Chalk up another victory for Santander’s Emilio Botín. When I said
last month that he was the big winner in the Battle of ABN Amro, I was concentrating
mainly on Banco Real, the Brazilian bank that Santander now owns. But Santander
also ended up with ABN’s unloved Italian arm, Antonveneta. ABN overpaid for
the bank in 2005, after getting caught up in a bidding war with Italy’s BPI,
and ended up buying
the bank at a valuation of €7.6 billion. By the time Santander got
it, two years later, the Spaniards valued the franchise at only €6.6 billion,
including its respected Interbanca merchant banking business.
But there’s a sucker born every minute, and Botín has now managed to
sell Antonveneta, sans Interbanca, for an astonishing €9 billion
to Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena. And boy is the market punishing
MPS for agreeing to such a ridiculous acquisition: MPS is now valued at
little more than €9 billion itself. Meanwhile, check out the chart of Santander’s
share price: the Spanish bank is now worth $136 billion, compared to a market
cap of $160 billion for Citigroup. Now there’s an idea: maybe Santander
should buy Citigroup! If anybody’s capable of running an enormous international
bank, it’s Emilio Botín.