Arab Times

Italians to pay three-quarters of bailout bill

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ROME, Dec 30, (AFP): The Italian state will foot 6.6 billion euros of the 8.8 billion euro ($9.2 billion) bill for bailing out struggling Monte dei Paschi di Siena (BMPS), the country’s central bank said.

The European Central Bank, citing the need for recapitali­sation, on Tuesday raised the total capital required by more than three billion euros than had been judged necessary just one month ago.

Explaining the higher cost of the bailout, Italy’s central bank in a statement said the public rescue plan was costlier than the original “market solution” directed at private investors.

The former plan was calculated at 5 billion euros, of which about 3 billion euros was meant to cover losses deriving from the sale of BMPS’s bad loans and 2 billion euros was to protect against an increase in “the coverage ratio of the unlikely-to-pay loans”.

However in the case of Monte dei Paschi di Siena “the immediate cost to the state” under the public option would amount to about 4.6 billion euros, it said.

“To this must be added the subsequent compensati­on of retail subscriber­s (about 2 billion euros) for a total of about 6.6 billion euros.”

The statement added: “The cost to entities other than the Italian state will be about 2.2 billion euros. Accordingl­y, the total cost amounts to 8.8 billion euros.”

Italian media had reported the likely cost to taxpayers as being around six billion euros.

BMPS came last in the ECB’s bank stress tests this summer. It has been forced to raise capital twice since 2014 and its share price has plunged 80 percent since the start of the year, meaning it faced an uphill battle to win over investors.

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