Commerzbank aims to cut jobs, branches after Deutsche merger fails
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[September 21, 2019] By
Tom Sims
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Commerzbank said on
Friday it wanted to shed thousands of staff and close a fifth of its
branches in a strategy overhaul, after the German lender's attempt to
merge with Deutsche Bank failed.
The bank, partly owned by the German government after a bailout and
struggling to generate profits, also aims to sell a stake in its Polish
subsidiary mBank and absorb its Comdirect online brokerage unit.
Commerzbank said the strategy plan would involve investment of 1.6
billion euros ($1.8 billion), with 750 million euros going into new
technology and the rest earmarked for restructuring.
The bank said the draft measures would be discussed at a meeting of the
supervisory board on Sept. 25 and 26. It said no final decision had yet
been taken.
Shares in Commerzbank, which has been reviewing strategy in recent
weeks, were 0.8% higher in late afternoon trade, with some investors
saying the measures were not enough.
Klaus Nieding, vice president of shareholder lobby group DSW, said the
bank needed to do more than cut costs. "The big question remains how the
bank wants to make money in the future," he said.
The bank was ejected from the blue-chip DAX index last year,
highlighting the challenge facing banks in Europe's biggest economy
since the global financial crisis.
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The headquarters of the Commerzbank are pictured before the bank's
annual news conference in Frankfurt, Germany, February 8, 2018.
REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski/File Photo
The bank said it would cut 4,300 jobs in some places but add 2,000 jobs
in "strategic areas", so the group headcount would fall in total by
about 2,300 full-time positions, equivalent to about 5.7% of its
workforce. It now employs about 40,700 people.
The sale of mBank would reduce its staff by a further 6,600.
It also aims to trim the number of branches by 200 to about 800.
The sale of its 69.3% stake in mBank has a market value of more than 2
billion euros ($2.2 billion). Commerzbank said the proceeds would enable
"a faster implementation of its strategy and the associated
investments".
The bank, which owns 82% of Comdirect, foresees offering a 25% premium
for shares it doesn't hold. Comdirect shares jumped 26%.
Germany's banks have been battling a legacy of bad debts, bloated
headcounts and fines a decade after the global financial crash.
Commerzbank has already been reducing staff and is trying to cut
back-office work to restore profitability.
(Reporting by Tom Sims, Hans Seidenstuecker and Patricia Uhlig; Editing
by David Evans and Edmund Blair)
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