2016-03-17T14:10:35Z

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Deutsche Bank's second-largest shareholder will not back Chairman Paul Achleitner for a second term because of his lack of success in turning the bank around, a German magazine reported.

"Achleitner will not be part of the future of Deutsche Bank after 2017," Manager Magazin quoted a person close to Sheikh Hamad Bin Jassim Bin Jabor Al-Thani of Qatar as saying.

Deutsche Bank AG Chairman of the Supervisory Board Paul Achleitner attends the Asian Financial Forum (AFF) in Hong Kong Thomson Reuters

The investor owns 3 percent of Deutsche Bank's shares following a 2014 capital increase at Germany's flagship lender.

Achleitner took the helm of the supervisory board in 2012 and is serving a five-year term.

Deutsche Bank said it was up to shareholders to decide on the chairman in due course. Al-Thani was not immediately available for comment.

According to Manager Magazin, al-Thani is unhappy Deutsche Bank has not kept a promise to revamp the business quickly, but will still back Achleitner at this year's shareholder meeting in May.

Deutsche Bank shocked markets with a 2015 record loss, after Achleitner brought in John Cryan to replace Chief Executive Anshu Jain from July. It has asked investors for two years of patience to draw a line under mistakes of the past and let a new strategy bear fruit.

Other large shareholders have also criticized Achleitner after the bank has seen its share price fall 45 percent over the last year.

(Reporting by Arno Schuetze; Additional reporting by Andreas Kröner and David French; Editing by Mark Potter)

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