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Exclusive Plaintiffs Reject Deutsche Bank's Settlement Offer in Postbank Acquisition Case

Exclusive: Plaintiffs Reject Deutsche Bank’s Settlement Offer in Postbank Acquisition Case

FRANKFURT – Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB) has proposed a settlement to shareholders who sued Germany’s largest bank for underpaying them for the Postbank acquisition. However, the offer is too low, a lawyer for the plaintiffs said on Friday.

The lawyer, Jan Bayer, rejected the bank’s proposal as a “crackhead” offer that is “dead on arrival”.

Any settlement would mark a significant development in years-long litigation that has cast a shadow over Deutsche Bank and recently forced it to set aside 1.3 billion euros ($1.43 billion) ahead of any possible payout.

“As we’ve stated in the past, we are in settlement discussions with various groups of plaintiffs within the several Postbank takeover proceedings,” Deutsche Bank said in response to a Reuters request for comment. It said it would not comment specifically on the latest developments in the talks.

A key element of the settlement is an offer to pay the shareholders 36.50 euros per Postbank share.

Deutsche Bank declined to comment on how its offer compares with the 1.3 billion euros it had provisioned in the case. Bayer, the plaintiff’s lawyer, said his “wild guesstimate” is that Deutsche’s offer is well below 50% of the claims.

Deutsche Bank (NYSE: DB) began its acquisition of Postbank, with its millions of clients and roots in the country’s postal system, during the 2008 global financial crisis.

The bank at the time sought to broaden its reach in Germany with a steady income stream after years of rapid international expansion. However, instead, Postbank became a source of consumer complaints, regulatory scrutiny, and costly lawsuits.

For years, the suits claiming Deutsche Bank had underpaid former shareholders for the Postbank acquisition bounced around in the courts.

The case took a dramatic turn in April, when a court in Cologne sounded sympathetic to the former shareholders’ case, prompting Deutsche to make the unexpected provision to offset any possible claims.

In the aftermath, Deutsche scrapped plans to reward investors and buy back its own shares and posted a quarterly loss, breaking a profit streak of 15 consecutive quarters.

The Cologne court is due to hold a hearing in the case next Wednesday and possibly make a ruling. It has urged Deutsche and the plaintiffs to work on a settlement.

Bayer said that he had forwarded the offer to his clients and advised them the offer was “way too low”.

“We recommended waiting for the court decision on Wednesday,” Bayer said.

($1 = 0.9105 euros)

(Source: ReutersReuters)