
Unipol chair hints that ING could be studying Popolare di Sondrio bid
MILAN, March 28 (Reuters) - Unipol Chairman Carlo Cimbri said on Friday a foreign bank was studying a potential bid for Popolare di Sondrio (BPSI.MI), opens new tab to rival the one unveiled by Italy's BPER Banca (EMII.MI), opens new tab.
Insurer Unipol is the leading shareholder in both BPER and Pop Sondrio and has thrown its weight behind BPER's bid for Pop Sondrio.
Speaking at the presentation of Unipol's multi-year plan, Cimbri hinted at Dutch bank ING as a possible suitor by saying the bank interested in Pop Sondrio was the colour of a journalist's tie, which was orange.
ING did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Cimbri said Unipol could be open to considering rival bids for Pop Sondrio.
Asked about unconfirmed rumours of foreign interest for the bank, Cimbri said: "It looks like a foreign group has hired lawyers and advisers to study a potential deal for Popolare di Sondrio: it's totally legitimate. We're an investor and if someone else makes a spectacular bid it's not like we've promised eternal love, we don't pick sides."
"We don't have eternal friends or eternal foes, only our interests are eternal: ... we're open to any proposition."

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Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Louis van Gaal slams Man Utd transfer approach with cutting Liverpool remark
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Daily Record
2 days ago
- Daily Record
Kyogo 'could' return to Celtic as transfer price plummets with El Kachati battle 'over' amid O'Riley payday veto
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Scotsman
2 days ago
- Scotsman
How Edinburgh can bolster its position as a global asset management centre
PA Sign up to our Scotsman Money newsletter, covering all you need to know to help manage your money. Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The return to private ownership of Royal Bank of Scotland owner NatWest last month was an important bookend in the soul-searching about Edinburgh as a financial centre. While it's true that Bank of Scotland owner Lloyds employs about as many people in Scotland as it does in London, banking is decidedly not the future. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Yet the need for the UK's largest financial centre after London to come up with a compelling global story has not gone away as other regional centres attract a critical mass of financial players. 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Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad This explains why Edinburgh and Glasgow have become big centres for what's also referred to as 'asset servicing', with Wall Street driving the trend. BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, last month moved its roughly 1,000 employees into a new office in Edinburgh that will in time be the firm's fourth largest globally. Its presence in the city dates back a quarter of a century and functions as a hub for an investment platform used by BlackRock's portfolio managers and those of its clients across Europe. Similarly, JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley have technology hubs in Glasgow employing a combined 5,000 people. Many are data analytics graduates from Scottish universities in jobs helping the banks to run front office functions around the world. JP Morgan's office hosts an 'asset management technology' team that's one of 10 the bank maintains globally. 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