By Gianluca Semeraro, Valentina Za, Giuseppe Fonte and Mathieu Rosemain
MILAN/ROME/PARIS (Reuters) -Italy’s biggest insurer Generali and French banking group BPCE are likely to abandon plans to merge their asset management businesses by letting a year-end deadline lapse without a binding agreement, three sources said.
The sources, briefed on the process, spoke on condition of anonymity because negotiations are private.
Generali and BPCE agreed in September to finalise a deal to combine Generali Investments Holding and Natixis Investment Managers by December 31, after amending terms to remove a 50 million euro ($58 million) break-up fee.
While talks are continuing, the sources said the most likely scenario was that the deadline would pass without a deal, amid Italian government opposition and uncertainty over potential management changes at Generali.
Generali declined to comment. A BPCE representative said: “We have given ourselves until the end of the year to reach an agreement. The teams are working towards this goal and relations between BPCE and Generali are good.”
ROME, TWO MAJOR GENERALI INVESTORS OPPOSE DEAL
The deal is opposed by Italy’s government and two major Generali investors – Delfin, the Del Vecchio family’s holding company, and construction tycoon Francesco Gaetano Caltagirone – both of whom recently consolidated influence over the insurer.
The two investors backed a takeover of Mediobanca, Generali’s biggest shareholder with a 13% stake.
Mediobanca is now owned by Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MPS), where the two families are major shareholders and where the Italian state, which rescued MPS in 2017 and then reprivatised it, still holds 4.9%.
Mediobanca is one of Generali’s advisers on the deal.
MPS on Tuesday appointed new top managers at Mediobanca, naming veteran fund manager Alessandro Melzi d’Eril as CEO and former JPMorgan banker Vittorio Grilli as chair.
The shake-up at Mediobanca may have implications for Generali, whose board – led by CEO Philippe Donnet and Chairman Andrea Sironi – was largely appointed by Mediobanca in April.
Donnet, CEO since 2016, has led Generali with Mediobanca’s backing. At the time of his reappointment, Caltagirone said he had no alternative CEO to propose but could still block what he called a “wretched” asset management deal.
Mediobanca ultimately secured 10 of 13 board seats at Generali.
Two of the sources and a fourth person close to the matter said Donnet was expected to oversee an orderly transition but may not complete his mandate, which runs until 2028.
($1 = 0.8575 euros)
(Editing by Mark Potter)












