Deutsche Bank's largest investor HNA plans to exit stake

The cash-strapped conglomerate has initiated the disposal process due to Chinese government demand

People exit Deutsche Bank AG headquarters on Wall Street in New York, U.S., on Thursday, April, 26, 2018. Deutsche Bank AG is planning to cut more than 10 percent of U.S. jobs as it withdraws from businesses where it can't compete, a person briefed on the matter said. Photographer: Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg
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Deutsche Bank’s largest investor, China’s HNA Group, plans to exit its entire stake in the German lender, according to people briefed on the plan.

Hainan-headquartered HNA is involved in various industries such as real estate, aviation, logistics and finance.

The cash-strapped conglomerate, which most recently still held almost 8 per cent of the voting rights, has started the disposal process as part of a government demand to focus on its airline business, said the people, asking not to be identified in discussing non-public information.

However, it’s not clear how and over what time period HNA would sell the stake, which it controls through a series of complex derivatives.

Officials for HNA and Deutsche Bank declined to comment. Dow Jones reported that the Chinese government had told HNA to exit the stake, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter.

A disposal would add to pressure on Deutsche Bank, whose shares have slumped amid several unsuccessful turnaround efforts, and could act as a catalyst amid speculation about a merger with another lender.

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Cerberus Capital, the US buyout firm run by Stephen Feinberg, is a top investor in Deutsche Bank and also holds a large stake in rival Commerzbank AG, which prompted speculation in the past that it may seek to combine the two.

Deutsche Bank shares fell as much as 2.2 per cent and traded 0.7 per cent lower on Friday morning in Frankfurt.

HNA held as much as 9.9 per cent in Deutsche Bank in 2017 through a combination of outright holdings and options, but it’s been reducing the investment and replacing actual shares with cheaper financial instruments amid a slump in the stock.

China’s top leaders earlier this year agreed to help HNA raise funds, people familiar with the matter have said, providing a safety net for a conglomerate that’s staggering under the weight of its debt. The government has instructed it to focus on its main business of travel, and to stop diversifying through acquisitions, the people said.