Deutsche Bank seized opportunity with capital move

Deutsche CEO Jain: Capital increase was chance to reach goals 'in one fell swoop'

FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) -- Deutsche Bank's co-CEO says the bank decided on a 4.8 billion euros ($5.2 billion) capital increase so it could meet its goals for stronger financial reserves "in one fell swoop."

Anshu Jain said Tuesday the increase was "a tremendous opportunity and one we felt we had to take."

Investors appeared to agree: Shares in Germany's largest bank soared 7.0 percent in morning trading in Europe.

Jain's comments made in a conference call with investment analysts come a day after the company announced plans for the capital increase. The measures include 2.8 billion euros from issuing 90 million new shares and up to another 2.0 billion euros from other financial instruments. The bank also announced better-than-expected first-quarter earnings.

The increase means the bank will meet new capital requirements well ahead of the 2019 deadline under the international agreement known as Basel III. It said it now had more robust finances than its global peers.

The move will take the bank's Core Tier 1 capital ratio — a key measure of financial reserves — from 8.8 percent to 9.5 percent. That meets the capital requirement under the international banking rules known as Basel III and keeps the bank on course to meet its own internal goal of 10 percent in 2015, the bank says.

The move will also calm long-running investor concerns over the bank's relatively lower levels of capital buffers compared to other big banks.

Deutsche Bank had held off raising capital through a share issue and sought instead to increase its buffer through other means such as selling risky assets. Share issues are often be unpopular with investors because they can dilute shareholder holdings.

Jain said the bank had made enough progress using other methods to put the bank in a position where a share increase would achieve its targets. "What has changed is the very rapid progress we have made on organic capital formation," he said.

Regulators around the world are pushing banks to keep more capital as buffers against unexpected losses as a way of strengthening the financial system and avoiding a repeat of the 2007-2009 financial crisis.