IMF chief gives Deutsche Bank tough advice, says need
deal on fine
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[October 07, 2016]
By David Lawder and Arno Schuetze
WASHINGTON/
FRANKFURT
(Reuters) - IMF chief Christine Lagarde gave Deutsche Bank some tough
advice on Thursday, saying Germany's biggest lender needed to reform its
business model and rapidly reach a deal with U.S. regulators over a
potentially huge fine.
A senior European official tried to shore up confidence in the
continent's banking system, saying it was working well overall, while
sources said Germany's financial watchdog had found no evidence so far
that Deutsche violated money laundering rules in Russia, possibly
relieving one of its many headaches.
Meanwhile, the chief executives of several German blue-chip companies
have discussed Deutsche's problems and are ready to offer a capital
injection if needed to shore up the bank, newspaper Handelsblatt
reported on Thursday.
However, Lagarde did not mince her words about the problems of Deutsch,
which the International Monetary Fund has identified as a bigger
potential risk to the financial system than any other global bank, in an
era of ultra-low interest rates.
"Deutsche Bank, like many other banks, has to look at its business
model," she told Bloomberg Television during the IMF and World Bank's
autumn meetings in Washington.
"It has to look at its long-term profitability - given the lower-bound
interest rates we have around the world and probably for longer than
many expect - and decide what size it wants to have and how it wants to
strengthen its whole balance sheet."
Germany's flagship bank is under heavy pressure as it fights a penalty
of up to $14 billion that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) plans to
impose for misselling mortgage securities, its latest setback that sent
its shares to a record low last week and worried clients.
Deutsche is in the midst of a deep overhaul that includes slashing a
workforce of around 100,000, revamping information technology and
selling non-core assets. It struck another deal on Thursday with its
works council to cut a further 1,000 staff in Germany, bringing total
job losses there to 4,000.
Lagarde acknowledged that Deutsche was selling assets but underlined the
importance of reaching an out-of-court settlement with the DOJ.
"A bad settlement is always better than a good trial," she said, adding
that Deutsche was "not in a trial mode."
"A settlement would ... deliver some certainty as to what weight the
bank will have to carry and whether it matches with its provisions or
not. So the sooner, the better," she said.
Deutsche has already spent 12 billion euros ($13.4 billion) on
litigation since 2012, and says it has put aside 5.5 billion euros for
its expected legal bill. This is far less than the top end of a possible
DOJ fine, although other banks have negotiated their penalties down to
much smaller sums and Deutsche hopes to do the same.
In preparation for a higher-than-expected legal bill, Deutsche has begun
speaking with Wall Street firms about its options to raise capital.
Senior advisers at the firms are offering to help underwrite a stock
sale to raise about 5 billion euros, according to a Bloomberg report.
Deutsche Bank declined to comment on the report.
Nevertheless, uncertainty remains over the provisions amount. "We reckon
that ... may be insufficient to cover all ongoing litigation cases,"
Scope Ratings said in note on Thursday.
SELL-OFF "OVERDONE"
Deutsche's share price has staged a small recovery from the record low
but remains down 43 percent from the beginning of the year.
[to top of second column] |
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde takes questions from the
press at the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank Group in
Washington, U.S., October 6, 2016. REUTERS/James Lawler Duggan
A top shareholder, however, said the sell-off was overdone. "To us,
Deutsche Bank is not a bank in crisis," Frank Engels, head of fixed
income at Union Investment, said.
European Commission Vice President Valdis Dombrovskis said that the
bloc's banking sector was working well despite problems at individual
institutions in Germany or Italy. "Overall, the banking sector seems to
be heading in the right direction," he told reporters in Washington.
Deutsche Bank also got some positive signals from its home market on one
of its other major litigation cases. The Bafin financial watchdog has
found no evidence to date that it violated money laundering rules in
Russia, people close to the matter said.
But regulators in Russia, Europe and the United States are also
investigating it over "mirror trades." These may have allowed clients to
move money from one country to another in 2014 without alerting
authorities, potentially enabling them to breach Western sanctions on
Russia over the Ukraine conflict.
Bafin declined to comment on its investigation.
The British Financial Conduct Authority, the DOJ and the Department of
Financial Services have launched investigations into whether any
European or U.S. sanctions against Russian individuals were violated.
Ratings agency Moody's said it does not expect Deutsche to accept an
excessive penalty for the U.S. mortgages case that might prevent it from
making interest payments on "AT1" debt that forms part of its capital
reserves.
"We don't think Deutsche would agree to a settlement that would
jeopardize their ability to make their AT1 coupon payments in April
2017," said Laurie Mayers, a banking analyst at Moody's.
Investors have been focused on the potential damage from the U.S. mis-selling
case in recent weeks, although German companies have rallied behind the
lender, which plays a key role in financing their international
operations and domestic needs.
In a source-based report, newspaper Handelsblatt said several German
companies discussed an emergency plan under which they would purchase
Deutsche Bank stock, in the low single-digit billions of euros, to boost
its reserves. The paper added that Berlin welcomed the private-sector
intervention.
Berlin is pursuing discreet talks with U.S. authorities to help Deutsche
secure a swift settlement and put the bank back on a firmer footing,
sources told Reuters.
Germany's influential industry association BDI said that as an
export-oriented economy Germany needs strong internationally competitive
lenders.
(Additional reporting by Kathrin Jones, Jan Strupczewski, Svea
Herbst-Bayliss, Jonathan Gould and Rene Wagner, Editing by Soyoung Kim
and Chizu Nomiyama)
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