Intesa Sanpaolo filed its voluntary public tender offer document with Consob on Friday, formalizing the acquisition of Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena in what becomes the largest Italian banking consolidation since the 2008 crisis. The deal values MPS at approximately €10.2 billion based on the exchange ratio disclosed in January, though final pricing will settle when Consob clears the document in the coming weeks. Completion is targeted for December 2025.
The filing ends a fifteen-month negotiation window that began when CEO Carlo Messina first signaled interest in absorbing the Siena-based lender, a bank founded in 1472 and bailed out three times since 2009. The Italian Treasury still holds a 26.7% stake in MPS after injecting €5.4 billion in 2017 to prevent collapse. Under the terms filed, Intesa will issue new shares at a ratio that dilutes existing shareholders by roughly 8%, a smaller equity impact than the 12% feared by analysts in February. The Ministry of Economy has pre-committed its shares to the tender, ensuring Messina clears the 66.7% acceptance threshold required for compulsory acquisition of remaining minorities.
This matters because it reshapes competitive dynamics across Southern European retail banking at a moment when net interest margins are compressing and loan growth has stalled. Intesa gains 1,100 MPS branches, most in Tuscany and Lazio, regions where it currently ranks third in deposit share behind UniCredit and Banco BPM. The combined entity will control 23% of Italian household deposits, up from 19%, and command pricing power in small-business lending where MPS historically discounted rates to preserve market share. Messina disclosed in the January framework that he expects €700 million in annual cost synergies by 2028, achievable through branch closures and backend consolidation, though unions have already filed pre-emptive objections with the labor ministry.
The second-order effect is the pressure this places on other mid-tier European banks to either merge or accept permanent sub-scale status. Banco BPM, now the largest independent Italian bank outside the top two, has seen its shares underperform Intesa by 14 percentage points since the MPS deal was announced, a signal that the market expects CEO Giuseppe Castagna to either find a partner or face acquisition himself. In France, Crédit Agricole and Société Générale are watching closely; both have Italian subsidiaries that will lose share if they do not respond. The ECB's supervisory arm has quietly encouraged this consolidation, viewing fewer, stronger banks as preferable to the fragmented landscape that complicated monetary transmission during the 2012 sovereign crisis.
Operators should monitor three follow-on events. Consob typically requires 30 to 45 days for document review, putting clearance in late May or early June. The formal tender period will then run 25 trading days, with results announced by mid-July. If Intesa crosses 90% acceptance, it can trigger compulsory delisting by September, ahead of the December operational merger. Watch for union escalation in June, when branch closure lists are expected; significant labor friction could delay backend integration by two quarters. Also watch UniCredit's response; CEO Andrea Orcel has been silent since the filing, but his cost-income ratio is now 5 points worse than Intesa's on a pro forma basis, and activist investors have been accumulating UniCredit shares since March.
The Treasury will net roughly €2.7 billion from the tender at current share prices, closing the book on the longest state intervention in European banking history. That cash will not sit idle; the Ministry has already floated using proceeds to recapitalize smaller regional lenders or fund industrial policy investments through Cassa Depositi e Prestiti. The real question is whether Messina's execution, if clean, emboldens ECB supervision to push harder for cross-border mergers the political class has resisted since Maastricht.
The takeaway
Intesa's Consob filing moves **€10B+** MPS acquisition to regulatory review, with December close reshaping Italian deposit share and pressuring sub-scale peers.
intesa sanpaolomonte dei paschiitalian bankingeuropean m&aconsobfinancial consolidation
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