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Viewing cable 08FRANKFURT2735, Commerzbank Buys Dresdner, Fuelling Consolidation Debate

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08FRANKFURT2735 2008-09-03 12:17 2011-08-24 01:00 UNCLASSIFIED Consulate Frankfurt
VZCZCXRO4248
OO RUEHAG RUEHDF RUEHIK RUEHLZ RUEHROV
DE RUEHFT #2735/01 2471217
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 031217Z SEP 08
FM AMCONSUL FRANKFURT
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 7871
INFO RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHDC IMMEDIATE
RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES  IMMEDIATE
RUCNFRG/FRG COLLECTIVE IMMEDIATE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 FRANKFURT 002735 
 
DEPARTMENT FOR EUR/AGS 
TREASURY FOR LUKAS KOHLER/OFFICE FOR EUROPE AND EURASIA 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: EFIN ECON GM
 
SUBJECT: Commerzbank Buys Dresdner, Fuelling Consolidation Debate 
 
1.  Summary: Commerzbank's acquisition of Dresdner Bank this week is 
the third and largest bank takeover in Germany this year, as global 
financial turmoil brings long-awaited consolidation to Germany's 
notoriously over-banked financial sector.  With the deal, 
Commerzbank picks up a bank which has suffered greatly in the recent 
downturn, but creates an entity large enough to rival Germany's 
biggest bank, Deutsche Bank, in many spheres.  The deal may spur 
further consolidation among private banks, but does not represent a 
significant change to Germany's three-pillar bank system.  End 
Summary. 
 
Let's Make a Deal 
----------------- 
 
2.  On August 31, Commerzbank finalized a deal to purchase Dresdner 
Bank from the insurance company Allianz SE for 9.8 billion euros 
($14.4 billion).  The bank will use shares and cash to buy 60.2% of 
Dresdner right away and acquire the rest by the end of 2009, pending 
shareholder approval. Allianz will acquire a 30% stake in the merged 
entity.  Commerzbank also agreed to cover the first 275 million 
euros ($404 million) of potential losses on Dresdner's asset-backed 
securities, while Allianz will cover the next 975 million euros 
($1.4 billion). 
 
3.  The deal ends months of speculation as potential bidders such 
Banco Santander and Lloyds TSB dropped out and China Development 
Bank lost the bidding.  With 1.1 trillion euros ($1.6 trillion) in 
assets, the new entity merges Germany's second and third largest 
banks, but still lies well behind Deutsche Bank with its assets of 
2.0 trillion euros ($2.94 trillion).  Commerzbank will, however, 
become one of Germany's biggest retail bank with 1,200 branches, 
while the name Dresdner will eventually disappear from the market 
130 years after the institution's founding. 
 
What's in a Deal? 
----------------- 
 
4.  For Allianz, the deal ends seven unhappy years of ownership, as 
it already cut more than 18,000 jobs at Dresdner, or 40% of the 
workforce, and shed 32.6 billion euros ($48 billion) in assets. 
Having bought Dresdner for 23.5 billion euros in 2001 ($22 billion 
at the time), Allianz aimed to profit from cross-selling insurance 
and banking products.  Not only did the strategy never take off, but 
Dresdner's investment bank branch, Dresdner Kleinwort, performed 
poorly compared to rivals, investing heavily in asset-backed 
securities which resulted in over 3 billion euros in write-downs and 
four consecutive negative quarters for the bank starting in August 
2007. 
 
5.  Going forward, Commerzbank faces challenges in merging the two 
entities.  A senior Deutsche Bank economist told Econ Off that he 
did not see a merger as a natural fit, saying that Dresdner Bank's 
focus on high-end clients and global investment banking did not mesh 
well with Commerzbank's regional portfolio and focus on Germany's 
small and medium-sized businesses.  Commerzbank announced 9,000 
potential lay-offs, both in Germany and abroad, to eliminate 
redundancies in the two Frankfurt-based entities, and will possibly 
wind down the unprofitable Kleinwort significantly.  By tying up 
funds, the deal also stretches Commerzbank's overall capitalization 
during a time when banks have struggled to raise fresh capital. 
Despite the challenges ahead, an analyst at the German Council of 
Economic experts told Econ Off that the deal undoubtedly created "a 
second national champion" that would strengthen competition in the 
industry. 
 
A Big Deal? 
----------- 
 
6.  The Deutsche Bank economist dismissed the significance of the 
acquisition joking that it was "no big deal" as Commerzbank would 
only account for 6-8% of the assets held by German banks and is 
still small enough to be at risk of a takeover by a foreign bank. 
Germany's three-pillar banking system, wherein private banks only 
make up around 28% of the overall market, remains firmly in place, 
with the savings bank and cooperative bank pillars legally apart 
from the private banks.  Nevertheless, the takeover caps a wave of 
deals within the private bank pillar in 2008 following Citigroup's 
sale of its German business to Credit Mutuel and KfW's sale of its 
stake in IKB to Lonestar, a U.S. private equity group. 
 
7.  The deal may also add impetus to Deutsche Bank's pursuit of 
Postbank.  With its 14 million private accounts, Postbank would 
offer reliable income from retail banking to counterbalance Deutsche 
Bank's focus on global investment banking as well as a steady supply 
of funding when capital markets are not performing.  No deal has 
been finalized and the state postal service may not agree to sell 
Postbank if it means large lay-offs. 
 
FRANKFURT 00002735  002 OF 002 
 
 
 
8.  A curious footnote on the takeover is the failed bid of 
state-owned China Development Bank (CDB).  While it remains unclear 
whether CDB outbid Commerzbank and whether its offer was serious, 
such a takeover would likely have unleashed a firestorm of debate 
over the role of state-owned foreign companies in the German 
economy.  The Deutsche Bank analyst said there was no "one view" in 
the political spectrum on the issue, but such a deal would have 
nonetheless provoked unease.  The deal with Commerzbank keeps 
Dresdner "in the family" and creates a larger German entity capable 
of building a more global profile. 
 
9.  Comment: The merger of Germany's second and third largest banks 
was no doubt fuelled by the global financial turmoil which exposed 
the weaknesses of already troubled banks.  Commerzbank will clearly 
be tied up absorbing Dresdner for the near future, while rivals such 
as Deutsche Bank eye other potential assets.  Consolidation will 
continue within the three pillars of the system, but few foresee 
drastic changes to Germany's banking landscape on the horizon.  End 
Comment. 
 
10.  This cable was coordinated with Embassy Berlin. 
POWELL