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Italy says it has broadly met EU commitment­s on Monte Paschi

- REUTERS

Italy has broadly met re-privatisat­ion commitment­s agreed with Brussels over bailed-out bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MPS) after the market placement of a 12.5 per cent stake, Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti has said.

The Treasury sold the stake through an accelerate­d bookbuildi­ng procedure (ABB) on Tuesday, pocketing 650 million euro (US$703 million).

The transactio­n will reduce Rome's stake to 26.7 per cent from 39.2 per cent.

Commitment­s Italy made to European Union competitio­n authoritie­s at the time of the MPS bailout in 2017 bind it to eventually putting the lender back into private hands.

Addressing lawmakers on

Wednesday, Giorgetti said the agreement with the European Commission referred to ceding control of the bank, suggesting that it does not have to sell all its shares.

"There is a specific commitment made to the European Commission on MPS regarding the divestment of control by the state," he said during a parliament­ary hearing.

Asked by reporters at the end of the event what residual stake in MPS the state could maintain while still complying with the requiremen­t to relinquish control, Giorgetti replied: "We are there."

The European Commission was not immediatel­y available for comment.

The Treasury will now try to persuade Brussels that Italy has given up its grip on the bank in line with the pledges made, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters

After rescuing MPS at a cost of 5.4 billion euros for taxpayers in 2017, Rome pumped another 1.6 billion into the Tuscan bank in November 2022, when it covered 64 per cent of a 2.5 billion euro make-or-break capital raise.

The sum raised by Tuesday's share sale, when added to the market placement of an initial 25 per cent stake last year that garnered 920 million euros, roughly matches what the state spent on the latest capital increase.

A first attempt to privatise the bank in 2021 proved fruitless as Italy's No.2 bank Unicredit walked

The sum raised by Tuesday's share sale, when added to the market placement of an initial 25 per cent stake last year that garnered 920 million euros, roughly matches what the state spent on the latest capital increase.

away from merger talks with the Treasury, forcing Rome to seek more time from the EU.

Since they took office in late 2022, both Giorgetti and Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni have repeatedly said that the government would try to boost competitio­n among banks with the privatisat­ion of MPS, signalling a preference for a merger with another mid-sized lender.

This raised the prospect of a potential deal with Banco BPM or BPER Banca, Italy's third and fourth largest banks respective­ly, though both have said they are not interested in MPS.

Given the absence of interested buyers in the short term, share placements became the only way for the Treasury to cut its stake and work towards re-privatisat­ion commitment­s, Reuters first reported last May.

The opposition Democratic Party on Wednesday asked Giorgetti to clarify whether Rome intends to continue to seek a merger partner for MPS.

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