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Commerzbank Takes Up German State Aid
Tom Burroughes
4 November 2008
Commerzbank has asked the German government for €8.2 billion ($10.5 billion) in cash and €15 billion more in debt guarantees. Commerzbank also posted a third-quarter net loss of €285 million. The international financial crisis cost the bank €1.1 billion in losses from market operations, the statement added. In September, the German financial conglomerate Allianz sold Dresdner Bank to Commerzbank for €9.8 billion in a deal that had been widely expected.
In its move to take up state assistance, Commerzbank responded to pressure from German authorities for banks to apply for aid under a rescue package that includes up to €80 billion in capital injections and €400 billion in loan guarantees. The capital infusion will take the form of a "silent participation," which means
That means investors' holdings will not be diluted in Commerzbank, which can also use a capital increase as it is acquiring Dresdner Bank, the third biggest private German bank from the insurance group Allianz. In accepting state aid, Commerzbank agreed to forego paying a dividend in 2009 and 2010 and its directors will see their salaries capped at €500,000 per year.