Italy’s MPS, Mediobanca to approve financial terms of full merger

Industry:    5 hours ago

The boards of Italy’s Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MPS) and Mediobanca are due to approve on Tuesday the terms on ​which MPS will buy the 14% of the partner it doesn’t ‌already own and merge with it.

MPS, which the state bailed out in 2017 and re-privatised in 2023-2024, last year took over Mediobanca in a 16 billion euro ($19 billion) deal, ​the biggest move in a wave of consolidation reshaping Italian banking.

The strategy ​for the combined group has pitted MPS CEO Luigi Lovaglio ⁠against leading investor Francesco Gaetano Caltagirone, who is also a long-standing investor in ​Generali, Italy’s biggest insurer.

Through its control of Mediobanca, MPS has become the biggest ​shareholder in Generali.

Lovaglio on February 17 secured board backing for plans to buy 100% of Mediobanca and merge it with MPS, leading the market to expect the terms of the transaction ​to be announced on February 27 when MPS presented a multi-year strategy ​for the combined group.

But MPS said that day that the share swap ratio for the ‌deal would ⁠be announced on March 10, leaving investors hanging and sparking a selloff.

Uncertainty mounted further when the MPS board last week voted to deny Lovaglio a new term as CEO.

Lovaglio’s mandate ends in April and he had been seeking reappointment. He ​took on the role ​in 2022 and ⁠turned MPS around.

Lovaglio had the backing of the largest MPS shareholder, the Del Vecchio family’s investment vehicle Delfin, but ​not of Caltagirone, who did not regard the Mediobanca merger ​as a ⁠priority.

Sources told Reuters on Monday that, contrary to earlier plans, Lovaglio would not meet investors as customary immediately after the unveiling of a new strategy.

A person close to ⁠the ​situation said MPS, however, would attend Morgan Stanley’s ​annual conference on Europe’s financial sectors in London next week, while further investor meetings to discuss the ​strategy were being considered.

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