Credito Valtellinese


Credito Valtellinese was an Italian bank based in Sondrio prior to its acquisition by Crédit Agricole Italia in 2021. The company was a former component of the FTSE Italia Mid Cap Index of the Borsa Italiana, but was removed and added as a component of the Index in May 2017; the bank was added back to the reserve list of the FTSE Italia Mid Cap Index in August 2017.
The bank was named after the area Valtellina. The bank had 363 branches in Northern Italy, 40 branches in Marche and Umbria, and 133 branches in Sicily. Credito Siciliano had three more branches outside the island of Sicily.
As of 30 June 2014, it had a market share of 32% in Sondrio, but only 2.9% of the whole Lombardy region in terms of deposits and 1.7% in terms of branches, ranking 10th in Italy.
Since 2021, it has been part of Crédit Agricole Italia after a successful takeover bid by Crédit Agricole Italia. Crédit Agricole successfully concludes the tender offer, acquiring 91.17% of the shares in Creval, for a cost of 855 million. The delisting from the Italian Stock Exchange took place on Friday 4 June 2021 following the success of the residual takeover bid and the consequent "squeeze-out", which led Crédit Agricole to hold 100% of the capital of Creval.

History

Credito Valtellinese is a former cooperative bank based in Sondrio, founded in 1908 as Banca Piccolo Credito Valtellinese. The bank expanded by the acquisition of Technoleasing in the 1980s, and Credito Artigiano in 1996, which was the parent company of Banca dell'Artigianato e dell'Industria. In 2002, Sicilian banks Banca Popolare Santa Venera in Acireale, Cassa San Giacomo in Caltagirone and Banca Regionale Sant'Angelo were merged to become Credito Siciliano. In 2008, Credito Piemontese, Cassa di Risparmio di Fano, Banca Cattolica di Montefiascone and Credito del Lazio joined.
From 2004 to 2013, Creval was a minority shareholder of Banca di Cividale.
In 2016, the bank was demutualized, being registered as a Banca Popolare. The new Italian Law N°3/2015 required that banks with more than €8 billion total assets in that category had to be transformed into a società per azioni. The withdrawal price for the shareholders was set at €0.4747 per share. At the same time, a plan was announced to combine 10 old shares into 1 new share.