
EU regulators clear with conditions UniCredit's acquisition of Banco BPM
BRUSSELS, June 19 (Reuters) - EU antitrust regulators on Thursday approved with conditions Italian bank UniCredit's (CRDI.MI), opens new tab takeover of rival Banco BPM (BAMI.MI), opens new tab.
UniCredit agreed to sell 209 branches in northern Italy to allay competition concerns.
"These commitments fully address the competition concerns identified by the Commission, by removing the horizontal overlap between the companies' activities in those areas and ensuring that competition is preserved," the European Commission said in a statement.
The EU said it had declined a request from the Italian competition authority to refer the merger to it for assessment under Italian competition law.
Italy had invoked its "golden powers" over the bid, on the grounds of national security concerns and to set the terms of UniCredit's offer. UniCredit had challenged the government-imposed conditions, with a court hearing set for next month.
"The Commission has a particular interest in ensuring that competition is preserved in sectors such as banking and insurance, which are of crucial importance for the economic development of the Capital Market Union and Savings and Investment Union," the commission said in its statement.
"Moreover, the Commission is well placed to deal with the transaction as it has developed significant expertise in analysing banking markets," the EU said.
Reuters reported on June 10 that the deal would be cleared after UniCredit agreed to asset sales.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
34 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Bank of England boss Andrew Bailey sounds alarm over jobs as it leaves interest rates on hold
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey yesterday sounded the alarm over the darkening outlook for jobs as it left interest rates on hold – but opened the door to a cut in August. He said there had been 'signs of softening in the labour market' as a Bank survey found that UK employers are slamming the brakes on pay rises as a result of Rachel Reeves' £25billion raid on employers' National Insurance. Global events are also 'highly unpredictable' as conflict in the Middle East pushes up oil prices and US tariffs also take their toll. The comments are the latest evidence undermining Government claims that it is turning the economy around. Recent figures showed more than 100,000 UK jobs were lost in May with a quarter of a million axed since the Budget. Growth in the first quarter of this year was followed by a downturn in April, when GDP slumped 0.3 per cent. Employment growth is also 'near zero'. The Bank's monetary policy committee left interest rates at 4.25 per cent, citing the need for a 'gradual and careful' approach. But three of the nine members voted for a cut, fuelling hopes of a rate slash in August. Inflation is 3.4 per cent and expected to climb close to 4 per cent by the end of the year. The feedback from the Bank's survey was bleak. Many firms are in 'wait-and-see' mode on tariffs while investment intentions are being held back by factors such as 'fragile demand, trade developments, Government tax and labour policies'.


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Bank of England holds steady as divisions emerge over rates
The Bank of England missed the party on Thursday when it announced that interest rates would hold steady at 4.25 per cent. On a day littered with monetary policy announcements across Europe, it was the only major central bank to sit tight. Switzerland's central bank cut rates by a quarter point. Sweden's did the same, as did Norway's. In the UK, the monetary policy committee was not for turning and stuck to the script: markets expected rates to be held and the Bank of England duly delivered. However, that the committee voted 6-3 in favour of leaving rates unchanged did somewhat upset the apple cart. Analysts projected a 7-2 vote split. Dave Ramsden, a deputy governor, broke from the centre ground on the MPC and voted alongside Swati Dhingra and Alan Taylor — external committee members who have repeatedly voted for frequent and larger cuts — for a 0.25 percentage point reduction.


Telegraph
3 hours ago
- Telegraph
Spain rejects Trump's Nato spending demands ahead of summit
Spain has rejected Donald Trump's 'unreasonable' demand that Nato members increase defence spending, throwing plans for a summit of alliance leaders into disarray. Next week's meeting in the Hague has been carefully designed to convince the US president to continue supporting Europe's defence. However, the refusal by Pedro Sánchez, the prime minister of Spain, to commit to a new defence spending target of 5 per cent of GDP has jeopardised the carefully choreographed diplomacy. Mr Trump has threatened to withdraw US protection from allies which don't commit to the new target, which has been raised from 2 per cent amid fears over Russian aggression. Mark Rutte, the Nato secretary general, has broad support for an increase in military spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP by 2030 and 1.5 per cent of investment in defence-adjacent areas such as transport infrastructure and cyber security. Mr Sánchez asked for Spain to be exempt from any spending target agreed next week or that the goal be made optional, even though Madrid has failed to meet even the original 2 per cent target. The letter from Europe's most influential Left-wing leader is a blow for Mr Rutte and could embolden the few other members reluctant to sign up to the 5 per cent. Germany and Poland are among the countries supporting the goal. Britain has committed to hit 2.5 per cent by 2027 but Sir Keir Starmer does not think the economy is strong enough to go above three per cent at this stage. In his letter, Mr Sánchez said hitting the target would only be possible by raising taxes on the middle class and cutting public services. The socialist premier said a 'rushed' effort to hit 5 per cent would damage economic growth and could force his government to slash net zero and development aid budgets. 'The empirical reality is that, for Spain, as for other Nato countries, reaching 5 per cent defence spending will be impossible unless it comes at the cost of increasing taxes on the middle class, cutting public services and social benefits for their citizens,' he wrote. He added that diverting money from education, technology and healthcare would cost the Spanish economy, as well as increase debt and inflation. In 2024, Spain spent just 1.28 per cent of GDP on defence, which has drawn criticism from the US president. Mr Sánchez claimed Spain was committed to the 2 per cent target but wanted the scope widened to include the fight against climate change and illegal migration. He has announced more than €10 billion of fresh defence investment to hit the 2 per cent target this year. But he faces a balancing act of aligning with Nato allies and cajoling his junior coalition partner, the far-Left alliance Sumar, which is hostile to increasing military spending. Mr Sánchez has taken swipes at Mr Trump and his political allies such as Javier Milei, the president of Argentina. Spain's formal recognition of Palestine and criticism of Israel will have won it no favours with the White House and neither will its liberal transgender rights laws. Mr Trump will be handed a one-page communiqué to sign off at the Nato leaders' summit in a concession to his short attention span and as part of an effort to head off a spending row between Europe and the US. Nato has cut back the 32-leader strong summit to just one working session of two and a half hours dedicated to the spending target. Strategic shortening of summit The meeting was originally meant to last three days, but shortening it will prevent Mr Trump from leaving early, as he did at the G7 meeting in Canada this week. Mr Trump's departure, ostensibly to respond to Israel's strikes on Iran, meant he missed talks with Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president. Sources have claimed he left because he was angered Emmanuel Macron, the French president, had visited Greenland on his way to Canada. Mr Trump has said he wants to buy the Arctic Island, but Mr Macron declared that the Danish autonomous territory was 'not for sale'. Mr Zelensky has been invited to a dinner of Nato leaders on Tuesday night hosted by the King and Queen of the Netherlands, but will not take part in the summit. The US has ruled out future Nato membership for Ukraine. Russia and Ukraine said on Thursday that they had completed another exchange of captured soldiers, part of a deal reached earlier in June at peace talks in Istanbul. 'Our people are returning home from Russian captivity,' Mr Zelensky said on social media. Fighting between Iran and Israel could deflect global attention from the Russian invasion of Ukraine and even bolster the Kremlin's war effort, Ukrainian officials say. The conflict has pushed up the price of oil – a key revenue stream funding Russia's invasion. However, Kyiv has welcomed Israeli attacks on Iran, which has directly aided and provided weapons to Moscow for its own strikes on Ukraine.