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Germany’s 2 largest resi landlords set to merge

Vonovia and Deutsche Wohnen, under pressure to limit rent hikes, agree to $22B deal

Vonovia CEO Rolf Buch and Deutsche Wohnen CEO Michael Zahn at a press conference earlier this week regarding the merger. (Getty)
Vonovia CEO Rolf Buch and Deutsche Wohnen CEO Michael Zahn at a press conference earlier this week regarding the merger. (Getty)

Germany’s two largest residential property groups, under public pressure to limit rent hikes, are set to merge in a $22 billion deal.

Vonovia and Deutsche Wohnen have agreed to the compact, which would value their real estate holdings at a combined $110 billion, according to MarketWatch.

Vonovia would buy Deutsche Wohnen’s shares at 53.03 euros a share. That would be an 18 percent premium on Deutsche Wohnen’s Friday stock price. The price closed Monday at 52.06 euros a share.

The companies said that jointly managing their portfolios will have a projected cost savings of around $128 million a year. Vonovia CEO Rolf Buch said the merger would help the firms bring housing units in Berlin up to new energy efficiency standards, according to the report.

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Both companies recently pledged to limit rent hikes to 1 percent in the German capital, where residents have pressed them to do so. Following a 2019 public campaign, Deutsche Wohnen said it would sell 20,000 units to the city.

Deutsche Wohnen CFO Philip Grosse said in 2019 that Berlin’s landmark rent freeze was a threat to the company’s finances, and that it would look to other markets to develop new properties.

Berlin’s rent control law was struck down in a German court earlier this year.

[MW] — Dennis Lynch 

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