UniCredit Plans to Shake Up Managers -- WSJ
May 23 2016 - 3:02AM
Dow Jones News
Board members agree that bank needs a CEO from outside the
company
By Giovanni Legorano
ROME -- Italian lender UniCredit SpA is heading for a management
overhaul that is likely to see its chief executive step down as
early as next week, people close to the bank's board said
Friday.
Board members are already looking for a new CEO to replace
Federico Ghizzoni, who has been at the helm of the bank since 2010,
but they have so far failed to agree on the right profile for the
job, say people familiar with the situation.
However, they all agree the bank needs an executive from outside
the company who would have the credibility to raise billions of
fresh capital -- one of the people said some board members think
the bank needs up to EUR9 billion ($10.10 billion) in additional
capital -- either through a rights issue or asset sales, or
both.
One of the person said the bank could call a directors' meeting
for May 24 to decide on the next steps and could ratify Mr.
Ghizzoni's resignation.
A spokesman for the bank declined to comment.
Shareholders have grown increasingly unhappy with the leadership
of Mr. Ghizzoni and are now seeking a CEO who can shake up a bank
that suffers from low profitability, large bad loans and a
sprawling international network that has failed to live up to
expectations. UniCredit is Italy's largest bank and the only one
regulated as a global systematically important bank.
UniCredit has been under pressure for some time, suffering from
the same factors that have weighed heavily on Italy's banking
system as a whole.
Low interest rates have pulled profitability down in a bank that
remains heavily dependent on traditional lending activities.
Efforts to expand into other fee-generating activities have had
limited success. Earlier this month, UniCredit reported its net
interest income dropped 3% in the first quarter compared with the
same period in 2015, while fees and commissions were down 3.4%.
UniCredit is also struggling with EUR80 billion in bad loans,
more than any other bank in Europe. While it has written down the
value of bad loans and past acquisitions by EUR76 billion and
raised EUR18 billion in new capital, its capital cushion is still
quite thin -- leading some analysts to say the bank needs to raise
more capital.
The bank also reported lower core capital for the first quarter.
Its management has consistently denied that it needs to raise fresh
funds, but in the past it often conceded the lender needs to shore
up its capital buffer.
Mr. Ghizzoni has also been criticized for the bank's decision
last fall to underwrite the EUR1.5 billion capital increase of
Banca Poplare di Vicenza SpA.
It had agreed to provide a backstop for the transaction, but
after a rout this year in Italian banking stocks, regulators grew
concerned that the capital increase would fail -- in turn leaving
UniCredit owning the troubled bank. As a result, the government
orchestrated a fund supported by Italian financial institutions
that stepped in and underwrote the deal.
UniCredit's shares have lost 42% so far this year.
Write to Giovanni Legorano at giovanni.legorano@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
May 23, 2016 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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