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DWS Cuts Asia Private Credit Team Amid Strategic Shift at Deutsche Bank’s Asset-Manager Arm

FRANKFURT, 21 November 2025 — DWS Group, the asset-management unit of Deutsche Bank AG, has dismissed its entire Asia-Pacific private-credit team as part of a broader strategic pivot away from the region’s private-lending market, according to people familiar with the matter.

The move represents a notable retreat from Asia for DWS, which has long targeted fast-growing private-credit opportunities in the region. Sources say the decision reflects concerns about deal-origination, margin pressure and regulatory complexity in Asia-Pacific markets.

What Happened & Why It Matters

  • DWS’s Asia-Pacific private-credit desk, previously focused on direct lending, real-asset financing and alternative credit solutions in the region, has been disbanded, with staff either redeployed or let go.
  • The shift signals that DWS is re-allocating resources away from Asia’s private-credit markets, likely favouring its European and U.S. businesses where the origination-to-asset-management model is more established and regulatory terrain more familiar.
  • For Asia’s alternative-credit ecosystem, which has been in growth mode as banks pull back, this announcement raises questions about institutional backing and the durability of non-bank lending growth in the region.

Implications for Asia-Pacific Investors and Markets

For investors and alternative-asset players in Southeast Asia, the decision has multiple ramifications:

  • The withdrawal sends a cautionary signal about the complexity of scaling private-credit operations in Asia: deal sourcing, execution risk, regulatory oversight and currency/interest-rate dynamics remain significant hurdles.
  • Other global asset-managers backing Asia-Pacific private-credit strategies may now face heightened scrutiny from allocators and institutional investors about staffing, returns and structural risk.
  • Regional borrowers relying on non-bank credit channels may experience tighter terms or slower access if major asset-managers pull back.

What to Watch Next

  • Whether DWS confirms the shift with formal commentary and outlines new region-strategy directions, such as focusing on passive assets or non-credit alternatives.
  • The impact on Asia-Pacific private-credit fundraising months ahead: will other firms fill the vacuum or retrench similarly?
  • Whether local or regional asset-managers will pick up origination and servicing activity previously executed by global firms, potentially changing competitive dynamics in the alternative-credit space.

Author

  • Chee Liang CFA specializes in financial advice and global economic trends, delivering clear insights to help readers navigate markets, investments, and the shifting dynamics of the world economy.

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