Deutsche Bank Looks to Settle US Mortgage Legal Exposure at a Reasonable Cost – Moody’s

According to Moody’s on 15 September, Deutsche Bank AG announced in a filing that it has commenced negotiations with the US Department of Justice (DoJ) aiming to settle civil claims in connection with the bank’s underwriting and issuance of residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) and related securitization activities between 2005 and 2007. Eliminating the claims’ litigation tail risk at a manageable cost would be credit positive for Deutsche Bank, but negotiations have just begun and the final cost of settlements of complex capital markets litigation remains very difficult to predict.

At the end of the second quarter of 2016, Deutsche Bank had €5.5 billion of litigation reserves, for a variety of legal matters, but the bank has not disclosed the size of reserves for any specific action. For the analysis below, we have assumed that at least half of the litigation reserve could be made available for a possible DOJ settlement. If Deutsche Bank can eliminate this tail risk and settle within or near the assumed reserve of €2.75 billion (or $3.1 billion), it would be positive for bondholders.

Deutsche Bank has indicated its willingness to consider settlements at a cost broadly in line with peers’ prior settlements. However, as Exhibit 1 indicates, peers’ settlements have varied widely, ranging from $1.7 million to $8.9 million per basis point of RMBS league table share. Based on Deutsche Bank’s 6.4% market share, a settlement in the low end ($1.7 million per basis point) or even at the mid-point ($3.6 million per basis point) of the settlement range would be well covered by our assumed DOJ settlement reserve. However, a DB settlement at the high end of announced peer settlements ($8.9 million per basis point) would total $5.7 billion. A settlement of $5.7 billion would require an addition to our assumed DOJ settlement reserve of €2.4 billion, which would dent 2016 profitability (pretax earnings for first-half 2016 totaled €1 billion), a credit negative. Basing litigation exposure solely on market share is a crude approximation, but it helps dimension the adequacy of reserves and potential income statement effect.

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The commencement of these negotiations is not surprising since Deutsche Bank management set a strategic objective to resolve crisis-related litigation and remove uncertainty hanging over the bank. As the complex negotiations proceed, we also expect that management have strong incentives to resist a quick settlement with the DOJ that is more expensive than the prior settlements of peers. These incentives include preserving flexibility with respect to paying coupons on its additional Tier 1 (AT1) securities. Even a settlement requiring an additional $2.4 billion of reserve should still leave Deutsche Bank with sufficient flexibility to pay its 2017 AT1 coupons. We expect this flexibility to increase given the EBA’s announced intention to bifurcate Pillar 2 capital requirements into required and guidance components, with only the required component factoring into the calculation of the Maximum Distributable Amount for AT1 coupon payments.

Finally, Deutsche bank’s current Baa2 rating and stable outlook already incorporates the possibility of a modest loss (and substantial litigation costs) in 2016 and the potential for limited profitability in 2017.

Author: Martin North

Martin North is the Principal of Digital Finance Analytics

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