Von der
Leyen tries to keep Meloni onside by stalling action over banking saga
Brussels
has completed its analysis of Italy’s decision to block the merger of two
Milanese banks, but Ursula von der Leyen has yet to take action.
November
7, 2025 4:14 am CET
By
Francesca Micheletti, Ben Munster and Bjarke Smith-Meyer
https://www.politico.eu/article/brussels-hesitates-to-bash-italy-for-derailing-banking-merger/
BRUSSELS
— The European Commission appears to be slow-walking a decision to take action
against Italy over its controversial use of national security powers to stall a
banking merger between UniCredit, the Milan-based bank, and its crosstown rival
BPM.
Officials
at the competition and financial services directorates handed in their
assessment of the case weeks ago to President Ursula von der Leyen’s Cabinet,
but have yet to hear back, five people familiar with the matter told POLITICO.
The assessment is not in favor of Rome, said one of the people, granted
anonymity to discuss a private matter.
Commission
insiders speculate that the delay has to do with broader political bargaining
at the highest level between Brussels and Rome. According to another of the
people, von der Leyen is taking care not to annoy Giorgia Meloni because she
needs the Italian premier’s support to shore up the increasingly shaky
political coalition that backed her for a second term last year.
Earlier
this year, Italy decided that UniCredit’s €10 billion takeover of BPM was a
threat to national security. Under the government’s rules on screening foreign
direct investments — known as its “golden power” — Rome imposed conditions on
April 18 that effectively prevented UniCredit from completing the deal.
The
Commission opened a so-called EU Pilot procedure — carried out by its financial
services directorate — to determine whether the use of national security
measures in a bank merger is in line with EU banking regulations and
single-market freedoms. The process can ultimately lead to an infringement
procedure — as happened when the Spanish government obstructed BBVA’s
acquisition of Catalan bank Banco Sabadell.
The
Commission’s competition directorate gave a conditional green light to the deal
on June 19. A month later it warned Italy that by applying the golden power to
a domestic deal, Italy may have violated merger rules as well as other
provisions of EU law.
The
Commission is currently assessing Italy’s replies in both investigations, a
spokesperson for the EU executive said.
Golden
power
The
golden power equips Italy with wide-ranging screening tools to curb bids on
national champions by foreign investors that are deemed risks to national
security, such as those from China.
The use
of the tool to derail a domestic merger appeared to flout the EU’s push for
greater banking consolidation across Europe — which it sees as necessary for
the continent’s financial sector and for the economy more broadly — to compete
with U.S. rivals. The largest American bank, JP Morgan, has a market
capitalization more than four times that of its nearest European counterpart,
Santander.
Banking
and Financial Services Commissioner Maria Luís Albuquerque has repeatedly
spoken out in favor of banking consolidation across the bloc.
The
competition and financial services teams had their assessment of the case ready
shortly after Italy submitted its last round of responses to the Commission in
August, said one of the people who spoke to POLITICO. But von der Leyen’s
Cabinet, which ultimately has to sign off on a decision, has taken no action so
far, they added.
According
to Italian media reports, Italy has been trying to buy more time and stave off
an infringement procedure by suggesting it could amend its golden power
legislation. Financial daily Milano Finanza reported on Tuesday that the
Commission has set Nov. 13 for a decision.
An
Italian official with knowledge of the file said the Commission could very well
be slow-walking action against Italy given that Unicredit’s withdrawal from the
deal is by now irreversible. That would allow time to review whether Italy’s
golden power is in line with EU competition rules without the pressure of a
live deal.
“A
medium-term, out-of-the-spotlight agreement on golden power could be the best
outcome,” this official explained.
Reuters,
citing sources familiar with the matter, reported last week that Italy could be
willing to amend its golden power to address the Commission’s concerns over how
it was used in the Unicredit-BPM case.
All
matters pertaining to the golden power are steered from von der Leyen’s office,
said another Commission official who is not directly involved in the matter and
was also granted anonymity to speak candidly. It is usually quite simple to
perform a technical analysis of such files, but “politics always trumps it,”
they added.
Spokespeople
for Meloni and Italy’s economy ministry declined to comment.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário