The possibility raised by the firm's chief regulatory officer was the
latest warning from a financial firm since the UK voted to leave the
European Union.
Currently, UK-based companies can conduct business throughout Europe, but could lose that right.
The warning came ahead of Deutsche's latest results which showed that job cuts had boosted profits.
The bank reported
that first-quarter profits more than doubled to 575m euros (£490m),
helped by cost-cutting efforts which have seen 3,300 job losses in the
past 12 months.
Germany's biggest bank has previously said it is committed to the City of London.
But
speaking at a conference in Germany on Wednesday, Sylvie Matherat,
chief regulatory officer at Deutsche, suggested it was considering job
moves as a result of Brexit.
'Need clarity'
The positions in question include not just front office jobs, but also roles in IT and risk management, she said.
"For
front office people, if you want to deal with an EU client, you need to
be based in the EU," she said during a panel at the Frankfurt Main
Finance Conference.
"Does it mean I have to move all the front office people to Germany or not? We're speaking of 2,000 people."
She added that an additional 2,000 jobs linked to risk management could also face relocation.
"So
we really need clarity," Ms Matherat said. "We are the largest bank
branch operating in the UK. We do have something like 9,000 people
there, so I mean they [staff] do have real questions [including] where
do I register my children for in the next two years at school? I mean
that is a very concrete question."
Despite the warning, the bank last month entered negotiations for a new London headquarters with a 25-year lease.
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