Italy court postpones derivatives trial verdict on ex Monte Paschi execs

Reuters

Published Nov 27, 2023 05:27AM ET

MILAN (Reuters) - An Italian appeals court on Monday postponed its verdict in the case of three former executives of Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena over derivative deals blamed for playing a part in the downfall of the Tuscan lender.

The Milan Court of Appeal deferred the verdict to Dec. 11 due to one of the three judges on the panel being unwell.

The verdict is being closely watched by investors in Monte Paschi since the derivatives cases, together with losses suffered by MPS during the euro zone debt crisis, had threatened to destabilise Italy's financial industry and forced the lender to seek an 8 billion euro bailout in 2017.

Lemanik fund manager Andrea Scauri said last week that in the case of an acquittal legal risks would be wiped out for Monte dei Paschi, triggering a release of provisions and the possible advance payment of a dividend.

The bank's former chairman Alessandro Profumo, former CEO Fabrizio Viola and the former president of statutory auditors Paolo Salvadori are defendants in a trial for false accounting and market rigging.

In the initial trial, Profumo and Viola were each handed a jail sentence of six years for allegedly not having correctly booked two derivative transactions, known as Santorini and Alexandria, between 2012 and 2015. Salvadori received three-and-a-half year sentence.