Commerzbank outlined its plans to cut 9,000 jobs and shrink investment bank Dresdner Kleinwort to a rump after buying Dresdner Bank, but investors were unhappy about the $14.5 billion deal.
Allianz is selling the bank in two tranches to create a stronger German number two behind Deutsche Bank. It is a deal that will trigger one of the biggest rounds of job cuts in banking since the markets crisis began.
It is also an admission from Allianz — after seven years and billions in losses — that it does not need its own bank in order to sell insurance to bank customers.
In Germany, investors were skeptical that Commerzbank Chief Executive Martin Blessing could make the deal work.
Dieter Ewald, a fund manager with Frankfurt Trust, which owns shares in Commerzbank said: “I think this is a real heavy-lifting exercise for Commerzbank and they might not make it.”
Dirk Becker, an analyst with Landsbanki Kepler said: “It is good for Allianz faxless payday advance. In the seven years they have owned Dresdner they have learned that they don’t have a clue about running a bank.
“But it is a huge integration. We will see in half a year that something will go wrong.”
Commerzbank shares tumbled almost 12 percent, lopping more than $2 billion off its market value, after it said it would buy 60 percent of Dresdner now and the rest in 2009.
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