Italian banks recover after government caps windfall tax

ROME  -Italy’s government has capped the impact of a surprise windfall tax imposed on profits generated by the country’s banks, prompting a recovery in financial stocks on Wednesday after a rout in the previous session.

The economy ministry clarified late on Tuesday that its 40 percent windfall tax, a one-off measure which targets profits banks have made on higher interest rates, would not amount to more than 0.1 percent of their total assets.

While other European countries, such as Spain and Hungary, have introduced windfall taxes on banks, analysts said Italy’s announcement late on Monday caught the market unawares, damaging confidence and raising fears of further measures across Europe.

Analysts at UBS said the cap meant the tax would have an aggregate impact of 1.9 billion euros ($2.1 billion).

The initial impact of the measure before the cap had been seen at below 3 billion euros, according to sources in Rome and analysts’ calculations.

Citi analysts had estimated on Tuesday that the windfall tax could bring as much as around 0.5 percent of total 2023 risk-weighted bank assets (RWAs) into Italian state coffers.

Shares in Italian lenders such as Intesa Sanpaolo, Banco BPM and UniCredit rebounded between 3.3 percent and 4.4 percent, while FinecoBank added some 6 percent.

UBS said the expected “earnings erosion” for Italian retail banks was likely to range between 6 percent for UniCredit to 15-16 percent for Banco BPM.

Bank earnings prompt backlash

The conservative government of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni had floated the idea of a bank tax, but seemed to have dropped the plan and the actual decision came as a surprise even to ministers gathered for a cabinet meeting on Monday night.

The move was announced at a late night press conference which Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti and Meloni did not attend.

Despite the market jitters, government figures stood by the measure on Wednesday, accusing banks of pocketing too many of the gains from the current round of interest rate hikes.

“Some bankers are regretting (it) but we are talking about an industry that is making billions and billions in profits without lifting a finger,” Deputy Prime Minister and Infrastructure Minister Matteo Salvini told RAI public radio.

“Redistributing a small part of these profits is economically and socially justified,” he added, confirming government plans to use proceeds to help mortgage holders as well as those on low incomes and small pensions.

($1 = 0.9113 euros)

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