Showing posts with label personal finance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label personal finance. Show all posts

Intesa Stock Priced at Discount as Lender Boosts Capital

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(Updates with analyst’s comment in fourth paragraph, shares in last.)

May 20 (Bloomberg) -- Intesa Sanpaolo SpA will sell new shares at about one-fourth less than yesterday’s closing price in a 5 billion-euro ($7.1 billion) offer, as the lender strengthens finances before stricter capital rules are approved.

Intesa will sell stock at 1.369 euros each and offer 2 common shares for every 7 common or savings shares held, Italy’s second-biggest bank said in a statement yesterday. The price is 24 percent less than the theoretical value of the shares excluding the rights.

Investors including Compagnia di San Paolo, Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Padova e Rovigo, and Fondazione Cariplo, have already said that they will fully subscribe their rights for 24 percent of the offer.

“The stock will be ideally positioned to take full advantage of the cyclical upturn we expect in the Italian banking market,” Silvia Benzi, an analyst at Cheuvreux with a “strong buy” recommendation, wrote in a note today.


Intesa is boosting capital in response to a request from central bankers and policy makers seeking to avert a repeat of a global financial crisis. Chief Executive Officer Corrado Passera said April 6 that Intesa aims to increase the common equity ratio to 10 percent, to comply with “what is believed will become the ‘new normal’ for Basel III” capital rules.

Intesa’s investors can exercise rights to buy stock from May 23 to June 10, while the rights will be tradable from May 23 to June 3, it said yesterday.

Intesa fell 0.4 percent to 2 euros in Milan, giving the company a market value of 25.4 billion euros. The Bloomberg Banks and Financial Services Index, which was up 0.1 percent today, has declined 1 percent in the past six months, compared with Intesa’s 11 percent decline.

--With assistance from Chiara Remondini in Milan. Editors: Dan Liefgreen, Jerrold Colten

U.S. Stocks Fall a Third Week on Europe Concern

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Notre Dame Says No to ‘Made in China’ on Fighting Irish Goods
The University of Notre Dame’s campus bookstore sells “Fighting Irish” lettermen jackets, “ND”license plate frames and stadium cups picturing the school’s leprechaun mascot. Not for sale: anything made in China.




Grimsvoetn Volcano Erupts in Iceland Iceland Volcano Shuts Island’s Airspace
A volcanic eruption under Europe’s largest glacier, Vatnajokull, is abating after it forcedIceland’s main international airport to close, the second such disruption in 13 months to the island nation’s air traffic.


U.S. stocks declined for a thirdstraight week, the longest slump since August, as investors grewmore concerned that Greece will default on its debt and reduced earnings forecasts undermined confidence in the economy.

U.S. Stocks Fall a Third Week on Europe Concern

0 komentar
Notre Dame Says No to ‘Made in China’ on Fighting Irish Goods
The University of Notre Dame’s campus bookstore sells “Fighting Irish” lettermen jackets, “ND”license plate frames and stadium cups picturing the school’s leprechaun mascot. Not for sale: anything made in China.




Grimsvoetn Volcano Erupts in Iceland Iceland Volcano Shuts Island’s Airspace
A volcanic eruption under Europe’s largest glacier, Vatnajokull, is abating after it forcedIceland’s main international airport to close, the second such disruption in 13 months to the island nation’s air traffic.


U.S. stocks declined for a thirdstraight week, the longest slump since August, as investors grewmore concerned that Greece will default on its debt and reduced earnings forecasts undermined confidence in the economy.