Deutsche Bank AG (NYSE:DB) shares, rose in value, with the stock price down by -1.65% to the previous day’s close as strong demand from buyers drove the stock to $29.5.
Actively observing the price movement in the recent trading, the stock is buoying the session at $29.99, falling within a range of $29.39 and $29.62. The value of beta (5-year monthly) is 1.026 whereas the PE ratio is 12.46 over 12-month period. Referring to stock’s 52-week performance, its high was $30.50, and the low was $13.70. On the whole, DB has fluctuated by 5.68% over the past month.
With the market capitalization of Deutsche Bank AG currently standing at about $57.28 billion, investors are eagerly awaiting this quarter’s results, scheduled for on 2025-Apr-29. The company’s Forward Dividend Ratio is 0.77, with its dividend yield at 2.62%.
Technical indicators serve as essential tools for traders, offering insights into market sentiment and potential price movements. We see that DB’s technical picture suggests that short-term indicators denote the stock is a 100% Buy on average. However, medium-term indicators have put the stock in the category of 100% Buy while long-term indicators on average have been pointing out that it is a 100% Buy.
The stock’s technical analysis shows that the PEG ratio is about 0.89, with the price of DB currently trading nearly 2.08% and 4.86% away from the simple moving averages for 20 and 50 days respectively. The Relative Strength Index (RSI, 14) currently indicates a reading of 55.84, while the 7-day volatility ratio is showing 1.21% which for the 30-day chart, stands at 1.41%. Furthermore, Deutsche Bank AG (DB)’s beta value is 1.02.
A comparison of Deutsche Bank AG (DB) with its peers suggests the former has fared considerably weaker in the market. DB showed an intraday change of -1.65% in today’s session so far, and over the past year, it grew by 72.99%%.
Data on historical trading for Deutsche Bank AG (NYSE:DB) indicates that the trading volumes over the past 10 days have averaged 2.89 and over the past 3 months, they’ve averaged 2.98 million. According to company’s latest data on outstanding shares, there are 1.94 billion shares outstanding.
Nearly 7.04% of Deutsche Bank AG’s shares belong to company insiders and institutional investors own 41.80% of the company’s shares. The data on short interest also indicates that stock shorts accounted for 7.12 million shares as on 2025-06-13, resulting in a short ratio of 2.57. According to the data, the short interest in Deutsche Bank AG (DB) stood at 37.00 of shares outstanding as of 2025-06-13; the number of short shares registered in 2025-05-15 reached 9.45 million. The stock has risen by 77.04% since the beginning of the year, thereby showing the potential of a further growth. This could raise investors’ confidence to be optimistic about the DB stock heading into the next quarter.