Deutsche Bank just announced a dramatic overhaul
deutsche bank
deutsche bank

(REUTERS/Luke MacGregor)
Workers sweep leaves outside Deutsche Bank offices in London December 5, 2013.

Deutsche Bank just announced a dramatic overhaul.

The structural changes follow the appointment of John Cryan as co-CEO earlier this year. He replaced Anshu Jain, who had helped build the investment banking units over the course of two decades.

The corporate banking and securities division will be replaced by two units: corporate and investment banking and global markets.

A number of executives who worked closely with Jain will exit as part of the changes as well.

Colin Fan, who had been cohead of the corporate banking and securities division, will leave, as will Michele Faissola, head of Deutsche asset and wealth management. Stefan Krause, a long-term management board member, will also exit, while Stephan Leithner, CEO for Europe, is leaving to take a role in the private equity industry.

Here's the announcement:

Deutsche Bank (XETRA: DBKGn.DE / NYSE: DB) will fundamentally change its group and leadership structure. At an extraordinary meeting today in Frankfurt, the Supervisory Board of Deutsche Bank resolved to restructure the Bank ́s business divisions. This will be supplemented by a reorganization of executive committees and senior management changes.

The Supervisory Board’s guiding principle, in light of the Bank’s Strategy 2020, was to reduce complexity of the Bank’s management structure enabling it to better meet client demands and requirements of supervisory authorities.

The Corporate Banking & Securities (CB&S) business division is a main focus of the organizational restructuring and will be split into two business divisions. Effective January 1, 2016, a business division called Corporate & Investment Banking will be created by combining the Corporate Finance business in CB&S and Global Transaction Banking (GTB). CB&S’s sales and trading activities will be combined in a newly created business division called Global Markets. The name “CB&S” will cease to exist.

Additional changes will affect Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management. High net worth clients will be served by Private Wealth Management which will be run as an independent business unit within the Private & Business Clients business division.

Deutsche Asset Management will become a stand-alone business division and focus exclusively on institutional clients and the funds business.

Together with the organizational restructuring there will be a broad-based change of key management roles. The Group Executive Committee (GEC) will be abolished, as will ten of the current 16 Management Board committees. Effective January 1, 2016, all four core business divisions will be represented directly on the Management Board. A ten-person Management Board will be supplemented by four General Managers (“Generalbevollmächtigte”).