Bloomberg
UniCredit SpA, Italy’s biggest bank, climbed in Milan trading after a report that it had hired an adviser for a possible merger with France’s Societe Generale SA, a deal rumored already two years ago.
Talks between the lenders to study integration and acquisition possibilities have been continuing, Italian financial newspaper MF reported, without citing anyone.
UniCredit appointed Daniel Bouton, the ex-SocGen chief executive officer who is now working for Rothschild & Co., due to the “delicate†nature of discussions, MF said, adding that SocGen hired JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Shares of both lenders rose, leading European banks higher before UniCredit pared gains. The Italian lender was up 1.3 percent at 12:51 p.m. in Milan trading, while SocGen climbed 1.5 percent in Paris.
Spokesmen for SocGen and UniCredit declined to comment. Rothschild wasn’t immediately available to comment.
UniCredit CEO Jean Pierre Mustier, who was head of SocGen’s corporate and investment-banking division and a member of its executive board before leaving the Paris-based bank in 2009, has been eyeing an expansion after spending the past two years cleaning up the Italian lender. Mustier told reporters this month that the bank will have to once again chart a growth path after hitting its 2019 targets.
“We want to be one of the pan-European winners,†Mustier said. “If it has to be done on an organic basis, we are working on that. If it has to be done on non-organic basis, we could consider that.â€
Mustier believes strongly in the benefits of a tie-up with SocGen, which would push the lender into a more pan-European direction, MF said. He may face opposition from Italy’s nationalist government, the paper said.
SocGen CEO Frederic Oudea, meanwhile, recently poured cold water on rumors about a potential tie-up with foreign banks. “I don’t believe at all†in European cross-border mergers, Oudea said at a June 7 conference in Frankfurt. He highlighted that capital requirements for too-big-to-fail institutions discourage large mergers on the continent.
SocGen revamped its top-management team in May by naming four deputy CEOs. The French lender also poached Sebastien Proto from Rothschild to become its new head of strategy, reporting directly to the CEO. Speculation about a possible combination with SocGen surfaced after Mustier took over as UniCredit CEO in 2016.