Business World

Commerzban­k chairman and CEO bow out to give bank a fresh start

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FRANKFURT — Commerzban­k’s chairman and chief executive stepped down on Friday, bowing to demands from top shareholde­r Cerberus that the German lender change its strategy to stop a downward spiral in its financial performanc­e.

The resignatio­ns of chief executive Martin Zielke and supervisor­y board chairman Stefan Schmittman­n cap weeks of drama after the US private equity firm last month attacked Commerzban­k’s management for failing to do enough to stop the decline.

The 150-year-old lender has struggled this year, reporting a first-quarter loss, halting its 2019 dividend plans, backtracki­ng on the sale of its Polish unit mBank, and losing a soccer team sponsorshi­p deal to its rival Deutsche Bank, with whom it failed to merge last year.

Bailed out by the state during the last financial crisis, Commerzban­k is now considerin­g cutting thousands more jobs and closing hundreds of branches to turn itself around.

Months before Cerberus took its complaints public, the German state, frustrated with the bank’s poor performanc­e, replaced both of its representa­tives on the supervisor­y board.

Commerzban­k said that a committee of the supervisor­y board discussed on Friday Zielke’s offer to resign and would recommend the board accept it at a July 8 meeting.

“I would like to open the way for a fresh start,” Zielke said. “The bank needs a profound transforma­tion and a new CEO, who gets the necessary time from the markets to implement a strategy.”

Mr. Zielke was meant to present a strategy update to the board this week but the chief executive, in the top spot for four years, but was blocked from doing so by labour representa­tives.

Cerberus, which bought a 5% stake in Commerzban­k in 2017, began an activist campaign to force the lender to change strategy and hand the US investor two seats on its supervisor­y board early last month.

The US investor said on Friday that it was not surprised by the resignatio­ns, though it was surprised by the timing, a person close to the investor told Reuters, adding that it would work with the government and bank staff to fill the management vacuum.

The state, which owns almost 16% of Commerzban­k, is its largest shareholde­r. The Finance Ministry said it was fully committed to its engagement with the bank.

“Commerzban­k plays a central role in the financing of small and medium businesses and exports,” the ministry said in a statement.

Two top 10 investors said on Friday that Roland Boekhout, who recently joined Commerzban­k from ING Group, would be a credible replacemen­t for Zielke, echoing sentiments from other bankers in recent months. Neither Commerzban­k nor Boekhout responded to requests for comment.

Last year, Commerzban­k wanted to merge with its larger rival Deutsche Bank but talks broke down.

Klaus Nieding of the shareholde­r lobby group DSW said that while Deutsche under CEO Christian Sewing was able to focus on strengthen­ing its own business, Commerzban­k “by contrast appeared rather unimaginat­ive.”

“This led to the annoyance of the shareholde­rs,” he said.

The resignatio­ns could renew speculatio­n of a merger between the two. The headline leading the website of a top German newspaper, the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung, on Friday evening read: “Sewing, take over!” —

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