ECB rejects Italy’s plea for more time to raise cash for stricken bank

Pressure mounts on government to bail out world’s oldest lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena

European Central Bank president Mario Draghi: the ECB turned down a request by lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena for more time at a meeting on Friday. Photograph: Juan Medina/Reuters
European Central Bank president Mario Draghi: the ECB turned down a request by lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena for more time at a meeting on Friday. Photograph: Juan Medina/Reuters

The European Central Bankhas rejected a request by ailing Italian lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena for more time to raise capital, a source said yesterday, in a move that piles pressure on the Italian government to bail out the bank.

The country’s third-largest lender, and the world’s oldest, had asked for an extension until January 20th to try to wrap up a privately funded €5 billion rescue plan in the face of fresh political uncertainty.

The ECB’s supervisory board turned down the request at a meeting yesterday on the grounds that a delay would be of little use and that it was time for Rome to step in, the source said.

The Italian government is expected to intervene to recapitalise the bank to avert the risk of it being wound down. The failure of Monte dei Paschi could threaten the savings of thousands of retail investors, ripple across the wider banking sector and provoke a financial crisis.

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Italy faces the risk of early elections, and the prospect of an anti-euro party coming to power, after prime minister Matteo Renzi quit this week following the heavy defeat in a referendum on his plan to reform the constitution.

The Italian finance ministry said it would not provide detailed comment until Monte dei Paschi di Siena responded to the ECB decision and it still believed such a capital increase was an “option”.

Pier Carlo Padoan, the finance minister and a possible contender to replace Renzi, held a meeting earlier yesterday with the bank’s chief executive, Marco Morelli, and leaders of the banking consortium that have been working on the capital infusion for the bank.

Amid the uncertainty, the price of the bank’s bonds plunged. Some bondholders had agreed to a debt-to-equity swap, which was part of the private sector solution, and it was not clear what their status would be if the deal no longer took place. –( Reuters/ Guardian Media)