Review by Choice Review
This volume summarizes events that occurred during a dark period in the history of one of the world's largest financial institutions: Deutsche Bank. Based in Frankfurt, the bank established Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas (DBTCA) for its Wall Street operations, which Enrich, the finance editor at the New York Times, here explores alongside other parts of the bank's shady past. Questionable investment practices (selling risky derivatives to the Orange County, CA, government) and banking practices (non-collateralized loans to Donald Trump) were employed to increase profits. Unreasonable goals were set, such as management's plan to increase return on equity from 4 percent to 25 percent. This objective was reached using the dubious practices noted above, in addition to secretly lending to countries under US-imposed sanctions, such as Iran and Syria. When employees and federal regulators noted banking deficiencies, Deutsche Bank hired William Broeksmit, a retired Merrill Lynch derivatives expert, to head its London trading department. In 2012, he was named to the DBTCA board, and by 2014, Broeksmit was aware of its problems. That same year, he committed suicide, but given the mysterious circumstances surrounding his death, Broeksmit's son Valentin is determined to learn the truth. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers. --Robert T. Sweet, Hood College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review
Throughout the seesawing legal negotiations surrounding the release of Donald Trump's elusive tax returns, one bank, and one bank only, has emerged as the critical player whose cooperation is the keystone to unmasking the president's financial past. For 150 years, the German institution Deutsche Bank has engaged in taking bold, quasi-legal, and perhaps overtly felonious risks under the leadership of an ever-changing retinue of cutthroat CEOs who have collectively let their ambition cloud their fiduciary judgment. Allegations of laundering money for Russian oligarchs, manipulating currency markets, violating sanctions, ignoring regulations, and deceiving customers have subjected them to U.S. and international scrutiny. But it will undoubtedly be its highly irregular relationship with its most notorious client, Donald Trump, that may ultimately be its undoing, if details of gargantuan loans and the president's cavalier handling of those loans are exposed under congressional investigation. New York Times finance editor Enrich's immersion in this shadowy world of monetary malfeasance shows how the disreputable world of big-stakes banking could topple an equally unscrupulous president.--Carol Haggas Copyright 2020 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Journalist Enrich (The Spider Network) wraps an exposé of Deutsche Bank's financial misdeeds around an adopted son's investigation into his father's suicide in this propulsive, richly detailed account. After sketching the bank's origins as a lender to German industries seeking international expansion in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Enrich focuses on the period from the mid-1990s to 2019 when Deutsche aggressively entered the Wall Street investment banking industry, briefly became the world's biggest bank, and ended up "teetering on the brink of financial ruin." He details outright frauds, including hiding more than $3 billion in losses during the 2007--2008 financial crisis, manipulating interest rates, laundering money for Russian oligarchs, and violating international sanctions, as well as a laundry list of poor decisions, including lending millions of dollars to serial defaulter Donald Trump when no other mainstream financial institution would do so. As Deutsche executives fostered a culture of reckless behavior, risk management officer Bill Broeksmit tried, in vain, to apply the brakes; his suicide in 2014, as the bank was facing harsh penalties from U.S. regulators, sparked his hard-partying musician son's drug-fueled efforts to take down the bank--a quest that ends, in this account, with the delivery of a cache of internal bank documents to the FBI. Enrich writes with verve, making financial jargon accessible to general readers. This journalistic tour de force hints that plenty of shocking secrets are yet to be revealed. (Apr.)
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Review by Library Journal Review
New York Times finance editor Enrich (The Spider Network) weaves a cautionary tale out of Deutsche Bank's rise and fall, and its long, strange relationship with Donald Trump. Over the years, the bank made billions in risky loans to Trump, a repeat defaulter, with mixed results. Enrich traces the bank's 20th-century history, beginning with its collaboration with the Nazis during World War II and continuing with its transformation into an investment bank in an attempt to pursue Wall Street riches, its spurious weathering of the 2008 financial crisis, and its ultimate unraveling. For decades, Enrich says, the bank subordinated ethics, customer loyalty, and even lawful behavior to maximize short-term profits. In a twisting subplot, Enrich follows the revelations of the bank's misdeeds from the perspective of the son of a Deutsche Bank executive who committed suicide. VERDICT Part exposé, part mystery, Enrich's account is important because it illuminates Deutsche Bank's excesses and Trump's business practices. Readers of Andrew Sorkin's Too Big To Fail, which unveiled vulnerabilities in the financial industry, will find Enrich's more focused account equally compelling.--Lawrence Maxted, Gannon Univ. Lib., Erie, PA
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A deep-reaching look at the inner workings of Deutsche Bank, Donald Trump's lender of choice.At the heart of this aptly titled book is the suicide of a Deutsche executive in 2014 and the subsequent quest of his son to find out the reasons for it. That story, well rendered by New York Times finance editor Enrich (The Spider Network: How a Math Genius and Gang of Scheming Bankers Pulled Off One of the Greatest Scams in History, 2017), takes many twists and turns, but its outlines are familiar: A corporation with a dodgy history (including financing the construction of Nazi death camps) goes straight for a time, guided by people of conscience who are eventually overwhelmed by executives willing to let ethics slide in the quest for profit. The latter category includes a banker who sat onstage at Trump's inaugurationand without whose legally problematic help, Enrich suggests, Trump would never have attained office. While many financial institutions refused to lend to Trump because of his habit of reneging, Deutsche was "the only mainstream bank consistently willing to do business" with himand at the time of the presidential election, he owed the bank $350 million. But did he really, or was the bank merely a front for funding from other sources headquartered in Moscow? The author works his way through a spaghetti tangle of leads with all sorts of unsavory connections, including the family of Trump's son-in-law, members of whom "were moving money to the Russians at the same time that Russia was interfering in the American presidential election." The implications are more than suggestive. What is inarguable, by Enrich's account, is that Deutsche suffered through a clash of corporate cultures by which one side strived to comply with such things as financial stress tests while worrying that a newly elected Trump would default, leaving it "the ugly choice between seizing the president's personal assets or not enforcing the loan terms," even as the other continued corrupt practices for nearly two decades.Following the money becomes easier in this thoroughly researched, if dispiriting, work of investigative journalism. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.