Lufthansa shares down on bailout standoff with
shareholder
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[June 22, 2020] By
Ilona Wissenbach and Holger Hansen
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Lufthansa <LHAG.DE>
shares fell on Monday as the German government held last-ditch talks
with the airline group's biggest shareholder, who is threatening to
block a 9 billion euro ($10 billion) bailout unless its terms are
adjusted.
The stock was down 5.2% at 1101 GMT, as billionaire investor Heinz
Hermann Thiele met senior government officials at the finance ministry,
according to three people familiar with the matter. Lufthansa declined
to comment.
The German airline has been hit hard by the coronavirus crisis and what
promises to be a protracted travel slump, forcing it to seek a state
rescue to avoid insolvency.
Thiele, who holds 15.5% of the group, objects to bailout terms that
would see Germany acquire a 20% stake and board seats, diluting existing
shareholders, and has instead proposed an indirect holding via the
country's KfW development bank.
Monday's stock decline followed a weekend message in which Lufthansa CEO
Carsten Spohr told employees less than 38% of shares had been registered
to vote at a key shareholder meeting on Thursday, handing Thiele an
effective veto on the bailout, which needs a two-thirds majority to
pass.
Lufthansa shares also exited Germany's benchmark DAX index on Monday, a
relegation announced early this month.
The group warned last week a no vote would force it to seek creditor
protection to avoid insolvency. That could eventually lead to break-up
pressures on the group, whose other carriers include Austrian Airlines,
Brussels Airlines and Swiss.
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A Lufthansa jet is seen behind a barbed-wire fence at the airport as
the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues in Frankfurt,
Germany, June 2, 2020. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
As well as adding significant risk, "a protective umbrella procedure for
Lufthansa would be a great embarrassment for Germany as an export nation,"
Kepler Cheuvreux analyst Ruxandra Haradau-Doeser said.
The government has nonetheless refused so far to consider any changes to the
complex bailout deal negotiated with Lufthansa management and the European
Commission.
Finance Minister Olaf Scholz, who attended the talks with Thiele along with
Economy Minister Peter Altmaier, said beforehand he expected the talks to
produce a consensus behind the proposed deal.
"I think discussing about the proposal, which is what we do - just making clear
what it is about - could organise the consensus," Scholz told a financial
conference by videolink ahead of the talks with Thiele.
"Lufthansa has been a very successful company before the crisis, so it's our
duty to make feasible that they (survive) the COVID-19 pandemic," he said.
(Additional reporting by Christian Kraemer, Michelle Martin and Joern Polz;
Writing by Arno Schuetze and Laurence Frost; Editing by Thomas Seythal and Mark
Potter)
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