Italy Offers Bank Bailout Despite Past Pledges
January 08 2019 - 9:00AM
Dow Jones News
By Giovanni Legorano
ROME--Italy's populist government has offered to shore up an
ailing bank with public money, in a sharp U-turn after attacking
mainstream politicians for years for bailing out banks with
taxpayers' money.
The country's embattled banking sector will provide a delicate
test for the new government, as Italian lenders--whose bondholders
include many ordinary savers--struggle to digest billions in bad
loans accumulated during the financial crisis and shore up their
fragile finances.
The governing coalition of the antiestablishment 5 Star Movement
and the nativist League offered on Monday to prop up struggling
Banca Carige SpA with financing guarantees or a direct injection of
capital, two measures that the parties have denounced when previous
governments used them to rescue or wind down lenders in Italy's
crisis-scarred banking sector.
The case of Carige, a regional lender from Genoa hit by souring
loans, a depressed local economy and years of mismanagement, is
testing the ability of Italy's new government to break with the
unpopular policies of the country's centrist establishment.
The League and 5 Star won power last year by promising a change
of tack in major policy areas from the budget to immigration, but
have been forced into a series of U-turns already by the fragility
of Italy's economy as well as pressure from financial markets and
European Union authorities. In December, the government watered
down its plan to boost growth via a bigger budget deficit, in
response to rising yields on government bonds that were pushing the
economy toward recession.
League leader Matteo Salvini, the most powerful figure in the
government, argued Tuesday that the government's offer of support
for Carige is different from past bank bailouts because it would
help small savers. "While (past leaders) ignored and forgot savers,
we have intervened immediately to defend them, without doing favors
to the banks, to foreigners, or to 'friends of friends,'" Mr.
Salvini said in a statement.
Analysts noted that the same instruments and justifications were
used by previous governments in several Italian bank bailouts since
the financial crisis.
The long-running drama surrounding Carige escalated last week
when its top management resigned because the controlling family
shareholders refused to inject fresh capital to meet demands from
regulators. The European Central Bank, which supervises the
eurozone's larger banks, promptly appointed new administrators
tasked with cleaning up the bank's loan book and finding a buyer.
Trading in Carige's shares has been suspended.
Amid fears that Carige could collapse without fresh funding or
capital, wiping out its shares and bonds and hitting many Italian
savers, the government quickly got its checkbook out and offered
help. Government officials also feared that Carige's failure could
renew wider concerns about Italy's fragile banking sector and lead
to a new selloff of government bonds.
"There has been a sudden change in the government position.
Until last week, the government was saying it wouldn't use even one
euro to save banks," said Angelo Baglioni, an economics professor
at Cattolica University in Milan.
Under the eurozone's new and stricter rules on bank bailouts,
governments are only supposed to inject taxpayer money into banks
only after investors such as junior bondholders have taken a hit.
The 5 Star Movement in particular has long denounced these rules
for so-called "bail-ins" as an attack on small savers. The 5 Star
and the League blasted Italy's previous centrist governments for
applying the rules to investors in Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena
SpA, which was nationalized two years ago, and two Veneto-based
banks that were liquidated in 2017.
If Rome ends up injecting fresh capital in Carige, EU
authorities, whose approval is needed, will likely demand that
losses be imposed on some investors, as in previous cases.
Facing a public backlash against the losses imposed on owners of
bank bonds, who in Italy include many ordinary savers, previous
governments set up reimbursement schemes, arguing that some
individual investors were misled by banks into buying the bonds.
Still, anger over bank bailouts helped undermine voter support for
centrist governments and contributed to the rise of the 5 Star and
League. At the end of June, mom-and-pop investors owned Italian
bank bonds worth EUR76 billion, according to the Bank of Italy.
The two populist parties said the EU's new rules on bailouts
would cause a "destabilization of credit with negative consequences
for families," and pledged to challenge the rules to better protect
the savings of ordinary Italians. The parties also argued for
more-severe punishment of bankers found responsible for
failures.
So far, however, the government is following the same playbook
as its predecessors, said Mr. Baglioni.
On Tuesday, Carige said it plans to tap the government's offer
of state guarantee to support the issuance of new bonds. It said it
views the option of a direct recapitalization by the government as
a last resort.
Write to Giovanni Legorano at giovanni.legorano@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 08, 2019 08:45 ET (13:45 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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