
Prophets & Losses: Challenges continue for the Vatican Bank
That would include the church's money, but also the deposits of its customers – including priests and bishops. And much of that money would have been invested in the likes of bonds, stocks and shares and securities – all following what the bank calls 'faith consistent investing', which is their attempt to only invest in things that align with the church's social doctrine. That includes environmentally-friendly companies and projects that show a respect for human life.
As of 2023 the bank also held around €37m worth of gold – which was mainly left with the US Federal Reserve for safe keeping. Meanwhile it had around €10.7m worth of medals and precious coins, which were held in the Vatican Bank vaults.
And, from all of this, it made a profit of more than €30.5m in 2023.
It should be said, though, that the bank's assets do not represent the total net worth of the church – far from it.
For example there's a separate entity called the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See – or APSA for short – which manages most of the Vatican's property interests. Its importance has grown in recent years and, as of 2023, it controlled around 5,000 real estate units, worth around €2.7 billion.
On top of that you also have all of the relics, sculptures, paintings and jewelry that is in Vatican City, and other places around the world. All of this together would add billions more onto the church's balance sheet – beyond what we know about the Vatican Bank's holdings.
But the fact that we know much at all about the bank is a relatively new thing, isn't it?
Yes – the Vatican Bank only started to publish annual reports in 2013. Before then there was very little public information about what the bank was in control of and what it was doing with the assets it had.
And that was very much the aim of Pope Pius XII when he established it in the 1940s – he wanted to add an extra layer of secrecy to the Vatican's finances. That was particularly important in the context of the ongoing war - the Vatican was essentially sitting in the middle of the Allies and Axis powers, and one of the few states able to do business with both.
And from the outset the Vatican Bank wasn't answerable to any regulations from any other country, it didn't publish annual results and it didn't pay any taxes. And while it was only meant to take on members of the church as customers, this relatively unique set up meant it became very attractive to wealthy Italian laymen too – especially those who wanted to keep a low profile on some of their business dealings.
As a result, controversy and suspicion has hung around the bank from its inception.
Tell me about some of the controversies...
There's probably two big ones in its history – one involving Michele Sindona, and the other involving Roberto Calvi and Banco Ambrosiano.
Michele Sindona was an Italian banker who was also good friends with Giovanni Battista Montini – who went on to become Pope Paul VI. As a result, when the Vatican Bank was looking to diversity its assets and investments in the 1960s, it took Sindona on as a financial advisor.
But Sindona wasn't the pencil-pushing banker type – he was also involved with the subversive masonic lodge Propaganda Due, and was working with the likes of the American and Italian Mafias – including the Gambino family in New York – helping them to launder drug money and avoid tax. Eventually, that would often see him transfer Mafia money to Switzerland via the Vatican Bank as a way of evading authorities and regulators.
Sindona also spent a lot of time and money buying up banks of his own to create a network to funnel his money through - but when one of his US companies collapsed in 1974, his whole empire fell apart. That exposed some of the dealings the Vatican Bank was a conduit for – and ended up costing them tens of millions of dollars in the process.
After his empire's collapse Sindona had the lawyer tasked with investigating his business killed – for which he was eventually given a life sentence in 1985. Days later he ingested poison and died.
What about Roberto Calvi?
He was managing director of Banco Ambrosiano - which was a Catholic Italian bank first established in the late 19th Century, which grew to at one stage become the country's second biggest lender.
The Vatican Bank became Banco Ambrosiano's largest shareholder – and the workings of two became quite closely linked for a time. Not least because the then president of the Vatican Bank, Archbishop Paul Marcinkus – who hailed from Chicago - was friends with Roberto Calvi.
His work with the Vatican Bank earned him the nickname 'God's Banker' – but, like Sindona, he was also one of the mafia's bankers, as well as a member of the Propaganda Due masonic lodge. And like Sindona, Calvi often used the Vatican Bank as an intermediary in the large, illegal transactions he was making on behalf of the Mafia.
The Italian central bank eventually became suspicious of what he was doing – and launched an investigation in the late 1970s, which identified billions of lire worth of illegal transactions. And when they dug even deeper, they found massive debts of as much as $1.5 billion – in the bank. Bear in mind this was 1982 – so it's the equivalent of around $5 billion today. And there was correspondence between Calvi and people in the Vatican which showed that senior figures in the church were aware of the kinds of transactions it was involved in.
Following the bank's collapse the Vatican agreed to pay more than $220m to Banco Ambrosiano's creditors in recognition of its "moral involvement" in the collapse – though it never took full responsibility for what went on.
Calvi, meanwhile, fled Italy on a false passport – but just over a week later his body was found hanging under Blackfriar's Bridge in London. He had stones and thousands of dollars of cash in his pockets. It was initially deemed a suicide but an Italian court later ruled it was a murder – the theory being that the mafia had him killed in revenge for the money he had lost them through the collapse of his bank.
The president of the Vatican Bank, Archbishop Marcinkus, meanwhile, who had worked with both Calvi and Sindona, didn't step aside from his role until 1989. Seven years after Banco Ambrosiano's failure. Italian authorities did issue a warrant for his arrest in 1987 but he claimed diplomatic immunity and waited out in Vatican city for a time, until the warrant expired.
He eventually died in 2006.
It's like something out of a movie...
Well you won't be surprised to learn that there have been multiple movies and books made about these events – be they retellings of the events or theories about what else happened with the players involved.
In fact if the story sounds familiar it may be because you've seen Godfather III; it used the dealings of Calvi, Marcinkus and the Vatican Bank as the basis for that film's central plot, though the names are changed.
In his telling, Francis Ford Coppola also included the conspiracy theory that Pope John Paul I was assassinated because he was set to reform the Vatican Bank and expose the corruption within. There have long been questions around his death, which came just 33 days after he was elected pope, but there's never been any compelling evidence that he was murdered.
So did Archbishop Marcinkus stepping aside bring an end to the Vatican Bank's controversies?
Not at all – there have been many since then, albeit at a lower level than what we saw with Sindona and Calvi. As its unique structure of minimal oversight and no taxes continued for many years, it remained an attractive offshore tax haven for the rich for even after the peak of its controversies.
It was investigated for money laundering in 2010 as a result of some suspicious international transactions, for example. Then in 2013, a senior accountant at the bank – Monsignor Nunzio Scarano - was arrested for trying to fly €20m from Switzerland back to Italy. He had been under investigation by Italian authorities for a series of transactions where cheques he claimed to be church donations were recycled through the Vatican Bank.
His arrest also led to the resignation of the bank's director and deputy director a few days later. The directors were found liable for mismanagement at the bank – while the monsigner was eventually given a three years sentence for corruption and defamation.
Then in 2014, Vatican authorities flagged their suspicions around an investment in a property development in London – which ultimately lost the bank €200m. An investigation into that eventually led to a turn of events that really shook the church, which was the arrest of cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, by Vatican authorities, in 2019.
He had been in charge of the management of the Holy See's funds between 2011 and 2018 – but was eventually convicted of embezzlement and fraud in 2023.
Wasn't fixing this a priority for Pope Francis?
Yes – and while all the recent talk of his legacy didn't focus much on this, his attempts to reform the Vatican Bank were a significant part of the work he undertook in his time as pope.
In truth the attempt to reform the bank was started by Pope Benedict – he was the one that set them on the path to publishing annual reports, for example. And to a degree Pope Francis had little choice but to try to tackle problems at the bank – the case hat led to Monsignor Scarano being arrested happened just a few months into his tenure.
But he did make huge efforts to reform it all the same. For example, following a review of its operations, he closed a huge number of dormant accounts the bank held, and forced many of its branches to send their assets back to the Vatican Bank itself in an attempt to simplify and streamline its structure, and make its dealings more transparent.
He also took control away from the likes of cardinals and put it into the hands of people with actual financial expertise – which was a huge issue with the bank from its inception. Archbishop Marcinkus, for example, had absolutely no financial training when was put in charge of the bank in the early 1970s. To try to deal with that he was sent off to a six week crash course in Harvard – before being handed control of billions of dollars worth of assets.
After the corruption revelations in 2013 and 2014, Pope Francis also took away the bank's responsibilities for the church's property assets – giving it instead to APSA. He also brought the bank into the European Union's Single Euro Payments Area – or SEPA – which effectively opened it up to more external oversight and regulation.
As a result of that the reputation of the Vatican Bank has improved dramatically. There are now more international banks willing to work with it than was the case just over a decade ago, and just last month its watchdog said that complaints of suspicious activity involving the bank had fallen by a third in 2024.
At the same time, though, there remains an underlying issue with the church's finances. It had an operating deficit of €83m in 2023, and its pension fund is also said to be facing an ever-growing gap. That means there is still a lot of work to do by the bank - and other parts of the Vatican's financial system – to put the church on a steady footing.
But the continued reform of the bank under Pope Leo is seen to be key to that. Many argue that the fall in donations the church has seen in recent years is linked to the fact that people have little trust that their money will be well-handled and well-spent – and it may take time before their faith is restored.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Agriland
3 days ago
- Agriland
Milk processors called on to hold current prices
Milk processors have been called on to hold their current milk prices, as they gear up to announce their offerings to suppliers for July. Ahead of the announcement run of July milk prices, the Irish Creamery Milk Suppliers' Association (ICMSA) cited "stable dairy markets" with minimal movement throughout the month. Noel Murphy, the chairperson of the ICMSA's dairy committee, said: "While some spot prices have softened slightly, overall market conditions remain stable and strong. "There is no rational basis for any reduction in milk prices." According to Murphy, the "fundamentals" of the dairy market have been strong, including Dutch dairy quotes for butter, skimmed milk powder (SMP) and whole milk powder (WMP), which "averaged in the high forties throughout July". "Italian spot prices consistently exceeded 60c/L, reflecting the strength of continental demand," Murphy said. He said this view was supported by good recent performances for SMP and WMP on commodity exchanges. Murphy noted that EU milk supplies are forecasted to decline slightly in 2025 due to regulatory pressures and tight margins, further adjusting downwards supply. "Given all these indications, any suggestion of downward pressure on milk prices would be unjustified and out-of-sync with market realities," the ICSMA dairy chairperson said. The Global Dairy Trade (GDT) index saw a second increase in a row this week, after four consecutive decreases throughout May and June. After the latest trading event on Tuesday (August 5), the index increased by 0.7%, following on from an increase of 1.1% on July 15. The increase two weeks ago followed on from four consecutive decreases between May 20 and July 1, which ranged from 0.9% to 4.1%. The index now stands at 1,268. This compares to a 2025 high of 1,344 on May 6. The May 6 figures was the highest GDT index since June 2022. Meanwhile, the latest Ornua Purchase Price Index (PPI), for July, implies an indicative return of 45.5c/L, 5.1% VAT inclusive (unchanged from the previous month) for milk at 3.6% fat and 3.3% protein. The figure is net of Ornua's costs to market, and was determined after deducting the estimated processing cost of 9.3c/L.


Irish Independent
3 days ago
- Irish Independent
‘The biggest infrastructure project in the West' – Italy to build €13.5bn bridge that links Sicily to mainland
The 3.7km suspension bridge will stretch across the Strait of Messina from Calabria − home turf to the powerful 'Ndrangheta mafia − to Sicily, stronghold of the Cosa Nostra organised crime group. The huge public outlay will be counted as defence spending to help Italy meet Nato's military expenditure target. The Romans first envisioned connecting the island to the mainland by a series of connected boats, before the plans were abandoned because of concerns such a structure would block maritime traffic in the strait. The idea picked up again in the 1950s, but was stalled for decades, not only because of concerns about organised crime but also because the area is seismically active – an earthquake in 1908 killed more than 80,000 people. The earthquake and subsequent tsunami almost destroyed Reggio di Calabria, on the toe of the Italian boot, and Messina, on the Sicilian side of the strait. In 2002, a €3.3bn bridge was proposed with the backing of Silvio Berlusconi, the then prime minister of Italy, who said: 'This time we're going to build it. Take it from me, I guarantee it.' Brushing aside earthquake concerns, Matteo Salvini, Italy's transport minister, announced yesterday that the ambitious scheme would finally go ahead. It will be 'the biggest infrastructure project in the West', he said, after a government committee with oversight of strategic public investments approved the project. It will also help Italy reach the increased 5pc defence spending targets that the Trump administration has long demanded of its Nato allies. Giorgia Meloni's government has indicated that it will classify the Messina bridge as a strategic investment, which will help bump up its current defence spending, which stands at less than 2pc of its GDP. The government has argued that the bridge would strengthen Europe's defences by facilitating easier troop movements to military bases in Sicily, part of Nato's southern flank.

The Journal
4 days ago
- The Journal
Italian government gets approval to build the world's longest suspension bridge
THE ITALIAN GOVERNMENT has been given the greenlight to build the world's longest suspension bridge over the Strait of Messina, connecting the island of Sicily to mainland Italy. After decades of false starts, over 3.5km bridge will finally collect the southern island of Sicily to the rest of the country. Infrastructure minister Matteo Salvini announced the project's approval today. According to the government's analysis, the bridge will boost the economy of both north and south Italy. On average, 4,300 people will be working to construct the bridge every day for at least seven years, reaching as high as 7,000 at peak times. It is estimated that the completion of the bridge will lead to the creation of up to 30,000 new roles, every year, in direct employment. Indirectly, up to 90,000 new jobs could be created from its construction. The project is due to be completed in 2032. Stretto di Messina Stretto di Messina Salvini, who is also the deputy prime minister, has frequently touted the employment figures to justify the cost – which needs an estimated initial investment of an eye-watering €13.5bn sum. Advertisement In the centre of the three-lane suspension bridge will be a passenger train, which can transport visitors to and from the island. It is due to be completed in 2032. In the centre of the three-lane suspension bridge will be a passenger train, which can transport visitors to and from the island. Stretto di Messina Stretto di Messina Designs for the bridge, standing at over 300-metere-tall, were finalised in the late 1990s and allow for boats, cruises and ships to continue to sail underneath. The project began in 2012 but was abandoned over financing concerns due to the global economic crash. Designs for the bridge, standing at over 300-metere-tall, were finalised in the late 1990s and allow for boats, cruises and ships to continue to sail underneath. Stretto di Messina Stretto di Messina Local protests over the environmental impact and the cost, with critics saying the money could be better spent elsewhere. The Italian government has said that the bridge with survive natural disasters and has been engineered to be as durable as possible. Other critics, however, believe the bridge will never materialise. Many point to a long history of public infrastructure works announced in Italy, some of which were financed for decades, but never completed. With reporting by AFP Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal