Just one percent of Commerzbank’s free-float shareholders have accepted UniCredit’s voluntary exchange offer during the extended deadline that expired on July 3. The figure looks almost dismissive, yet the Italian lender has managed to amass a total position of between 38% and 41% in the German bank. That disconnect is driving the market narrative as the official results of the tender are due to be published on Wednesday, July 8.
The small take-up from independent shareholders masks a larger reality. UniCredit’s overall holding is a composite of shares acquired during the original offer period, a pre-existing stake, and additional financial instruments. The precise contribution from this second round will not be known until the official announcement, and that detail may move the stock more than the headline 1% number. Under the terms of the offer, Commerzbank shareholders receive 0.485 UniCredit shares for each share they tender — no cash component — so the deal’s value fluctuates with both banks’ stock prices.
Commerzbank’s equity has been trading near its 52-week peak of €38.85, hit on June 19. On Tuesday the shares stood at €38.20, up 0.53% on the day and just 1.67% below that high. Over the trailing twelve months the stock has climbed more than a third, with a 30-day gain of roughly 5.3%. The relative strength index sits at 61, indicating positive momentum without overheating, and the price remains nearly 4% above its 50-day moving average of €36.74 — a sign the recent uptrend is intact.
Behind the scenes, the Frankfurt-based bank’s management and supervisory board continue to reject the Italian offer, pointing to the lack of a control premium and the promise of their own “Momentum 2030” strategy. They have raised profit guidance for the current year and are pursuing an aggressive policy of dividends and share buybacks. The low acceptance rate is being cited internally as a vote of confidence in Commerzbank’s independent future. Berlin adds another layer of resistance: the German government still holds about 12% of the shares and has publicly opposed UniCredit’s approach, a stance that may discourage institutional investors who had bet on a swift consolidation in European banking.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Commerzbank?
Yet the bull case is not without its risks. Should the takeover bid fall short of UniCredit’s ambitions, the stock could shed some of the merger premium that has been priced in. The Italian bank may also choose to pause its open-market purchases to avoid triggering full consolidation, removing a significant source of demand. With the shares already up 34.5% over the past year, a pullback toward the 50-day line at €36.74 would be a normal technical correction, especially if the market concludes that independence will be expensive to sustain on earnings alone.
Crucially, even if UniCredit’s total stake ends up above key thresholds, the deal is far from sealed. The offer documentation itself assumes completion no earlier than 2027, and by July 2 of that year at the latest. Numerous regulatory authorities still need to give their blessing. Commerzbank therefore remains in a transitional state: the short-term direction will be shaped by Wednesday’s final acceptance rate — a very low figure would initially support the stock and strengthen management’s negotiating hand. The next major fundamental test arrives on August 6 with the second-quarter earnings report, which will show whether revenue quality in net interest and fee income can back the independence narrative.
As long as the share price holds above the 50-day average of €36.74, the bullish scenario remains intact. A break below that level, however, would likely trigger a longer consolidation phase. For now, the market is watching a chessboard where 1% of shareholders said yes, but the other player already holds close to 40% of the pieces — and the game is scheduled to run well into next year.
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