to form the new Eurohypo AG Merger of the property and public
Transcription
to form the new Eurohypo AG Merger of the property and public
Merger of the property and public sector financing activities of to form the new Eurohypo AG Conference call for international analysts 6 November 2001 1 Introduction 2 Strategic positioning 3 Transaction objects, organisational structure, corporate governance, integration 4 Synergies 5 Financial Data 6 The new Eurohypo – expertise, size, and clear focus on profitability 1 Introduction “The merger at a glance” 1 4 n Commerzbank, Deutsche Bank, and Dresdner Bank are bundling their propertyfinancing businesses, and are terminating their own activities in this area n The new institution is being created through a merger into Deutsche Hyp, and will be named Eurohypo n Including free float, the relative valuation of the mortgage banks is Deutsche Hyp 30%, Eurohypo 35%, and Rheinhyp 35% n The core capital ratio according to BIS (Bank for International Settlements) is 6%. In order to achieve this ratio, Commerzbank, and Dresdner Bank will contribute additional equity n The target return on equity will clearly exceed the current cost of capital of around 9% n Cost synergies will amount to around EUR120m p.a. beginning 2004 2001iF106 Goals of the new Eurohypo 1 5 n Leading provider of commercial-property financing in Germany and Europe with mixed-bank status n Expansion of presence in North America n Increase in commission income through real estate investment banking and syndicated loan business n Leading market position in servicing and refinancing of standardised home loans in Germany n Public sector financing characterised by conservative risk policy and focus on higher margin foreign business n Benchmark issuer in the Pfandbrief market and leading issuer of MBS 2001iF106 Transaction background 1 Market environment Increasing competitive pressure in German property financing raises the need to consolidate n Selective growth in foreign markets n More intensive use of instruments for easing strain on balance sheet n Weak margin in German public sector business n n Real estate investment banking and foreign markets offer growth and margin potential Restructuring of the real estate activities of the three groups: mortgage banks as centre of competence of commercial-property financing n Formation of partnerships between institutions of different banking groups to n – – n 6 Mortgage bank environment significantly improve market position realise synergy potential Concentration of property financing expertise in one optimised unit 2001iF106 2 Strategic positioning Business model 2 Professional real estate customers/Commercial-property financing n Quality edge through bundling of expertise n Broader range of financing through use of mixed-bank status n Stronger European focus and expansion in North America Standardised home loans n n 8 Public sector financing Market leader in servicing and refinancing n Expansion of higher-margin foreign Sales handled by agents and through agency agreements with parent companies and third parties n Conservative business n Realisation risk policy of adequate financing volumes n Concentration on higher-margin business and expansion of commission income business n Best possible risk diversification and realisation of economies of scale 2001iF106 Market leader in commercial-property financing 2 Sales performance in 2000 (in EUR bn) The new Eurohypo – share of foreign business in sales performance 18.4 4.2 41% 68% 57% 14.2 59% 8.2 4.6 Eurohypo(1) Hypo Vereinsbank DePfa 32% 43% 2.0 AHBR 1998 1999 International 2000 National (1) Combined figure for Eurohypo, Rheinhyp, Deutsche Hyp, Deutsche Bank (real-estate centres); syndicated business shown separately Sources: Annual reports, VdH, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche Hyp, Rheinhyp, Capital Data Loanware n n 9 The new Eurohypo is the leading German bank for commercial-property financing Growth potential in the higher-margin foreign business – the new Eurohypo already has an excellent track record 2001iF106 Commercial-property financing – Operations in Germany 2 Currently: 25 branches in 10 locations In the future: 10 branches in 10 locations Hamburg Hamburg Berlin Dortmund Düsseldorf Cologne Leipzig Berlin Dortmund Düsseldorf Cologne Frankfurt Frankfurt Mannheim Mannheim Stuttgart Stuttgart Munich Deutsche Hyp (8 branches) n n 10 Eurohypo (8 branches) Leipzig Munich Rheinhyp (9 branches) Combination of improved distribution and optimised cost basis Branches to be merged by end of 2002 2001iF106 Commercial property financing – Foreign operations 2 Stockholm London Amsterdam Warsaw Chicago Brussels Paris Los Angeles Prague Zurich 11 Budapest Milan Madrid Lisbon Vienna New York Barcelona n Presence in the most important business centres in Europe and the USA n Significant improvement in sales reach outside Germany n All locations are maintained, while the number of branches will be reduced from 33 to 17 2001iF106 Growing commission income through established real estate investment banking 2 Development of commission income (in EUR m) (1) Business model 89.0 Real estate investment banking Origination/ Structured finance n Senior Debt n Mezzanine n Equity Advisory n Securitisation n Asset Sales 69.3 57.3 52.3 38.0 Funding n On-balance n MBS/CMBS n Private placements 1998 1999 2000 1H 2000 1H 2001 (1) Sum of Deutsche Hyp, Eurohypo, and Rheinhyp Source: Annual and interim reports, Commerzbank, Deutsche Bank, Dresdner Bank 12 n Focus on structured finance and securitisation n Strong starting position through established activities in London and the USA n Dynamic growth of commission income maintained 2001iF106 Syndicated loans 2 Syndicated real estate loans in Europe – rankings in 2000 (US$ m) 1 2 3 4 5 Eurohypo (1) Royal Bank of Scotland Barclays Société Générale Crédit Lyonnais 3,979 1,962 1,842 1,272 1,014 Major transactions Canary Wharf Whitehall MP MILLENNIUM PARTNERS EUR 1,600m Eurohypo EUR 431.6m Eurohypo Arranger Arranger US$ 400m Dresdner Bank Real Estate Arranger March 2001 (UK) January 2001 (F) February 2001 (USA) (1) Combined syndicated volume of Deutsche Hyp, Eurohypo, and Rheinhyp Source: Capital Data Loanware, Rheinhyp, Deutsche Hyp The new Eurohypo is market leader in Europe for syndicated real estate loans and also holds a strong position in North America 13 2001iF106 Standardised home loans – Distribution channels 2 Sales through agents n Continuation of Rheinhyp model n No end-consumer business n Current key figures (1) Agency agreements n Existing co-operation models with the parent banks to continue n Further agency agreements with third parties are planned – approx. 2,400 independent sales agents – approx. 140 full-time staff – 20 offices – EUR 794,1m of new business volume(2) (1) as of 30.06.2001 (2) 1st half year 2001 Reduction of acquisition costs per customer combined with significant new business volume 14 2001iF106 Standardised home loans – Servicing 2 Business model 15 n “Factory-style“ processing and administration of private home loans n Open platform – third-party providers can convert their fixed costs into variable costs through outsourcing Structure n Rheinhyp's subsidiary prompter AG responsible for servicing business from third-party providers n Own portfolios will be processed in two, instead of previous five, in-house service centres n Currently over 425,000 loans in the combined portfolio n Number of locations reduced to what is economically necessary n Cost leadership through economies of scale n Creation of additional, less volatile sources of commission income 2001iF106 Broadly diversified property loan portfolio (1) 2 Split by property type Other 11% Office building 22% Residential – other 26% Trade buildings 14% Residential – owner occupied 27% Total: EUR 90.0bn Regional split Former West Germany 54% Berlin 11% GB/Ireland 35% Spain/ Portugal 19% Foreign countries 16% Former East Germany 18% Other 13% France 12% Scandinavia Austria/ 10% Switzerland 11% International portfolio: EUR 14.6bn (1) Deutsche Hyp, Eurohypo, and Rheinhyp combined, as of June 30, 2001 Source: Annual reports, Deutsche Hyp, Eurohypo, Rheinhyp n n n n 16 Active portfolio management Broad diversification by property type and region Rising share of foreign business Further diversification possible through North American operations 2001iF106 Public sector financing 2 Total financing volume per 31.12.2000 (in EUR Mrd.) The new Eurohypo – Share of foreign business (2000) 138.3 112.4 65% 84% 69.8 42.9 35% 16% Eurohypo(1) DePfa AHBR HVB Real Estate(2) Total New business International National (1) Deutsche Hyp, Eurohypo, and Rheinhyp combined, incl. Source: Annual reports, Deutsche Hyp, Rheinhyp foreign subsidiaries (Europäische Hypothekenbank S.A., Rheinhyp Europe plc) (2) Sum of Bayerische Handelsbank, NürnbergHyp, Südboden, and PBI (Pfandbrief Bank International, Luxembourg) Source: VdH, DePfa 2000 annual report, PBI 2000 annual report n n n 17 Strong position in public sector financing Continuation of conservative risk policy Further growth in higher-margin foreign business 2001iF106 Establishing as a benchmark issuer 2 Pfandbriefe – Volume outstanding (in EUR bn)(1) Pfandbriefe – New issue volume in 2000 (in EUR bn) 183.1 27.4 9.5 74.4 21.5 5.6 59.8 59.5 12.9 48.3 17.9 15.8 10.5 5.2 0.7 9.8 7.7 Eurohypo(2) AHBR DePfa HVB Real HypothekenEstate(3) bank in Essen (1) as of 31.12.2001 (2) Deutsche Hyp, Eurohypo, and Rheinhyp combined Source: Annual reports n n 18 Eurohypo AHBR 7.0 7.0 HVB Real Hypotheken- DePfa Estate(3) bank in Essen Public sector Pfandbriefe Mortgage Pfandbriefe (3) Bayerische Handelsbank, NürnbergHyp, Südboden Source: Annual reports, HVB, Deutsche Hyp Economies of scale Realisation of funding advantages through status as a benchmark issuer Development of agency status 2001iF106 Reduction of capital burden through (synthetic) securitisation 2 MBS transaction volume of German banks (EUR bn)(1) Issuer Name Volume(3) Date Rheinhyp Europa I EUR 1.336m Mar. 2000 Eurohypo 2000-1 EUR 500m Jun. 2000 2,3 Rheinhyp Europa II EUR 1.520m Apr. 2001 Eurohypo 2001-1 GBP 1.083m Aug. 2001 6,3 0,7 0,3 1.8 1.8 1998 1999 2000 2001 ytd (2) Eurohypo Total (1) as of 30.09.2001 (2) Eurohypo and Rheinhyp combined, without credit default swaps Source: Deutsche Bank, Global Markets Research 19 Selected transactions (3) Volume including credit default swaps Source : Eurohypo, Rheinhyp n Eurohypo and Rheinhyp have had a strong impact on the German MBS market n In the future innovative structures will be used to reduce capital burden 2001iF106 3 Transaction objects, organisational structure, corporate governance, integration Transaction objects 3 Merger of mortgage-bank subsidiaries Commerzbank Dresdner Bank Deutsche Bank Rheinhyp Deutsche Hyp Eurohypo Total assets: Equity(1): Employees: EUR 78,3m EUR 1,0m 867 Total assets : EUR 93,7m Equity(1): EUR 1,4m Employees: 845(2) Total assets : EUR 71,4m Equity(1): EUR 1,4m Employees: 788 Change of name to Eurohypo Planned transfer of current parent company activities Commercial property business of branches in Germany and real estate banking in USA Real estate investment banking of Dresdner Bank in USA Deutsche Bank's share of property centres and REIB structured finance team in Europe (1) Sum of subscribed capital, reserves, and funds for general banking risks (2) After reduction of workforce by 440 employees to be reflected in the P&L of fiscal year 2001 Source: Interim Reports 2001 n 21 Merger into Deutsche Hyp to preserve mixed-bank status 2001iF106 Shareholder structure 3 Relative valuation of mortgage banks (including free float)(1) Eurohypo 35% Rheinhyp (2) 35% Deutsche Hyp 30% (1) As of today (2) Including property financing units in Berlin and Hamburg and Commerzbank's new property financing business in Germany 22 n Prior to the merger, Commerzbank and Dresdner Bank will contribute additional equity of EUR500m and EUR280m, respectively n In the next few years, an increase of the company’s free float is planned. This will enable the new Eurohypo to raise equity via the capital market n To cover potential risks in the existing portfolio, parent banks are providing guarantees limited in terms of duration and scope 2001iF106 Organisational structure 3 Supervisory Board 2 representatives 2 representatives 2 representatives Commerzbank Deutsche Bank Dresdner Bank 6 employee representatives Chairman of supervisory board: Dr. v. Harbou Board of Managing Directors (1) Divisions Dr. v. Köller CEO Knobloch Deputy CEO Schuh Deputy CEO Corporate clients (Europe, excl. Germany and UK) Corporate clients (UK, USA) Internal auditing Risk management/ Credit, Market and operational risks Corporate communications Human resources Legal services Dr. Danne Plesser Rasche Private clients/ Servicing Corporate clients (Germany) Capital market/ Treasury IT/ Organisation Internal and external reporting Public sector financing (1) designated Board members 23 n Realisation of business model while structuring business lines and assigning departments n Systematic separation of sales responsibility and risk management 2001iF106 High-quality risk management 3 Independent risk management right up to board level Active management of market risk n n Value at risk and sensitivity-based risk management Conservative limits set for market risk Efficient processes and instruments n n n n 24 Internal rating system credit standing and transaction) Lean, know-howoriented lending process Systematic early warning recognition of risk Constant analysis of individual risks Active portfolio management n n Diversification for optimising risks and returns All-inclusive portfolio management Strong equity basis n 6% core capital – 10%overall capital – – selective new business – permanent portfolio analysis – modern control instruments Active management of equity resources: n (according to BIS rules) Allocation of equity through risk-adjusted pricing 2001iF106 Integration timetable 3 Milestones November 2001 Signing of heads of agreement Jan. 2002 April/May 2002 2nd half 2002 Due diligence AGM approval Entry into completed from commercial subsidiaries register n Implementation n Conception Transaction n Completion of business & organisation model n Completion of due diligence n 2001 n Preparation of measures n n Mid-2003 Entry into implementation phase Realisation of measures Monitoring of implementation Verification of synergies and integration targets Implementation plan Legal implementation 2002 n Con- tribution REF (1) n Con- tribution REIB(2) 2003 (1) Deutsche Bank’s real estate centres (2) Deutsche Bank’s Structured Finance team in London, Commerzbank’s Real Estate Investment Banking in New York, Dresdner Bank’s Real Estate Banking in the US 25 2001iF106 Integration structure 3 Steering committee 6 future members of Supervisory Board Integration committee Future Eurohypo Board of Managing Directors Integration office Project groups according to business and function Efficient and swift implementation of merger by 2003 based on a tight integration structure 26 2001iF106 4 Synergies Optimised cost base through realisation of synergy potential 4 30 Others 30 IT 50 50 Others 10 IT 40 140 Personnel 90 Personnel Cost synergies 70 Gross earnings synergies Dissynergies p.a. starting in 2004 Net synergies Restructuring costs non-recurring in 2002 and 2003 n Net synergies of around €140m p.a. starting in 2004 n Annual cost synergies of around €120m correspond to 28% of the combined cost base (1) n After two years, non-recurring restructuring costs of EUR170m will be covered by synergies (1) Cost basis after Deutsche Hyp’s reduction of work force by 440 employees to be reflected in the P&L of fiscal year 2001 28 2001iF106 Cost synergies 4 Personnel n n n 29 Reduction of workforce by approx. 800 employees forms a significant part of expected synergy potential Staff reduction will be done under economic and socially-acceptable considerations and in close cooperation with the staff council Through its focus on expertise and international expansion, the new Eurohypo will be an attractive employer for qualified personnel IT systems n All three merger partners use an SAPbased system n Agreement already reached on a common system. As a result: – accelerated migration (completion mid-2003) at low cost, and – realisation of high synergy effects through reduction of redundancies 2001iF106 5 Financial Data Financial figures as of June 30, 2001 5 Deutsche Hyp Eurohypo Rheinhyp Equity(1) (EURm) 1,354.0 1,446.3 999.9 Total assets (EURm) 93.7 71.4 78.3 Net interest income (EURm) 190.6 185.6 172.2 Net commission income (EURm) 2.2 13.4 -10.9 Operating expenses (EURm) 102.6 (2) 60.4 59.6 Operating result after risk provisioning (EURm) 36.2 123.2 75.7 (1) Sum total of subscribed capital, reserves, and funds for general banking risks (2) Including EUR 34.5m of restructuring costs 31 2001iF106 6 The new Eurohypo – expertise, size, and clear focus on profitability The new Eurohypo – expertise, size, and clear focus on profitability 6 The new Eurohypo – the European property financing institution Rising commission income Higher margin potential Market leader in commercial-property financing Leader in know-how and quality Benchmark issuer Optimised cost base Improved risk position 33 2001iF106