
UniCredit to Pull BPM Bid If Italy Doesn't Clarify Conditions
UniCredit SpA will pull the takeover bid for Banco BPM SpA if the Italian government doesn't clarify the conditions imposed on the deal, Chief Executive Officer Andrea Orcel said.
'If it is not exactly clear what they mean, once we close the transaction, we will have the risk of a €20 billion penalty,' Orcel said at a conference organized by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. 'The probability that we take that risk is zero, and therefore if the golden power is not in some shape or form clarified, we will pull.'
Hashtags

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


Bloomberg
30 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
What the Price of Bananas Says About Inflation
By and Joe Weisenthal Save Hello and welcome to the newsletter, a grab bag of daily content from the Odd Lots universe. Sometimes it's us, Joe Weisenthal and Tracy Alloway, bringing you our thoughts on the most recent developments in markets, finance and the economy. And sometimes it's contributions from our network of expert guests and sources. Whatever it is, we promise it will always be interesting. If you like chatting with us, check out the Odd Lots Discord, where you can hang out and talk with us and with other listeners 24/7.


Bloomberg
35 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Private Equity Stuck in Limbo Gets Assist From Direct Lenders
As private equity firms struggle to sell the companies they own and return cash to investors, their counterparts in the world of private credit are offering special loans to tide them over. Direct lending arms at shops from Ares Management Corp. to Neuberger Berman Group and even private equity titan KKR & Co. have all launched what some are calling 'dequity' funds — to convey the presence of both debt and equity — to the tune of $30 billion industry-wide since 2023, according to data compiled by Preqin.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
EU Lawmakers Propose Further Easing of ESG Rules Amid Backlash
European lawmakers are considering drastic cuts in the number of companies subject to new ESG reporting requirements, raising concerns the bloc is doing serious damage to its sustainability agenda. Jorgen Warborn, the member of parliament charged with ushering the changes through the legislature, proposed that only companies with more than 3,000 employees should be in scope of the EU's Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive, according to documents shared by Warborn on LinkedIn. That compares with a current threshold of 250, and triples a proposal by the European Commission to raise it to 1,000.