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Saturday, February 1, 2014

Italy Unveils Most Bizarre Bank Bailout Yet

from ZeroHedge:


On Wednesday, Italy’s government voted final approval to a decree hiking the value of Bank of Italy’s share capital from €156K to €7.5 billion - something that had not been done since the 1930s. Of course, politicians determining the fictitious value of a central bank is one thing, as idiotic as it may be. However, what is truly preposterous is the covert bailout that accompanies the decree: a key part of the decision was setting a 3% ceiling on the stake that the bank’s shareholders can own in the central bank. This means, as Reuters reports, that Intessa and UniCredit, currently the central bank’s largest shareholders with stakes of 42 percent and 22 percent respectively – not to mention two of Italy’s most NPL-heavy banks – will have to sell the bulk of their central bank “equity” stakes. And who will they sell them to? Why the central bank itself, and in return they will pocket up to €3.5 billion ($4.7 billion) from the sale of their central bank holdings. Said otherwise, Italy took not only bizarro accounting, but also monetary financing of insolvent banks by the monetary authority, and thus Italy’s taxpayers, to the truly next level.


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