UniCredit to raise $13.8
billion in Italy's biggest share issue
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[December 13, 2016]
By Stephen Jewkes and Gianluca Semeraro
MILAN
(Reuters) - Italy's largest bank, UniCredit, unveiled plans on Tuesday
to raise 13 billion euros ($13.8 billion) in the nation's biggest share
issue, to shore up its balance sheet and distance itself from Italy's
broader banking crisis.
Its gambit comes at a troubled time for Italian banks and the economy,
with Monte dei Paschi di Siena at risk of failure, a new government just
installed in Rome and early elections expected next year.
UniCredit, the only Italian bank deemed important to the stability of
the global financial system, has lost more than half its market value
this year, hit by concerns over profitability, bad loans and a weaker
balance sheet than major European rivals.
The bank plans to launch the issue in the first quarter of 2017 and use
the money to help fund the removal of 17.7 billion euros worth of bad
debts from its balance sheet, enabling it to boost its profits and also
dividend payouts by 2019.
It would take the bank's core capital ratio to above 12.5 percent in
2019, though UniCredit envisages deep job cuts. It plans to shed 14,000
jobs - or about 11 percent of its staff as of the end of 2015.
Including announced asset sales, the bank will have a third less staff
by 2019, compared with the end of last year, as a result of its
turnaround plan.
"We are taking decisive actions," Chief Executive Jean Pierre Mustier
said.
UniCredit shares jumped 2 percent on the news, with traders saying its
plan seemed realistic. The turnaround, though, would involve 12.2
billion euros in one-off losses in the fourth quarter, including loan
writedowns and restructuring costs.
The success of the plan hinges on investors believing it will be a
long-term solution. The bank has already raised 14.5 billion euros since
the global financial crisis struck in 2008.
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Unicredit bank logo is seen on a banner in Milan, Italy, May 23,
2016. REUTERS/Stefano Rellandini/File Photo
Mustier told reporters that the problems of Monte dei Paschi would not
upset UniCredit's plans.
"I am highly confident Monte Paschi will be resolved by year-end and so
it will have no impact on our capital increase."
Italy is ready to bail out Monte dei Paschi, the country's third-largest
bank, if it fails to get the 5 billion euros it needs to stay in
business from private investors, a Treasury source said. The European
Central Bank has given it by the end of this month to raise the money.
For UniCredit, investment banks have signed a pre-underwriting agreement
to help it market the issue, including Morgan Stanley, UBS, BofA Merrill
Lynch, JP Morgan and Mediobanca.
UniCredit's bad loans would be sold to two vehicles, one managed by
Fortress Investment Group and the other by PIMCO. UniCredit would retain
minority stakes in each.
($1 = 0.9403 euros)
(Additional reporting by Valentina Za; Editing by Mark Bendeich and
Pravin Char)
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