The Lead-Up to Deutsch Bank's ‘Bloody Sunday’

The Lead-Up to Deutsch Bank's ‘Bloody Sunday’
AP Photo/Michael Probst

It takes a lot to rattle Wall Street.

But Deutsche Bank managed to. The beleaguered German giant announced on July 7 that it is laying off 18,000 employees—roughly one-fifth of its global workforce—and pursuing a vast restructuring plan that most notably includes shutting down its global equities trading business.

Though Deutsche's Bloody Sunday seemed to come out of the blue, it's actually the culmination of a years-long—some would say decades-long—descent into unprofitability and scandal for the bank, which in the early 1990s set out to make itself into a universal banking powerhouse to rival the behemoths of Wall Street. That pivot represented a major shift for the financial institution, which had contributed to Germany's post-World War II economic “miracle” as a domestically-focused commercial lender and retail bank.

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