Italy's bank stocks on Wednesday
regained much of the value they lost on Tuesday after the
economy and finance ministry said that a new 40% windfall tax it
was introducing on lenders' surplus profits would be capped to
0.1% of institutes' assets.
The Italian banks lost close to nine billion euros in
capitalization on Tuesday after the government's surprise
announcement of the windfall tax.
They recouped around 3.91 billion euros on Wednesday.
Fineco was 7.2% up after losing 9.9% on Tuesday, MPS regained
2.7% after a drop of 10.9%, Unicredit rose by 4.4% following a
5.9% slide and Intesa Sanpaolo climbed 2.3% after a loss of
8.67%.
The gains helped the Milan bourse's FTSE Mib index close up
1.31% on 28,308 points after it dropped by 2.12% on Tuesday.
Italy's banks registered big profits in the first half of the
year, with revenues boosted as a result of the European Central
Bank's interest-rate hikes.
Among other things, this has caused payments on variable-rate
mortgages to soar.
The windfall tax will be paid in 2024 on the surplus profits of
2023.
The government said the money raised would be used to help
finance tax cuts for households and businesses.
Italian bank association ABI has not released a statement about
the windfall tax, amid reports of irritation within the
industry, especially because it came out of the blue.
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