The federal government is getting out of Lufthansa – with a profit of 760 million euros

Lufthansa aircraft

The state wants to part with further shares in the airline.

(Photo: AP)

Frankfurt After a good two years, the federal government left Lufthansa again – with a handsome profit. The state economic stabilization fund (WSF) placed the remaining 74.4 million Lufthansa shares with international investors on Tuesday evening for a total of 455 million euros, the federal finance agency announced. The WSF had saved the airline in the 2020 corona crisis with silent participations and a 20 percent shareholding.

With the sale of the shares, the WSF earned a total of 1.07 billion euros. The finance agency calculated that the bottom line was a profit of 760 million euros. Lufthansa had already repaid the silent participations in autumn 2021.

“The participation of the WSF ends with this pleasing balance sheet and the company is back in private hands,” said the outgoing head of the finance agency, Jutta Dönges, who is responsible for the WSF. This completes the stabilization of Lufthansa. The state is getting out earlier than it had set itself the goal: the WSF was actually not supposed to sell the remaining shares until autumn 2023.

Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs placed the last package of 6.2 percent at a price of EUR 6.11 per share. That’s 3.4 percent less than Tuesday’s Xetra closing price of EUR 6.32. At the end of July, the federal government had already reduced its stake to less than ten percent, since then it has apparently thrown more shares onto the market in smaller numbers and melted the stake.

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More: Kühne wants to buy more Lufthansa shares.

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