Monte dei Paschi in last ditch push to see through capital raise
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[October 08, 2022]
By Valentina Za and Giuseppe Fonte
MILAN (Reuters) -Monte dei Paschi di
Siena's (MPS) capital raising plan is entering a make-or-break stage
with CEO Luigi Lovaglio and the banks due to guarantee the sale
hammering out final details, people close to the matter said.
MPS, which is 64% owned by the state after a 2017 bailout, is looking to
raise up to 2.5 billion euros ($2.5 billion) by issuing new shares.
The share sale on Oct. 17 would allow MPS to raise funds to help pay for
staff cuts under early retirement rules that expire at the end of
November - barring new legislation to extend them.
To meet the deadline MPS must approve the terms of the share issue at
the very latest by the middle of next week, two people said.
And before that it needs to secure the support of a group of eight banks
that have made a preliminary commitment to mop up unsold shares.
With markets gripped by fears about recession, inflation and war, the
banks see the deal as too risky to undertake without a pre-commitment
from cornerstone investors.
So far however, only French insurer Axa, which sells its products in
Italy through MPS branches, has offered to provide support.
Lovaglio has failed to take up a similar offer by another MPS commercial
partner, Anima Holding, because unlike Axa the Italian asset manager has
also sought a strengthening of the distribution agreement as part of the
deal.
Under the structure envisaged by the group of banks, Anima would provide
a guarantee commitment that would come before the bank guarantees,
meaning it would take on more risk, a person with knowledge of the
matter said.
The lenders had expected Lovaglio to have by now obtained commitments in
writing from cornerstone investors, two people close to the transaction
said.
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View of the logo of Monte dei Paschi di
Siena (MPS), the oldest bank in the world, which is facing massive
layoffs as part of a planned corporate merger, in Siena, Italy,
August 11, 2021. REUTERS/Jennifer Lorenzini/File Photo
The diverging views between the consortium and the CEO on how to
proceed means it won't be clear until the start of next week whether
the capital increase will take place as planned.
The lenders, which are led by Bank of America, Citi, Credit Suisse
and Mediobanca, can walk away thanks to a clause that subjects the
underwriting to positive investor feedback.
With MPS' market value equivalent to less than a tenth of the amount
the state-owned bank is looking to raise, the banks are exposed to
potential losses on the shares left on their books, which will
initially value the Tuscan bank above healthier peers.
Under European Union state aid rules, the state can cover 64% of
MPS' capital raising, based on its stake in the bank resulting from
the 2017 bailout.
The remaining 36% must come from private hands.
Anima and Axa could jointly provide at best only up to 300 million
euros, sources have said, adding the consortium had hoped to have
formal pre-commitments also from other investors sounded out by
Lovaglio, such as holders of the bank's junior debt.
The risk of a conversion into equity has pushed the price of MPS'
junior bonds close to half of their nominal value. ($1 = 1.0216
euros)
(Reporting by Valentina Za in Milan and Giuseppe Fonte in
RomeEditing by Keith Weir and Jane Merriman)
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