Deutsche Bank reported a net loss that missed market expectations on Wednesday as a major restructuring plan continues to weigh on the German lender.

It reported a net loss of 832 million euros ($924 million) for the third quarter of 2019. Analysts were expecting a loss of 778 million euros, according to data from Refinitiv. It had reported a net profit of 229 million euros in the third quarter of 2018, but a loss of 3.15 billion euros in the second quarter of this year.

Here are some of the key highlights:

Total net revenues: 5.3 billion euros in the third quarter vs. 6.2 billion euros a year ago.

Common equity tier 1 ratio stood at 13.4% in the third quarter, vs. 14% a year ago.

Total non interest expenses: 5.8 billion euros in the third quarter, vs. 5.6 billion euros a year ago.

"Our results in the quarter are entirely in line with our plans. We are executing, I think, well against the strategic changes we announced in the summer," James von Moltke, chief financial officer at Deutsche Bank, told CNBC's Annette Weisbach.

He added: "Our net loss is a little better than our internal planning and our capital ratio at 13.4% stable quarter-on-quarter demonstrates what we set out."

The embattled German lender has struggled since the global financial crisis of 2008 and the subsequent debt crisis in the euro area. The bank has faced billion-dollar fines, increased market competition, a lower market share in both commercial and investment banking, as well as a series of management changes.