Intesa CEO critical of excessive bank buybacks, underprovisioning

Reuters

Published Feb 06, 2024 19:22

Updated Feb 07, 2024 06:30

By Valentina Za

MILAN (Reuters) -Intesa Sanpaolo Chief Executive Carlo Messina on Tuesday criticised as "almost pathological" an excessive use of share buybacks to reward investors in Europe, after Italy's biggest bank announced the buyback markets had been expecting.

Messina also said he thought it was safer to provision against loan losses above a certain threshold, even if there was no immediate need.

Reporting 2023 results on Tuesday, Intesa (LON:0HBC) said it would buy its own shares for an amount that, based on Reuters calculations, approaches 1.7 billion euros.

That complements its ordinary 70% cash dividend payout.

Intesa's dividend policy, one of the most generous in Europe, contrasts with the equally ambitious payout strategy of UniCredit (LON:0RLS) where CEO Andrea Orcel has favoured share buybacks to please its fund shareholders.

UniCredit on Monday said it would pay out 100% of its 2023 profits, mostly via share buybacks. UniCredit's excess capital is higher than Intesa's.

Intesa has among its investors Italian not-for-profit banking foundations, while UniCredit is owned by international funds.

Messina told a press conference Intesa's foundation shareholders needed the cash for charitable activities, while share buybacks are better for fund investors.

"Share buybacks shouldn't be part of the regular's dividend policy, at least for Intesa, the board will decide each year how to best use the cash," he said.

Messina said he expected the use of buybacks in bank's distribution policies would normalise as they run out of excess cash.

"If you want to be a bank CEO for many years like I've done and you want to go on for many more years, you need to be clear that your company is not a cow to be milked," Messina said.

He said the same applied to the strategy on loan loss provisions.