income, currencies, equity research, mergers and acquisitions, prime brokerage, market making, trading, securities clearing
Parent company: Deutsche Bank AG
Key people: Christian Sewing (CEO), James von Moltke (CFO), Fabrizio Campelli (head of investment bank), Marcus Chromik (chief risk officer), Bernd Leukert (chief technology, data and innovation officer), Claudio de Sanctis (head of private bank), Rebecca Short (COO)
Financing status: corporate-backed or acquired
Deutsche Bank Securities is a US-based broker-dealer that offers investment banking, trading, and advisory services. It serves institutional, corporate, and government clients as part of Deutsche Bank’s global investment bank.
This profile will place more emphasis on Deutsche Bank Securities, not just the entire group.
Deutsche Bank has roots in the US that go back to 1872, when it first entered the American market. The bank itself was founded in Berlin, Germany in 1870 to support global trade.
In the late 1800s, Deutsche Bank took risks in American railway investments. It worked with Henry Villard and helped reorganize the Northern Pacific Railroad after its collapse. The bank also supported industries like electric power, mining, and manufacturing.
World wars and changes in the economy led Deutsche Bank to adjust its US plans during the 1900s. After World War I, the bank worked to protect German investors and settle old business.
In 1979, the firm finally opened its own branch in New York. The 1980s and 1990s saw more growth, including new branches and the key purchase of Bankers Trust in 1999.
The Bankers Trust deal gave Deutsche Bank Securities a much larger footprint in the US and brought it into the heart of Wall Street. In 2001, the company was listed on the NYSE. By 2021, it had moved its Americas headquarters to One Columbus Circle in New York.
The firm has faced challenges as well, including a $19 million SEC penalty in 2023 for not meeting ESG promises through its asset management arm. Despite ups and downs, it remains a major player in US investment banking as it continues to adapt to new markets and regulations.
Deutsche Bank Securities delivers investment solutions with a global reach and deep market expertise. The firm is known for its strong research, advisory services, and ability to handle complex transactions for institutional clients.
Deutsche Bank’s US investment platform centers on Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. and its asset management arm, DWS. Specialized units like Deutsche Finance America add expertise in alternatives and real estate.
Deutsche Bank Securities states its culture focuses on empowering employees to work together and achieve results. The company says that its approach centers on people and is guided by four main principles:
The company offers a benefits program that supports a wide range of employee needs. These benefits seek to help the staff balance work and personal life:
Deutsche Bank Securities focuses on building diverse teams and fostering open dialogue across all levels. Programs like ATLAS help women managing directors move into senior roles, with a 100 percent success rate. ERGs, such as dbPride and VOWS, support inclusion for LGBTQI staff, veterans, and others.
Christian Sewing serves as the CEO of Deutsche Bank and oversees HR. He previously led both the Corporate Bank and the Investment Bank. Sewing joined the company in 1989 after completing a bank apprenticeship and earning a diploma from Bankakademie Bielefeld and Hamburg.
The management board is made up of leaders with deep experience in finance, risk, technology, and client service:
The management board sets the company’s strategy, risk, and financial direction. Each member is responsible for key areas of Deutsche Bank’s performance and control.
After strong first-quarter results and rising shares in 2024, Deutsche Bank set aside $1.4 billion for legal provisions related to its 2010 Postbank acquisition. This action puts its planned share buybacks at risk, which are key to rewarding shareholders and supporting long-term growth. Despite the setback, the firm maintains its financial targets and continues to focus on delivering value for clients and investors.
In 2025, one of the firm’s economists also addressed claims that firing Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell could lower US debt costs. The topic came up after public calls to cut rates as a way to reduce government interest payments.
Deutsche Bank’s analysis showed that removing Powell and forcing big rate cuts would save far less than the $1 trillion some have suggested. By analyzing market reactions, Deutsche Bank shows clients that dramatic policy moves may not lead to real savings.
Bond returns are exceeding stock gains by the widest margin in nine years as optimism that greeted the year evaporates and investors around the world question the strength of the economic recovery.
Check out the estimates from strategists at brokerages for where the Standard & Poor's 500 Index will finish 2010 and how much profit companies in the benchmark measure of U.S. stocks will generate
Investors are moving more money than ever before out of stocks and into bonds, widening a valuation gap and convincing some major fund companies and investors that now is the time to buy equities.
Lam sees little chance of economic relapse; 'prolonged period of mild growth'
When it comes to municipal bond defaults, investors need to be careful about a few specific types of bonds. For most other munis, problems can be neutralized with good old-fashioned research and diversification.
Michael Burry, the former hedge fund manager who predicted the housing market's plunge, said he is investing in rich farmland, small technology companies and gold as he hunts for original ideas and braces for a weaker dollar.
Traders, storage facility owners betting on turnaround in the first half of the year
The ex-hedgie who predicted the mortgage collapse sees green in green acres. High tech, gold looks good to him as well.
Almost two years after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s failure caused world markets to seize up, Pacific Investment Management Co. is planning a fund that will offer protection to investors against market declines of more than 15 percent.
Pimco places an $8.1B options wager that the U.S. won't experience a long period of falling prices. Says one exec at the fund firm: A decade of deflation is 'remote.'
New rules will make it tougher for smaller financial-services companies to compete.
A securities industry regulator investigating abuses in mortgage-linked investments has focused on the activities of Morgan Stanley, Barclays PLC and Credit Suisse Group AG, a person with direct knowledge of the matter said.
The removal of uncertainty regarding Congress's financial reform bill may reinforce the employment rebound as some bankers are being offered guaranteed bonuses.
Finra-backed candidates who represent large and midsize firms are running unopposed so far in the regulator's upcoming board election, but a battle is brewing for three open small-firm seats.
Complex reverse convertibles mostly sold to individual investors; 'inconceivable'