The Niagara Falls Review

Restructur­ing will lead to stability

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MILAN — Italy’s finance minister said Tuesday the plan to restructur­e the struggling bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena will provide “a credible future” for the institutio­n while ensuring stability to the Italian banking sector.

Minister Pier Carlo Padoan made the comments after the European Union’s executive commission approved Italy’s plans to inject $6 billion US into the world’s oldest bank as part of a five-year restructur­ing plan that the bank’s management will outline to investors on Wednesday.

Italy’s banking system has been weighed down by a heavy load of bad loans due to a prolonged crisis in the eurozone’s third-largest economy coupled with management issues.

Besides the Monte dei Paschi rescue, Padoan has been ushering through a plan to save two co-operative banks in the productive northern Veneto region, where account holders have lost billions of dollars.

The Commission cleared the Monte dei Paschi capital injection only following the contributi­on of $4.8 billion from the bank’s shareholde­rs and junior creditors, as required by EU rules meant to minimize the cost of bailouts for taxpayers. Once the operation is complete, the Italian government will hold a 70 per cent stake in the bank. Padoan said he expected that Italy will be repaid its investment in full, with some returns, although he didn’t specify by when and how much.

“The rescue is an extremely important element for the bank and the Italian banking system, and another sign of a turnaround after the agreement last week on the Veneto banks,” Padoan told a press conference. “It is a plan that provides certainty and a sustainabl­e future to the bank that will have a very important capital level.”

The capital injection is intended to give the bank a buffer in case of worsening economic conditions. The restructur­ing includes moving more than $30 billion in soured loans off its balance sheets, according to the EU Commission.

Commission Vice-President Valdis Dombrovski­s said the capital injection “should protect financial stability in Europe and limit the burden on taxpayers.”

Padoan also expressed confidence that the Italian parliament would approve the decree to save the two Veneto banks.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Italian Finance Minister Pier Carlo Padoan says the plan to restructur­e the struggling Monte dei Paschi di Siena bank will provide “a credible future’’ for the institutio­n.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Italian Finance Minister Pier Carlo Padoan says the plan to restructur­e the struggling Monte dei Paschi di Siena bank will provide “a credible future’’ for the institutio­n.

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