Native name
|
CDP Equity S.p.A. |
---|---|
Formerly called
|
Fondo Strategico Italiano S.p.A. |
majority state-owned S.p.A. | |
Industry | Financial services |
Headquarters | Palazzo Busca, Milan, Italy |
Key people
|
|
Services | Merchant bank |
Profit | €249.446 million (2014) |
Total assets | €5.564 billion (2014) |
Total equity | €4.833 billion (2014) |
Owner | Cassa Depositi e Prestiti (100%) |
Parent |
|
Website | cdpequity.it |
Footnotes / references in separate financial statements |
CDP Equity, was known as Fondo Strategico Italiano (Italian Strategic Fund), was established in late July 2011 as a sovereign wealth fund.
It has an estimated operating balance of €4 billion. Its purpose is to invest in strategic Italian companies to help them to compete globally. The fund’s activity is restricted to healthy and profitable Italian businesses, with solid growth prospects, in need of capital injection to enlarge their business and be competitive on a global scale. The initial capital of the fund totalled €1 billion, with 90% of this sum contributed by CDP and 10% from Fintecna. The CDP is ready to inject a total amount of €4 billion.
The fund was set up by the state-controlled lender Cassa Depositi e Prestiti (CDP) on the directive of Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti, emulating a similar fund in France, allegedly after French dairy company Groupe Lactalis SA made a successful takeover bid for Parmalat.
The fund become a member of the International Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds and signed up to the Santiago Principles on best precise on managing Sovereign Wealth Funds.
In September 2011, Maurizio Tamagnini, formerly a top investment banker at Merrill Lynch, was hired as the CEO of the fund. The position of chairman is filled by Giovanni Gorno Tempini, who is also the CEO of CDP.
On 31 March 2016 FSI was renamed into CDP Equity.
On 5 August 2016 Bank of Italy withdrew its 20% stake from CDP Equity.
In May 2012, the Italian Strategic Fund stated that it would give financial backing to help fund a project that will bring fiber-optic cable to Italy’s main cities, as part of the country’s attempt to increase high-speed internet connectivity. The €4.5 billion project, led by fibre-optic company Metroweb (was a subsidiary of F2i First Fund via F2i Reti TLC) will receive an initial €200 million from FSI through F2i Reti TLC. There is also an option for the fund to provide a further €300 million.