
Deutsche Bank does not need state aid, the chief executive of Germany's biggest lender said in a newspaper interview Wednesday, seeking to quash rumours that have hammered its share price.
State aid "is not on the table", John Cryan told Germany's biggest-selling newspaper Bild.
"At no point did I ask for help from the Chancellor," he added, responding to reports in the German press at the weekend that Angela Merkel had refused to come to Deutsche's rescue.
Shares in the bank hit a record low on Monday, dropping 7.54 percent to close at 10.55 euros ($11.80) and recovering little of the lost ground on Tuesday.
Investors were spooked after it emerged in mid-September that the US Department of Justice (DoJ) is seeking a $14-billion fine from Deutsche over its role in the subprime mortgage crisis.
"It has been clear from the beginning that we won't pay this amount," Cryan told Bild, adding that "we expect the DoJ will treat us just as fairly as the American banks" that have settled their cases with much lower payouts.
Analysts expect Deutsche will be able to negotiate down its bill with the US authorities in the subprimes case, but it is not clear whether the $5.5 billion the bank has set aside to cover its legal costs will be enough.
That fear has weighed on the bank's share price, as the value of its existing stock will be diluted if the bank is forced to raise more capital on the markets.
"At the moment there is no question of a capital increase," Cryan told Bild.
"We have far fewer risks on our books than before and we have a comfortable supply of free liquidity, of cash," he said.
Cryan, in the post at the head of Deutsche Bank for a little over a year, has launched a massive restructuring of the Frankfurt institution, planning to slash 200 branches in Germany and almost 9,000 jobs worldwide by 2020.
Shares in the bank have lost more than half of their value since January after the bank booked an almost 7-billion-euro loss in 2015.
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