Bettina Orlopp played her final card just hours before the deadline expired. In an open letter to shareholders, the Commerzbank chief executive pleaded with investors to reject UniCreditâs stock-swap offer, warning of the consequences for the German lenderâs independence. Yet as the dust settles on the extended tender period, market whispers suggest the battle is already lost.
Unofficial reports from Italian daily Milano Finanza point to an acceptance rate of around 15 percent among independent shareholders, boosted by a rally in UniCreditâs own shares that lifted the implied premium above five percent. When added to the 42.5 percent stake UniCredit already controls through direct holdings and derivatives, the total could exceed 58 percent. That would hand the Milan-based bank a commanding voting position at Commerzbankâs next annual general meeting, enough to reshape the supervisory board and, by extension, the management board itself.
For a full integration, however, UniCredit still needs the 12 percent stake held by the German government â a relic of the financial crisis. Analysts at fairesearch, including Dieter Hein, expect a tactical pause: full consolidation would weigh on UniCreditâs capital ratio in the short term, so the Italians are likely to wait for Berlin to sell its remaining packet before pressing for a complete merger.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Commerzbank?
The stock market has largely ignored the drama. Commerzbank shares closed Friday at âŹ37.79, down just 0.16 percent on the day. Over the past 12 months the stock has gained nearly 34.5 percent, and it sits only 2.73 percent below its 52-week high of âŹ38.85 reached on June 19. Technical indicators show no signs of overheating: the relative strength index stands at 57.4, the 50-day moving average of âŹ36.59 is cleanly underfoot, and the 200-day line at âŹ34.24 provides a solid floor.
The public relations war has intensified in parallel. Orlopp, dubbed the âJoan of Arc of Commerzbankâ by Handelsblatt, has taken her fight beyond boardrooms to the bankâs website, where warnings about risks to mid-sized corporate lending are prominently displayed. The conflict escalated to the point where Germanyâs financial watchdog BaFin had to intervene after UniCredit publicly disparaged Commerzbankâs condition. The group works council even filed a criminal complaint for alleged market manipulation, while UniCredit CEO Andrea Orcel threatened to replace the German lenderâs leadership.
The official result of the tender offer will be announced by UniCredit on July 8. What matters most, according to observers, is not the headline acceptance rate but its composition â how much comes from independent institutional investors and retail shareholders versus the derivatives already in UniCreditâs pocket. If the reported figures hold, Orloppâs letter will have been a last, desperate plea in a game already decided.
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