A brand on the UniCredit SpA headquarters in Milan, Italy, on Saturday Jan. 22, 2022.
Bloomberg | Getty Photographs
Italian lender UniCredit on Monday provided to snap up its home rival Banco BPM for roughly 10 billion euros ($10.5 billion) in a transfer it says is separate from its pursuit of German financial institution Commerzbank.
The deal would, if accomplished, merge two of Italy’s largest lenders. UniCredit mentioned in an announcement early Monday that it’s providing 6.657 euros for every share — a slight premium on Friday’s shut worth of 6.644 euros.
UniCredit mentioned the acquisition, which might be an all-stock deal, would enable the financial institution to “additional strengthen its position as a number one pan-European banking group.”
Monday’s information follows a flurry of merger and acquisition bulletins within the European banking sector this 12 months. The trade has been thought of ripe for consolidation for years, with cash-rich UniCredit usually cited as a doable acquirer.
In September, UniCredit elevated its stake in German lender Commerzbank to round 21% and submitted a request to spice up the holding to as much as 29.9%. Earlier that month, the Italian financial institution had taken a 9% stake in Commerzbank, with half of this shareholding acquired from the German authorities.
The German authorities has but to bless the potential union, with Chancellor Olaf Scholz stating that “unfriendly assaults, hostile takeovers are usually not a very good factor for banks,” in late-September feedback carried by Reuters.
The biggest shareholder of Commerzbank, the Berlin administration, retains a 12% stake after rescuing the lender through the 2008 monetary disaster and divesting 4.5% of its preliminary place in early September.
Earlier this month, in the meantime, Banco BPM itself made a bid for asset supervisor Anima in a doable 1.6-billion-euro deal, and simply days later purchased a 5% chunk of state-owned Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MPS).
UniCredit on Nov. 6 posted an 8% year-on-year hike in quarterly web revenue to 2.5 billion euros ($2.25 billion), in contrast with a Reuters-reported 2.27-billion-euro forecast. It additionally raised its full-year web revenue steerage to above 9 billion euros, from a earlier outlook of 8.5 billion euros. Shares are up some 55% up to now this 12 months.
—CNBC’s April Roach and Ruxandra Iordache contributed to this text.
Correction: This story has been up to date to mirror the proper spelling of Banco BPM.