What buying Commerzbank would mean for UniCredit — and the banking sector
UniCredit‘s move to take a stake in German lender Commerzbank is raising questions on whether a long awaited cross-border merger could spur more acquisitions and shake up the European banking sector.
Last week, UniCredit announced it had taken a 9% stake in Commerzbank, confirming that half of this shareholding was acquired from the government. Berlin has been a major shareholder of Commerzbank since it injected 18.2 billion euros ($20.2 billion) to rescue the lender during the 2008 financial crisis.
UniCredit also expressed an interest in a merger of the two, with the Italian bank’s CEO Andrea Orcel telling Bloomberg TV that “all options are on the table,” citing the possibility that it either takes no further action or buys in the open market. Commerzbank has given a more lukewarm response to the merger proposals.
Orcel said the Italian bank was able to buy 4.5% of the state’s stake in Commerzbank because the government trusts UniCredit, Reuters reported Thursday citing local media. When asked if UniCredit would launch an unsolicited tender offer to buy out other investors in Commerzbank, the CEO told the Italian paper: “No, it would be an aggressive move.”