Deutsche Bank races
against time to reach U.S. settlement
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[October 03, 2016]
By Georgina Prodhan, Kathrin Jones and Lawrence Delevingne
FRANKFURT
(Reuters) - Deutsche Bank is throwing its energies into reaching a
settlement before next month's presidential election with U.S.
authorities demanding a fine of up to $14 billion for mis-selling
mortgage-backed securities.
The threat of such a large fine has pushed Deutsche shares to record
lows, and a cut-price settlement is urgently needed to reverse the trend
and help to restore confidence in Germany's largest lender.
Its shares won't trade in Germany on Monday because of a public holiday,
but they will resume trading on the U.S. market later on Monday.
A media report late on Friday that Deutsche and the U.S. Department of
Justice were close to agreeing on a settlement of $5.4 billion lifted
the stock 6 percent higher, but that report has not been confirmed.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday that the bank's talks with
the DOJ were continuing. Details are in flux, with no deal yet presented
to senior decision makers for approval on either side, the paper said,
citing people familiar with the matter.
"Clearly, so long as a fine of this order of magnitude ($14 billion) is
an even remote possibility, markets worry," UniCredit Chief Economist
Erik F. Nielsen wrote in a note on Sunday.
Ratings agency Moody's said it would be positive for bondholders if the
lender could settle for around $3.1 billion, while a fine as high as
$5.7 billion would dent 2016 profitability but not significantly impair
the bank's capital position.
POTENTIAL RISK
Deutsche is much smaller than Wall Street rivals such as JPMorgan and
Citigroup.
But it has significant trading relationships with all of the world's
largest finance houses and the International Monetary Fund this year
identified it as a bigger potential risk to the wider financial system
than any other global bank.
Deutsche Chief Executive John Cryan will be in Washington this week for
the annual meeting of the IMF, and the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
reported that other executives would join him to try to negotiate a
settlement with the U.S. authorities.
Like fellow large European banks also under investigation for mis-selling
mortgage-backed securities -- Credit Suisse <CSGN.S> and Barclays <BARC.L>
-- Deutsche will want to get a deal done with the current administration
still in power.
A new administration to be installed after the Nov. 8 election will
bring unknown risks and likely delays.
Domestically, Deutsche Bank is fighting a rearguard action, seeking to
shore up confidence among the public, politicians and regulators who say
the bank brought many of its problems upon itself by overreaching itself
and then reacting too slowly to the 2008 financial crisis.
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It
suffered a further blow to its image this weekend with a third IT outage in the
space of a few months on Saturday, denying some customers access to their money
for a short time.
INDUSTRY SUPPORT
German
business leaders from companies including BASF, Daimler, E.ON, RWE and Siemens
lined up to defend the bank in a front-page article in the Frankfurter
Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung.
"German industry needs a Deutsche Bank to accompany us out into the world," BASF
Chairman Juergen Hambrecht said.
A spokesman for a blue-chip company that did not feature in the article told
Reuters he had been asked by Deutsche for an executive to provide a similar
supportive comment.
Deutsche Bank and the government in Berlin have had to play a delicate balancing
act, emphasizing the substance and importance of the bank without implying any
need for state aid or willingness to supply it.
The bank has a market capitalization of only about 15.9 billion euros ($17.9
billion) and would almost certainly have to raise fresh cash to pay the full DOJ
demand.
Both
the bank and Berlin this week denied reports that the government was preparing a
rescue plan.
The Bild am Sonntag newspaper wrote on Sunday that Deutsche's chairman had
informed Berlin just before it disclosed the potential $14 billion fine but had
not asked for help.
The same newspaper quoted the president of the Bavarian Finance Centre, Wolfgang
Gerke, as saying that the German government should step in and buy a 20 percent
stake in the bank before its value fell any further. The group represents
financial services companies in the southern German state.
"Fundamentally, I'm against state interventions," he told the newspaper, but
added that in this case a government stake would be "a signal that could turn
the whole market".
(Additional reporting by Harro ten Wolde and Michael Shields; Editing by Keith
Weir, Lisa Von Ahn and David Goodman)
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