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BrackenFebruary 1 2019

Why Italy’s banking problems are Europe’s banking problems

Italy’s financial challenges are far from unique, and are in fact shared by some of its neighbours, writes Giorgio Di Giorgio of the Arcelli Centre for Monetary and Financial Studies.
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The Italian banking sector is again in turmoil. The board of Carige, a medium-sized and mostly local commercial bank headquartered in Genoa, has recently been removed by the European Central Bank (ECB). Management powers have been assigned to the previous chairman and CEO of the bank and to a third legal expert appointed by the Bank of Italy. Their task is to either sell the bank or walk a narrow path between nationalisation and resolution. Another medium-sized bank, Popolare di Bari, is also in trouble, due to a high percentage of non-performing loans (NPLs) and the need to raise capital.

These are setbacks to the progress achieved between 2017 and mid-2018, when one of Italy’s largest lenders, and its oldest, Monte dei Paschi di Siena, was recapitalised with public money, and two medium-sized banks in the wealthy Veneto region were taken over by Intesa Sanpaolo, the country’s largest banking group, after being ‘cleaned’ of bad debt.

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