Monte dei Paschi di Siena shareholders voted to return Matteo Lovaglio to the bank's board, reversing his earlier removal and ending a proxy contest that had stretched across multiple quarters. The vote restores Lovaglio to a directorship at Italy's third-largest lender, months after governance tensions forced his departure from the chief executive role.
The shareholder approval marks the formal close of a governance fight that began when Lovaglio's board seat was eliminated following his transition out of the CEO position. The proxy contest forced MPS shareholders to pick sides between governance traditionalists and investor factions backing Lovaglio's operational track record. Vote tallies have not been disclosed, but the outcome suggests meaningful institutional backing for the former executive's return. Lovaglio's CEO tenure ran through mid-2024, a period when MPS executed €1.6 billion in non-performing loan disposals and saw tier-one capital rise to 16.2%. The board change comes as MPS continues its multi-year restructuring under state-backed majority ownership.
The reinstatement carries strategic weight beyond personality politics. Lovaglio's return gives the board direct access to the executive who drove recent cost-reduction programs and managed relationships with Italian Treasury officials during sensitive capital negotiations. Italy's Ministry of Economy retains a 26.7% stake in MPS following partial privatization attempts, and Lovaglio's re-entry to the boardroom positions him to influence strategic conversations around future state divestment. His operational visibility into legacy asset workouts and digital transformation initiatives makes him a high-signal voice on timing questions around Treasury exit pathways. The proxy fight's resolution also removes a governance distraction that had complicated investor presentations to potential cornerstone buyers for the government's remaining stake.
The vote creates a new board dynamic at a bank still working through state ownership complications. MPS trades at 0.4x tangible book value, a discount that persists despite improving asset quality and capital ratios. Lovaglio's directorship returns him to strategic discussions around revenue mix, digital banking investments, and geographic footprint decisions—areas where his operational tenure gives him asymmetric information relative to other board members. The shareholder decision also signals institutional impatience with governance turbulence at a lender where execution stability directly affects privatization valuations.
Operators should track MPS board committee assignments in the next 30 days to gauge Lovaglio's operational influence. Watch for Italian Treasury commentary on revised divestment timelines, particularly any statements tied to "improved governance stability"—language that would telegraph renewed privatization preparation. Monitor tier-one capital ratio progression through Q2 2025 earnings; Lovaglio's board presence may accelerate capital deployment decisions that had stalled during the proxy fight. European banking analysts covering southern European restructuring plays will recalibrate MPS privatization probability estimates based on board composition changes.
The reinstatement vote occurred 17 months after Lovaglio's CEO departure and eight months into the proxy contest, a timeline that reflects the procedural complexity of board challenges at state-influenced European lenders.