Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Private & Commercial Clients Germany / International is the retail bank of Deutsche Bank. In Germany, it operates under two brands – Deutsche Bank and Postbank. Additionally, it has operations in Belgium, Italy, Spain and India. The businesses in Poland and Portugal are in the process of being sold. [130] [131] [132] [needs update]
In September, Deutsche Bank decided to close one out of five branches in Germany, reducing its presence to around 400 units, Reuters reported.Why Does It Matter: Executives from leading European ...
(The other 11 banks in the top 25 were Deutsche Bank, Dresdner Bank, Bank der Deutschen Arbeit, Commerzbank, the indirectly government-owned Deutsche Verkehrs-Kredit-Bank, cooperative Deutsche Rentenbank-Kreditanstalt, Bayerische Hypotheken- und Wechsel-Bank, Deutsche Centralbodenkredit AG, part-government-owned Deutsche Industriebank and ...
Deutsche Bank on Monday said that it had completed a fourth and final phase of a years-long technology integration process with Postbank. Germany's largest bank said it would result in cost ...
Deutsche’s move represents a turnaround on previously liberal work-from-home policies introduced by the bank during COVID-19, which allowed staff to spend 40-60% of their week working remotely.
Also, Christmas Eve is developing into a semi-holiday: from mid-afternoon it is practically treated as a holiday, and while shops still open in the morning, for other businesses (apart from those that work even on holidays) this is becoming increasingly unusual; schools are closed in any case.
The Deutsche Bank Twin Towers, also known as Deutsche Bank Headquarters (German: Zwillingstürme der Deutschen Bank or Hauptverwaltung Deutsche Bank AG), is a twin tower skyscraper complex in the Westend-Süd district of Frankfurt, Germany. Both towers rise to 155 m (509 ft) and serve as headquarters for Deutsche Bank, the largest bank in Germany.
In his Monday address, the Deutsche Bank boss pushed back against the characterization of Germany as being the “sick man of Europe”— a phrase popularized in 1998 by economist Holger ...