National Post

Despite new rules, Italy bails out banks

- David McHugh

FRANKFURT • After expensive bailouts played a major role in their debt crisis, European authoritie­s agreed on tough new rules to ensure that taxpayers didn’t have to pour money into shaky banks.

So why is the heavily indebted Italian government pumping five billion euros ( US$ 5.6 billion) into two failed banks that most people outside Italy have never heard of ?

It turns out that the new rules — while they may have saved taxpayers some money in this case — have their exceptions. And it shows politician­s are still tempted to throw taxpayer money at banks. Functionin­g banks are crucial because they supply the credit that keeps the economy running. And collapsed banks can wipe out shareholde­rs and bondholder­s.

But bailing banks out of trouble bankrupted the Irish government, which the other eurozone states had to rescue in 2010, and has seriously burdened others. The new rules stated that bondholder­s and shareholde­rs had to take losses before taxpayers could be tapped.

Veneto Banca and Banca Popolare di Venezia each have about one per cent of the Italian banking market for loans, concentrat­ing their business on relatively prosperous northern Italy. Both have been struggling with loans that aren’t being repaid, and have already burned up 3.5 billion euros in new capital invested by a fund backed by other Italian banks.

After financial markets closed Friday, the new European system, in place since 2016, swung into action. The European Central Bank pulled the plug, ruling the two banks were failing or likely to fail. The Single Resolution Board, empowered to impose restructur­ing or sale of banks in the EU, ruled that there was no public interest reason for it to impose a plan since the banks didn’t threaten the entire financial system. It left the decision with the Italian government — which decided to use public funds.

The functional parts of the banks were sold to a larger competitor, Intesa Sanpaolo, for a symbolic one euro. The shaky parts — such as the bad loans — are being split off into a separate entity that is being wound down. The government kicked in 5.2 billion euros to keep the takeover from weakening Intesa Sanpaolo’s finances, and gave credit guarantees for a further 12 billion euros to finance the parts of the banks that are being liquidated.

European officials stressed that the actual costs to the Italian government will be far less than those sums. The government has a claim on whatever can be recovered from the loans and other investment­s that are being wound down.

Intesa Sanpaolo said that by taking over some of the banks’ business it was helping preserve the savings of two million families and the activities of 200,000 client firms. Markets reacted positively, as investors seemed to welcome the move to clean up Italy’s banking problems. The main stock index in Milan was the strongest riser in Europe, gaining 1.5 per cent.

The key step was the decision by the Single Resolu- tion Board to kick the matter back to Italy; a workout by the SRB could have meant losses for all bondholder­s.

Doing t he i nsolvency under local Italian law means holders of more secure, or senior, bonds won’t l ose money, nor will depositors — even those with funds over the limit. That spares some political backlash. The government of Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni faces an election by early next year; losses by small investors will only fuel support for the populist and anti-EU Five Star Movement, which polls show rivals the governing Democratic Party in opinion polls.

But the rules did require that holders of less- secure junior bonds won’t be paid back, and thousands of small shareholde­rs will lose their already diminished investment. Intesa Sanpaolo said it was making 60 million euros available to compensate them.

Officials at the EU’s executive Commission, which approved the aid, said that the new system and its rules were followed in all respects.

The European commission­er in charge of competitio­n policy, Margrethe Vestager, said that “Italy considers that state aid is necessary to avoid an economic disturbanc­e in the Veneto region as a result of the liquidatio­n of BPVI and Veneto Banca, who are exiting the market after a long period of serious financial disturbanc­es.”

Yet the deal drew criticism, following as it did a similar decision earlier this month to pull the plug on Spain’s Banco Popular. In that case, it was sold for one year to national rival Santander but no taxpayer money was contribute­d.

“Some in Italy will see this last turn as a happy ending,” wrote Silvia Merler, a scholar affiliated with the Bruegel think- tank in Brussels, in a blog post. “Others will see it for what it actually is: a political choice.”

SEE IT FOR WHAT IT ACTUALLY IS: A POLITICAL CHOICE.

 ?? ALESSIA PIERDOMENI­CO / BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Banca Popolare di Vicenza SpA, above, is one of two Italian banks in deep trouble with bad loans on its books that was sold to larger competitor Intesa Sanpaolo.
ALESSIA PIERDOMENI­CO / BLOOMBERG NEWS Banca Popolare di Vicenza SpA, above, is one of two Italian banks in deep trouble with bad loans on its books that was sold to larger competitor Intesa Sanpaolo.

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