Salvini, who heads the far-right League, said in a statement
that the ECB move showed that the EU's banking union was
creating instability and said more transparency was needed to
dispel any suspicion the central bank was politically motivated.
Earlier on Tuesday, a source told Reuters the ECB would give the
banks it supervises a target date to fully provision for all of
their bad debt, existing and new. The move surprised some
investors and particularly spooked Italian lenders because many
hoped the ECB would be more flexible.
Troubled lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena <BMPS.MI> said it was
told to increase coverage for impaired loans by 2026, sending
its shares down by more than 10 percent.
"The new attack by the ECB supervisor on the Italian banking
system and MPS shows once again that the banking union ... not
only does not make our financial system more stable, but it
causes instability," Salvini said.
The far-right leader accused the ECB of overriding decisions
made by the European Commission, adding that it raised a
"fundamental question" about the bank's supposed impartiality.
"Independence does not mean irresponsibility," Salvini said,
demanded greater transparency over its decision-making.
"This transparency is necessary to dispel the doubt that the ECB
is making political use of the powers attributed to it. This
latest foul play by the ECB could cost Italy 15 billion euros,"
he added.
The Italian central bank was not immediately available for
comment.
(Reporting by Crispian Balmer, editing by Steve Scherer)
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