Investors sparked a selloff in Deutsche Bank AG DB -3.11% and thrust one of Europe’s most important lenders into the center of concerns about the health of the global financial system.
Shares of Germany’s largest lender tumbled as much as 15%, their third consecutive day of losses, though they later regained some ground and closed down 8.5%. The cost to insure against its default using credit-default swaps soared to the highest levels since 2020.
- Deutsche Bank's shares dropped 11 percent on Friday and have now fallen 29 percent since the 2023 banking crisis began, sparking fears of a collapse.
- "Looks like the banking crisis hasn't been entirely put to bed," Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG Group, told Reuters.
- Despite the worries, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and other analysts remain optimistic that the bank won't suffer the same fate as Credit Suisse.
Another bank is entering troubled territory amid the recent banking crisis that has spilled into
global markets—this time in Germany.
Deutsche Bank is facing fears of a collapse after shares dropped 11 percent on Friday morning,
bringing those stocks down to a total of 29 percent since the bank chaos began on March 8.
"We are still on edge waiting for another domino to fall, and Deutsche is clearly the next one
on everyone's minds (fairly or unfairly)," Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG Group,
told Reuters. "Looks like the banking crisis hasn't been entirely put to bed."
Deutsche Bank's latest slump, driven partly by the Credit Suisse deal, signals that confidence
in the banking system remains low. It marks the third week of
decline for European banks, which fell 4.2 percent in the wake of the financial turmoil.
1 comment:
Austrian bank, Creditanstalt, failed in May 1931 followed by German Danatbank in July initiating a European banking crisis and the Great Depression. Fast forward to 2023, Credit Suisse failed with Deutsche Bank soon to follow. History does repeat itself.
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