FRANKFURT--Deutsche Bank AG (DB) is less involved in the U.K.'s investigations into the alleged manipulation of foreign-exchange markets than some of the German lender's large rivals, chief financial officer Stefan Krause said Wednesday.

The U.K.'s Financial Conduct Authority held preliminary settlement talks with executives and lawyers of the six banks, comprising Citigroup Inc. (C), J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Barclays PLC (BCS), Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC (RBS), HSBC Holdings PLC (HBC), and UBS AG (UBS), people familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal in late September.

The FCA told these banks they should each expect to pay the U.K. regulator more than the 160 million pounds ($261 million) that UBS paid in 2012 to settle the U.K.'s probe into alleged interest-rate rigging, the people said.

"It wasn't our decision to not be part of the group [of six banks]," Mr. Krause said in a conference call, adding that Deutsche Bank's involvement in the probes is smaller. "This is good news at this point, but the investigations are still ongoing and we need to learn more" about them, he said.

Banks and regulators are eager to conclude the currencies-market probe, hoping to avoid prolonged legal and regulatory wrangling, as well as the financial uncertainty, that have dogged a separate investigation into the London interbank offered rate, or Libor.

But the FCA settlement talks haven't included U.S. authorities, several of which are conducting their own investigations into possible currencies-market manipulation, the people familiar with the matter have said, and it looks increasingly unlikely there will be a joint U.S.-U.K. industry wide settlement, with the U.S. case likely to continue into 2015.

Mr. Krause said Wednesday some investigations that the bank is involved in are more advanced than others, adding that the foreign-exchange investigations are "lower down in the process," signaling they could take longer to resolve than others.

Deutsche Bank said late Tuesday it is replacing Mr. Krause--who has faced criticism from investors over his financial leadership of the German bank--with a Goldman Sachs Group Inc. partner.

Mr. Krause will take a newly created position within the company, with responsibilities including strategy, cost cutting and other issues, the bank said. The personnel changes are part of a broader shuffle on the company's management board. A senior Deutsche Bank audit executive, Christian Sewing, will gain responsibility for dealing with the bank's mounting legal and legacy issues.

Write to Eyk Henning at Eyk.Henning@wsj.com

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