Mediobanca

Mediobanca
Mediobanca S.p.A.
Type Società per azioni
Traded as BIT: MB
Industry Financial services
Founded 1946
Headquarters Milan, Italy
Key people Alberto Nagel (CEO), Renato Pagliaro (Chairman)
Products Investment, retail and private banking, investment management
Revenue €1.716 billion (2010/2011)[1]
Profit €368.6 million (2010/2011)[1]
Total assets €75.39 billion (June 2011)[1]
Total equity €6.544 billion (June 2011)[1]
Employees 3,450 (June 2011)[1]
Website www.mediobanca.it

Mediobanca is an Italian investment bank founded in 1946 at the initiative of Raffaele Mattioli (at that time CEO of Banca Commerciale Italiana, the largest bank in Italy which promoted its incorporation together with Credito Italiano) and Enrico Cuccia to facilitate the post-World War II reconstruction of Italian industry. Enrico Cuccia led Mediobanca from 1946 to 1982. Today, it is an international banking group with offices in Frankfurt, London, Madrid, Moscow, New York and Paris.

Contents

History

Mediobanca was set up to provide medium-term financing for manufacturers and establish a direct relationship between the banking sector and the investment needs of the reorganization of industry after the devastation caused by World War II. The Banking Act of 1936 established a clear separation between short term and medium-to-long term financing and the major banks had opted for specializing in short-term loans and there was the institution that would deal with financing for the flotation of companies that wished to obtain a stock market listing. In addition to granting consolidated loans against certificates of deposit and savings books, Mediobanca developed its activity of placement of bonds and shares issued by Italian companies. The professionalism developed by the bank under the brilliant guidance of Enrico Cuccia enabled it to quickly acquire a position of leadership in the field of investment banking in Italy. In the mid-Fifties, Mediobanca entered into agreements with important foreign partners (Lazard Group, Berliner Händel-Gesellschaft, Lehman Brothers, Sofina) that enabled the bank to play a role on the international market and obtained a Stock Exchange listing in 1956.

Since its origins, Mediobanca has operated in collateral areas to the credit market, such as trust management (1948 with Spafid), the promotion of international trade (through trading companies mainly operating between Italy and Africa in the mid-fifties), consumer credit (in 1960 through the company Compass which had been set up ten years earlier to develop new initiatives with industrial partners), auditing (1961 with Reconta, which was the first Italian audit firm), leasing operations (1970 with Selma). The placement of securities of Italian companies on the domestic market and abroad led to the acquisition of small holdings which have increased over time reinvesting part of the profits. They became the bank’s main real investment for the protection of its equity. These packages favored the retention of major customers, the most important being Assicurazioni Generali, Montedison, SNIA Viscosa, Pirelli and Fiat. In 1963, together with other banks and financial institutions, Mediobanca led the formation of the first shareholder syndicate to intervene in the capital of a company, Olivetti, with the objective of redefining its strategic purchases on several occasions of Generali shares led to the bank being its largest shareholder (currently 13%). There were numerous, equally important, operations with Montedison, Fiat, SNIA Viscosa and Italcementi.

When Mediobanca was set up, the shareholders authorized Enrico Cuccia to operate using his own judgment and he kept the bank free from the political influences that gradually affected IRI, the public entity that controlled the three Italian banks of national interest that were Mediobanca’s majority shareholders. 1982 saw the beginning of a period of intense friction with IRI under the presidency of Romano Prodi, when the three banks were instructed to discontinue Mr. Cuccia’s mandate. Cuccia resigned as General manager by was elected to the Board by the shareholder Lazard while Mediobanca continued to be managed by two of his trusted aides, Silvio Salteri as CEO and Vincenzo Maranghi, his generally accepted “heir”. In 1988, when Antonio Maccanico took over the presidency, the conflict was settled and the bank was privatized by the setting up of a shareholders’ syndicate with equal representation of banking groups (initially the three founding banks) and private groups. On that occasion the position of CEO went to Vincenzo Maranghi and Cuccia accepted his appointment as Honorary President maintaining a symbolic presence in the bank and performing strategic consultancy. After Antonio Maccanico, called to government posts, the presidency went to Francesco Cìngano, who was Mattioli’s successor in Banca Commerciale Italiana.

The new banking law passed in 1993, abolished the specialization requirement allowing ordinary banks to enter the medium/long term credit market and generated a series of problems between Mediobanca and its banking partners, which ceased to be the almost exclusive channel for the placement of term deposits and bonds. In the changing context of the financial markets of the early nineties, Mediobanca evolved by engaging more decisively in investment banking operations, creating a major diversification in the private banking business and expanding its consumer credit area, finally developing an international presence. In the nineties, it was among the main players in the Italian program of privatization of large state-owned enterprises (the largest operations concerned Telecom Italia, Enel, Banca di Roma and Banca Nazionale del Lavoro), also contributing to foreign programs in the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Spain.

Its final and perhaps greatest coup was its decisive role in the 1999 takeover of Telecom Italia by Olivetti.[2] The deal was decided by the narrowest of margins with 51% of shareholders voting in favour of the deal.[3] Under Cuccia's leadership, which lasted until his death in 2000, the bank was widely described as "secretive"[4][5][6] despite being publicly-traded: meetings with analysts or interviews with the media were not granted.[4]

Mediobanca today

The death of Enrico Cuccia in June 2000 exacerbated tensions with the banking shareholders due to conflicts of interest, competition in the same markets and the central bank’s hostility towards Mediobanca’s management. In April 2003, Vincenzo Maranghi agreed to resign as long as the bank's independence was preserved. This was achieved by promoting two of his aides to top management positions, Alberto Nagel and Renato Pagliaro. They developed market operations more intensely (IPOs, M & A, trading of financial instruments), reducing the weight of historical shareholdings (some of which, like Fiat, were sold). They also achieved penetration of the main foreign markets, where the bank’s presence was established through local professional teams. With the launch of Che Banca! in 2008, operations in the retail banking segment expanded creating a model of multi-channel distribution (Internet, call centers, branches) capable of providing substantial deposit flows. While the years immediately following the resignation of Maranghi entailed the appointment of an external Presidency (Gabriele Galateri and Cesare Geronzi), subsequent events reestablished all the conditions guaranteeing the independence of the institution whose leadership today has Alberto Nagel as CEO and Renato Pagliaro as president.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Annual Report 2010/2011". Mediobanca. http://www.mediobanca.it/static/upload/ann/annual-accounts-and-report-as-at-30-june-2011.pdf. Retrieved 18 November 2011. 
  2. ^ "Obituary: Enrico Cuccia". The Daily Telegraph. 24 June 2000. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1344642/Enrico-Cuccia.html. Retrieved 2009-08-11. 
  3. ^ "Olivetti conquers Telecom Italia". BBC News. 22 May 1999. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/348931.stm. Retrieved 2009-08-11. 
  4. ^ a b Edmondson, Gail (18 November 2002). "Mediobanca: A Titan Trembles". BusinessWeek. http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/02_46/b3808166.htm. Retrieved 2009-08-11. 
  5. ^ Ringshaw, Grant (9 July 2000). "Death in Milan". The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/comment/4457541/Death-in-Milan.html. Retrieved 2009-08-11. 
  6. ^ Garfield, Andrew (14 May 1999). "Mediobanca finds ally in Italian power play". The Independent. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/mediobanca-finds-ally-in-italian-power-play-1093491.html. Retrieved 2009-08-11. 

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