Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Italy to control struggling bank

Rescue deal gets rid of $32.5B in bad loans, infuses $6.1B

- COLLEEN BARRY

MILAN — In a bid to end years of struggles, the Italian government is taking control of bank Monte dei Paschi under a plan agreed to by European officials that includes the disposal of $32.5 billion in bad loans.

In detailing the plan Wednesday, Chief Executive Officer Marco Morelli said that ridding the bank of the load of soured loans was “the most relevant issue” in the European Commission’s approval this week of the rescue plan.

The Italian government will inject $6.1 billion into the bank, giving it a 70 percent stake, as part of a total boost of $9.2 billion. Under the deal, the government must exit within five years.

The Monte dei Paschi rescue comes just a week after the government announced plans to save two small Veneto banks where thousands of savers have lost billions.

Italian Finance Minister Pier Carlo Padoan said Wednesday that the moves had “removed impediment­s to growth. We are putting the worst behind us.”

It is the third capital injection in recent years for Siena-based Monte dei Paschi, Italy’s third-largest by assets, as it struggles to recover from poor management and a heap of bad loans that compounded during Italy’s long economic crisis.

Under the bad loan disposal plan, $29.6 billion will be bundled and sold at 21 percent of gross book value, the vast majority to the government-organized Atlante II fund, while the bank retains 5 percent.

That compares with a price equal to 33 percent of value under a previous relaunch plan announced last

fall but which had to be revised after the bank failed to come up with an investor to inject $5.7 billion.

The loss on the disposal will be booked by the bank in the first half of this year, while the transactio­n is expected to be completed by next June.

The remaining $2.8 billion in bad loans will be disposed of in a separate procedure.

The five-year plan calls for a net income above $1.36 billion by 2021, compared with a 2016 loss of $2.6 billion, as the bank refocuses on retail and small-business customers. During the period, the bank will be under strict cost controls, capping top executive pay, reducing employees by a net 5,500 and shutting branches as it moves toward digitaliza­tion.

The bank could resume trading on the stock exchange by late September, Morelli said.

Morelli said he agreed to a steep 70 percent pay cut, with no bonuses for the period the bank is under state aid, under a formula negotiated in Brussels. He is one of six managers taking cuts.

He said the clear rules on capital structure and liquidity will help the bank recover consumer confidence and business it has lost during its protracted crisis.

“I think now Monte dei Paschi is back in place,” said Morelli, who took over nine months ago. “What the top management experience­d in the last nine months is pretty much unheard of. … I think the experience is one of an emergency room hospital department. We did have an emergency every five minutes.”

The European Commission’s approval had been a key sticking point in the rescue of the bank, as European Union rules now try to avoid using taxpayer money to save banks. But the commission cleared the government capital injection after it was agreed that the bank’s shareholde­rs and junior creditors would take losses first, for an estimated $4.9 billion, to minimize the bill for the government. a maker of high-performanc­e electrifie­d cars.

Other models will include plug-in hybrids, which can be charged from power outlets and run for short distances solely on batteries, and socalled mild hybrids, which charge their batteries from the car’s convention­al engine or by recovering energy from braking.

“Volvo Cars has stated that it plans to have sold a total of 1 million electrifie­d cars by 2025,” Samuelsson said. “When we said it we meant it. This is how we are going to do it.”

 ?? AP/LUCA BRUNO ?? Marco Morelli, chief executive of Monte dei Paschi, heads to a news conference Wednesday in Milan. Morelli is taking a 70 percent pay cut as part of the bank rescue plan.
AP/LUCA BRUNO Marco Morelli, chief executive of Monte dei Paschi, heads to a news conference Wednesday in Milan. Morelli is taking a 70 percent pay cut as part of the bank rescue plan.

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