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Italy’s top bank Intesa launches unsolicited $35 billion bid for Monte dei Paschi

By Thomson Reuters Jun 8, 2026 | 1:26 AM

By Valentina Za

MILAN, June 8 (Reuters) – Italy’s biggest banking group Intesa Sanpaolo on Monday announced a €30.6 billion ($35 billion) unsolicited cash-and-share bid to buy rival lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MPS), kicking ​off a fresh consolidation drive.

Having secured a fifth of the ‌Italian banking market with the acquisition of mid-sized UBI back in 2020, Intesa kept out of a mergers and acquisitions burst sweeping the industry last year, saying antitrust limits prevented any further domestic expansion.

To address competition issues, Intesa said it had ‌struck ​a deal with insurer Unipol, the main ⁠investor in BPER Banca, to ⁠sell a banking business comprising 635 MPS branches and the MPS brand, if its bid was successful.

Intesa and Unipol teamed up in a similar manner in the UBI deal.

Intesa said the combined entity ​would become the euro zone’s second-biggest banking group by market value after Spain’s Santander, with a capitalisation of €126 billion and a net ⁠income goal of €16 billion in 2029, up ⁠from last year’s combined profits of €13.6 billion.

MPS, which the ​state bailed out in 2017 and reprivatised in 2023-2024, emerged as a ​focal point for further Italian banking consolidation after buying Mediobanca last ‌year.

That deal made it the largest investor in insurer Generali, a coveted asset in Italian finance.

Intesa, whose business model is focused on wealth management and insurance, had attempted to buy Generali in 2017, but dropped ⁠the plan and grew its insurance business internally.

Italy’s second-biggest bank UniCredit last year built a large stake in Generali.

Intesa said in a statement its offer ⁠entailed a premium of ‌12.5% versus the closing share price of MPS ⁠on Friday, for an overall outlay of €30.6 billion versus ​the ‌MPS market value of €27.4 billion.

On Sunday, amid mounting expectations ​of an ⁠Intesa move, Banco BPM said its board had unanimously approved seeking to open talks with MPS over a potential combination between the two lenders that would be a merger of equals.

($1 = 0.8667 euros)

(Reporting by Valentina Za in Milan and Gursimran Kaur in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu, Tom Hogue ​and Jamie Freed)