Rome did so by invoking its “golden power,” which was originally designed to stop foreign takeovers from threatening national security. That move did not go unnoticed in Brussels, where officials opened two distinct probes into the matter, led respectively by the financial services and the competition directorates. It has also triggered an exchange under the EU Pilot, and the Commission “is now assessing the reply of Italian authorities.”
Competition officials in Brussels cleared the deal with conditions on June 19, rejecting Rome’s request to hand the deal back to the national antitrust authority.
Competition officials also sent Rome a set of questions on its “golden power,” a Commission spokesperson told POLITICO, explaining that only in “exceptional” circumstances can a government interfere with a Brussels merger decision. National interventions in mergers aiming to protect a “legitimate interest,” they said, should be “appropriate, proportionate and non-discriminatory.”
There are broader concerns over Rome’s entanglements in the banking sector. Government officials have spoken privately of the need to build up a third force in Italian banking that would act as a counterweight to the dominant duo of UniCredit and Intesa Sanpaolo, which they hope would bolster credit access for the small firms and households that make up a sizable bulk of the ruling coalition’s electoral base.
According to Rome insiders, the government wants to build this “third pole” around Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MPS), which has been under effective government control since the last in a series of expensive bailouts in 2017. The Commission only approved that bailout on the condition that Rome reduce its influence over the bank as quickly as practicable. With the conditions having been fulfilled, MPS is now on the hunt for acquisitions — with the backing of the government, which is still its largest shareholder, owning an 11.7 percent stake.
At first, Meloni’s government aimed to merge MPS with BPM, which bought a large stake in the Tuscan lender last year. When that was derailed by UniCredit, the government changed tack, supporting a surprise €12.5 billion bid by MPS for Milan-based investment bank Mediobanca. The target rejected the offer outright as having “no industrial rationale” and as being structured so as to create significant conflicts of interest at the shareholder level — an implicit complaint about the offer’s political dimensions.