Deutsche Bank shares rise in early European trading on February 6

Deutsche Bank Share Price Today (Feb. 6): DB Rises to €31.00 in Early European Trade

Deutsche Bank shares were trading around €31.00 in early European hours on February 6, up 0.88% on the session. The stock opened at €30.76 versus a previous close of €30.73, with early activity clustering tightly around the €31 level as the European session gathered pace.

Note: Price feeds for this instrument are shown with a short delay, and the day’s figures can update quickly as liquidity builds.

Market snapshot

Last traded

€31.00 +0.88% (+€0.27)

Time (GMT)

08:52

Open

€30.76

Previous close

€30.73 (05 Feb 2026)

Bid / Offer

€30.68 / €31.32

Volume (early)

23,775

The early read is less about a dramatic breakout and more about positioning: does the market keep paying above the prior close as liquidity improves, or does the stock drift back toward the open once the first burst of buying fades? With the spread showing visible interest on both sides, the €31 handle becomes the natural focal point for the morning.

Key levels to watch

Immediate pivot
€31.00
Near-term resistance
€31.32
Near-term support
€30.68
52-week range
€16.58 low · €37.09 high

The wider context matters because it frames expectations. At €31, Deutsche Bank sits well below the €37.09 52-week high but far above the €16.58 low, highlighting how much of the re-rating is already in the price. That often turns the next phase into a level-by-level grind: hold, consolidate, and then test resistance rather than sprinting in a straight line.

Early-session moves in large European financials can look small in percentage terms, but they still carry information. When a stock opens above the previous close and trades repeatedly around a round-number zone, it often signals that buyers are comfortable stepping in without needing a deeper discount. That can be especially relevant after a strong 12-month run, when markets tend to punish weak opens but reward steadier accumulation.

The tape in the first hour suggests a familiar pattern: modest prints pushing slightly higher, then quick pauses as sellers test the bid. If that “step up, hold, step up” rhythm persists, it can keep the tone constructive even without a headline catalyst. If it breaks—through heavier selling or a widening spread—the price often gravitates back toward the open as traders reset.

Recent early prints

Date Time Price (EUR) Volume Trade type MIC
06.02.2608:52:0231.0451Off-bookSINT
06.02.2608:51:5931.0353Off-bookSINT
06.02.2608:51:2931.0053Off-bookSINT
06.02.2608:51:2731.0051Off-bookSINT
06.02.2608:51:2131.000171Off-bookSINT
06.02.2608:51:0031.0002Off-bookSINT

These prints show where early trading is clustering around the €31 level.

For many readers, the practical question is what comes next as the session matures. The first checkpoint is whether the price can keep holding above €31 through the main European cash hours. If it does, the next test becomes the offer side around €31.32. If it can’t, attention shifts quickly to €30.76 (the open) and then to the visible bid zone near €30.68.

Deutsche Bank’s profile in markets also rises during earnings season, when analyst desks across the street adjust targets and fine-tune assumptions into major results. While that research flow does not automatically translate into intraday moves for Deutsche Bank’s own shares, it does keep the firm’s name prominent in daily market conversation and can amplify attention when price levels start to matter.

For official company updates and disclosures, readers can follow Deutsche Bank investor relations.

For broader market context on risk appetite and how global equities have been behaving recently, you can also read: Dow Jones slides as Nasdaq posts worst 3-day selloff since 2025.

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