Deutsche Bank accidentally sent client $6 billion — report

Police officers build barricades in front of the European Central Bank, ECB, in Frankfurt, central Germany, Thursday, May 30, 2013. They have put up metal barricades around the European Central Bank a day ahead of anti-capitalist protests expected to draw several thousand people. Members of the Blockupy group say they will try to prevent employees from reaching the ECB for several hours Friday, May 31, 2013, to underline their opposition to what they say is the bank's role in enforcing government spending cutbacks as a way of dealing with the eurozone's crisis over too much government debt. (AP Photo/dpa, Boris Roessler)

Police officers build barricades in front of the European Central Bank, ECB, in Frankfurt, central Germany, on May 30, 2013.  AP

LONDON, United Kingdom — Germany’s biggest lender Deutsche Bank accidentally sent $6 billion to a client after entering the wrong numbers, Bloomberg News reported on Monday.

A junior member of the investment bank’s foreign exchange sales team made the error in June, Bloomberg reported, citing a person briefed on the situation.

The $6 billion was sent to a U.S. hedge fund client and recovered one day later, and occurred after the employee used a “gross figure, rather than a net figure”, according to the report.

The incident follows a series of scandals at the Frankfurt-based bank, which launched a major business and management shake-up this weekend.

Its two co-chief executives Anshu Jain and Juergen Fitschen resigned in June over missed profit targets and missteps, and were replaced by new co-CEO John Cryan.

The bank is mired in roughly 6,000 legal cases and received a record $2.5 billion fine in May for its role in rigging interest rates.

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