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Germany to Discuss Lufthansa Bailout With Airline’s Largest Shareholder

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    Lufthansa is in a tight spot, and none of its options appear to be particularly appealing.

    Lufthansa’s biggest shareholder, billionaire Heinz Hermann Thiele, will meet Germany’s economics minister for talks on Monday about a 9 billion euro (8.2 billion pounds) bailout for the airline, a source close to the matter told Reuters.

    Thiele objects to the terms of the bailout deal, which would give the German state a 20% direct stake in the company as well as two seats on its supervisory board, and has built up a stake of 15.5% in Lufthansa.

    Thiele has instead proposed an indirect state participation through state-owned German development bank KfW [KFW.UL] as an alternative to an outright government stake.

    Lufthansa and Germany’s finance ministry declined to comment on the meeting. Thiele could not be reached for comment.

    Like the rest of the airline sector, Lufthansa has been hard hit by what is expected to be a protracted travel slump due to the coronavirus pandemic, forcing it to seek the bailout.

    Lufthansa warned last week that it might not get approval for the deal at a shareholder vote on Thursday and may apply for protection from creditors under German insolvency law if it fails to push it through.

    If participation at Thursday’s meeting is below 50%, the deal would require a two-thirds majority to pass. At the airline’s annual general meeting on May 5, only 33% of the company’s share capital was present.

    Lufthansa was unable to provide guidance about the expected attendance level for the June 25 meeting, a spokesman said on Sunday.

    (Reporting by Holger Hansen and Rene Wagner; Additional reporting by Joern Poltz; Writing by Edward Taylor; Editing by David Clarke)

    This article was from Reuters and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to legal@newscred.com.

    Photo Credit: A Lufthansa aircraft. The German government will discuss various bailout options with the airline's largest investor.
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