« Back to article | Print this article |
Jain, 48, currently the head of Deutsche Bank AG's investment banking division in London was named co-chief executive of Germany's largest lender.
He will succeed Management Board Chairman Josef Ackermann, who exits the bank in May next year.
Jain will lead Deutsche along with his German doppelg nger, Juergen Fitschen, who is 14 years older than Jain.
Click NEXT to read more...
"The bank is resorting to a dual CEO structure for the fourth time in its history, despite the potential for conflict and even a power struggle between the two, because handing the reins to Jain alone was seen as too much of a culture shock, according to people familiar with the matter," Laura Stevens, Berlin-based reporter for The Wall Street Journal, wrote in an article earlier this week.
In some ways, the responsibilities bestowed upon Jain perhaps speak of a greater accomplishment than being given the reins of an American corporate like Pepsi or Morgan Stanley, co-CEO issues aside.
Click NEXT to read more...
Here, immigrants rarely scale the Teutonic ladder of corporate excellence to its very apex. However, Germans will point to Jain as proof that this is indeed possible.
It is easy to see why Jain has won this coveted spot.
He is known for his hard work and academic brilliance over the 16 years he has spent at Deutsche and has earned a great reputation by transforming the company's investment banking operations into a solidly profitable business.
Detractors of the co-CEO decision will argue that surely a person, whose division has given its corporate parent more than 70 per cent of its profits, deserves a shot at running the ship by himself.
Click NEXT to read more...
Fitschen, who reportedly has good relations with German industry, can act as the face of the bank to shareholders, while Jain runs the bank and aims to become fluent in German.
This way Jain gets his due and the bank ensures no communication conundrums.
Born in Jaipur, Rajasthan, and educated both in India (BA in economics from Delhi University) and the United States (MBA in finance from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst), Jain was previously a managing director at Merrill Lynch in New York.
Click NEXT to read more...
Prior to his appointment as co-CEO, Jain was responsible for corporate finance, sales and trading and transaction banking businesses at Deutsche.
He has also been a member of Deutsche's management board since 2009 and the group executive committee since 2002.
He joined the bank in 1995.
Jain is a dogged cricket enthusiast whose opinion article in Newsweek on the 2011 World Cup apparently raised hackles at Deutsche.
Click NEXT to read more...
Apparently, fellow Deutsche bankers rued his passion for a game that football-crazy Germans could not possibly appreciate or understand.
Jain remains unperturbed and proudly displays a cricket shirt signed by Australian cricket twins Steve and Mark Waugh on one of his office walls.
His other hobby is wildlife photography.
Click NEXT to read more...
His appointment as the co-CEO, however, has not drawn criticism from any quarters.
Instead, critics and supporters have been unanimous in praising him.
"I could ask for no better partner than Anshu in building further on the bank's success in our home market and worldwide," said Jain's counterpart Fitschen.
Jain returned the complement: "I'm humbled and honoured at having been asked to lead this great institution together with Juergen."