UniCredit picks former Treasury chief Padoan as chairman

By Valentina Za and Gianluca Semeraro MILAN (Reuters) - Italian bank UniCredit on Tuesday said it had named economist Pier Carlo Padoan as director and would appoint the former Treasury chief as chairman when it renews the board next spring. The choice of Padoan, 70, a parliamentarian for the ruling centre-left PD party, comes as consolidation sweeps through Europe's battered banking sector, piling pressure on CEO Jean Pierre Mustier to drop his 'no M&A' mantra.

Reuters October 14, 2020 00:06:31 IST
UniCredit picks former Treasury chief Padoan as chairman

UniCredit picks former Treasury chief Padoan as chairman

By Valentina Za and Gianluca Semeraro

MILAN (Reuters) - Italian bank UniCredit on Tuesday said it had named economist Pier Carlo Padoan as director and would appoint the former Treasury chief as chairman when it renews the board next spring.

The choice of Padoan, 70, a parliamentarian for the ruling centre-left PD party, comes as consolidation sweeps through Europe's battered banking sector, piling pressure on CEO Jean Pierre Mustier to drop his "no M&A" mantra.

As a minister in the government of former PD leader Matteo Renzi, Padoan in 2017 oversaw the bailout of Monte dei Paschi, which the government is now seeking to re-privatise.

Sources have said UniCredit is seen as the best candidate to take over Monte dei Paschi but the Treasury is unwilling to meet conditions posed by UniCredit to consider a potential deal.

After politics sank early attempts to strike cross-border deals with Societe Generale and Commerzbank, Mustier has vowed to stay out of the current merger wave.

He has been working instead on a plan to split UniCredit's domestic assets from its foreign ones to cut funding costs for Italy's only globally systematically relevant bank.

A source familiar with the matter told Reuters on Tuesday Mustier was looking to speed up such plans and seek approval from the current board before its mandate expires next spring.

Il Sole 24 Ore reported directors were split on the issue and would prefer to wait until a new board is in place.

UniCredit said Padoan would play an active role in selecting candidates the board will put forward for its own renewal.

Sources with knowledge of the matter have told Reuters the proposed asset split could ease tie-ups, potentially paving the way for UniCredit to pursue an international merger for its foreign business as well as a domestic combination in Italy.

"UniCredit is a true pan-European winner with solid Italian roots. I very much look forward to working with the board and the management team to capitalise on these strengths," Padoan said in a statement.

Padoan will replace academic Cesare Bisoni, whom UniCredit had named interim chairman following the sudden death of Fabrizio Saccomanni last year.

Mustier has dispelled long-standing concerns about UniCredit's weak capital base by raising 13 billion euros in cash from investors and more than that through asset sales.

But UniCredit's share price stands below levels of mid-2016 when Mustier arrived, at around 0.3 times the book value.

The dividend ban driven by COVID-19 has stalled Mustier's plan to boost investor returns through dividends and buybacks.

"In case regulators' approach to capital return remains conservative and considering that the competitive landscape has changed in Italy, we believe UniCredit might consider M&A if it represents revenue/profitability or capital opportunities," Citi analyst Azzurra Guelfi said in a note.

By taking over smaller peer UBI earlier this year, rival heavyweight Intesa SanPaolo has leapfrogged UniCredit as Italy's biggest bank and cemented its dominance in the country's wealthy north.

Il Sole 24 Ore said UniCredit may list 49-50% of the sub-holding company created to house its foreign assets on the Frankfurt stock exchange, raising capital to pursue a domestic merger while still seeking an international deal with the remaining 50% stake.

(Additional reporting by Giuseppe Fonte, Giselda Vagnoni, Andrea Mandala and Agnieszka Flak; Editing by Alexander Smith, Ed Osmond and Philippa Fletcher)

This story has not been edited by Firstpost staff and is generated by auto-feed.

Updated Date:

TAGS:

also read

France, Germany to agree to NATO role against Islamic State - sources
| Reuters
World

France, Germany to agree to NATO role against Islamic State - sources | Reuters

By Robin Emmott and John Irish | BRUSSELS/PARIS BRUSSELS/PARIS France and Germany will agree to a U.S. plan for NATO to take a bigger role in the fight against Islamic militants at a meeting with President Donald Trump on Thursday, but insist the move is purely symbolic, four senior European diplomats said.The decision to allow the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to join the coalition against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq follows weeks of pressure on the two allies, who are wary of NATO confronting Russia in Syria and of alienating Arab countries who see NATO as pushing a pro-Western agenda."NATO as an institution will join the coalition," said one senior diplomat involved in the discussions. "The question is whether this just a symbolic gesture to the United States

China's Xi says navy should become world class
| Reuters
World

China's Xi says navy should become world class | Reuters

BEIJING Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday called for greater efforts to make the country's navy a world class one, strong in operations on, below and above the surface, as it steps up its ability to project power far from its shores.China's navy has taken an increasingly prominent role in recent months, with a rising star admiral taking command, its first aircraft carrier sailing around self-ruled Taiwan and a new aircraft carrier launched last month.With President Donald Trump promising a US shipbuilding spree and unnerving Beijing with his unpredictable approach on hot button issues including Taiwan and the South and East China Seas, China is pushing to narrow the gap with the U.S. Navy.Inspecting navy headquarters, Xi said the navy should "aim for the top ranks in the world", the Defence Ministry said in a statement about his visit."Building a strong and modern navy is an important mark of a top ranking global military," the ministry paraphrased Xi as saying.