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FRANKFURT (Reuters) – UniCredit executives had conversations with top German government officials, including from the chancellery and the finance ministry, in the months before buying part of the state’s stake in Commerzbank, according to parliamentary documents seen by Reuters.
The details of the meetings are given in a government answer to Matthias Hauer, a German lawmaker, and are the most detailed account yet of contact between Germany and UniCredit before the Italian bank swooped to buy a large stake in Commerzbank. The German government has said it was surprised by UniCredit’s move.
Florian Toncar, the state secretary in charge of the stake sale, spoke with Marion Hoellinger, the head of UniCredit’s German arm, on Sept. 4 about a government agency announcement on the stake sale and again on Sept. 10.
Chairman Pier Carlo Padoan met with Joerg Kukies, a top official in the German chancellery, on the sidelines of a conference in Paris on May 16, according to the government’s answer, that also flagged two further exchanges with chancellery officials on June 7 and May 30.
While the document sheds light on various meetings, it offers few details of the content of the discussions.
Hauer, a Christian Democrat lawmaker, said the answer showed a “lively exchange” between the German government and the Italian bank, urging further inquiry into how the government had sold the entire stake for sale to UniCredit rather than a number of investors.
“The German government … make out as if they have nothing to do with the chaos at Commerzbank. But they caused it,” he said.
(Reporting By John O’Donnell, editing by Elisa Martinuzzi and Rachel More)
By John O’Donnell, Christian Kraemer and Tom Sims