Deutsche Bank AG, Europe’s largest lender with $3.07 trillion (Rs.153  trillion today) of assets, has infused Rs.455 crore to strengthen its  Indian operations. The German bank has been investing money every year  in its Indian branches since 2007, with 2009 being an exception.
“The capital base pertains only to the India branches and excludes all  other Deutsche Bank entities operating in India—equity broking and  investment banking, primary dealership, asset management and shared  services,” Deutsche Bank said in an emailed statement on Tuesday.
The latest capital infusion will take the bank’s tier I or core capital  in the country to a little over Rs.5,500 crore. Tier I capital includes a  bank’s equity and reserves.
Deutsche Bank’s India branches have  shown a compound annual growth rate of 38% over the last five years. The  German bank recently received nod from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)  to open two branches in Ahmedabad and Surat, which will take its network  to 17 outlets.
The additional capital will be used to service and  finance the bank’s corporate, institutional and retail clients, said  Gunit Chadha, chief executive of Deutsche Bank’s Indian unit.
Corporate and investment banking makes up more than 80% of Deutsche Bank’s business in India. In April 2011, the bank sold its 
credit card  business to IndusInd Bank Ltd, but has maintained that it will continue  to invest in retail banking, although this will remain a small part of  its overall business in India.
In 2010-11, Deutsche Bank’s profit in  India rose 41% to Rs.630 crore, helped by rising income from advances,  trading and fees. It earned Rs.1,880.16 crore from advances and  investments, up from Rs.1,578.87 crore in the previous year.
This is  the right time for foreign banks to strengthen their Indian businesses  to service corporate clients in the country, said Manish Ostwal, banking  analyst at Kisan Ratilal Choksey Shares and Securities Pvt. Ltd.
“Even larger banks such as Standard Chartered are now focusing on  wholesale banking because getting permission to open branches from RBI  is difficult, while helping Indian companies to get capital from abroad  is their strength, which no other local bank except the State Bank of  India can provide,” Ostwal said.
Deutsche Bank’s new branch licences  from RBI have come after two years. UK-based Standard Chartered Plc  received permission to open three branches—one each in Jaipur, Jodhpur  and Thiruvananthapuram in 2010. The last time both the banks opened  branches was in 2010.
In India, Deutsche Bank is the smallest of the  big foreign banks in the country, including Standard Chartered,  Citibank NA and the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp. Ltd (HSBC). RBI  distributes 12-18 branches among all foreign banks every year. 
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HSBC and Citibank have not got permission to open any new branch in the current cycle, their spokespersons said.
India’s reputation as one of the fastest growing economies in the world  has also led to lenders such as Deutsche Bank in getting capital here,  Ostwal said.
“The recent ratings downgrade of the Indian banking  sector has made it difficult for Indian banks to access funds and,  hence, foreign banks have an opportunity to strengthen their position in  areas such as foreign exchange, commodities, merger and acquisitions  and structured finance,” the analyst said.
In November, global  rating agency Moody’s Investors Service Inc. downgraded the outlook for  Indian banks to negative from stable, citing a likely deterioration in  asset quality in the next 18 months.