2014/525/EU: Commission Decision of 20 March 2013 on the measures SA.23425 (11/C)... (32014D0525)
EU - Rechtsakte: 08 Competition policy

COMMISSION DECISION

of 20 March 2013

on the measures SA.23425 (11/C) (ex NN 41/10) implemented by Italy in 2004 and 2009 for SACE BT S.p.A.

(notified under document C(2013) 1501)

(Only the Italian text is authentic)

(Text with EEA relevance)

(2014/525/EU)

THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, and in particular the first subparagraph of Article 108(2) thereof,
Having regard to the Agreement on the European Economic Area, and in particular Article 62(1)(a) thereof,
Having called on interested parties to submit their comments pursuant to the provisions cited above(1),
Whereas:

I.   

PROCEDURE

(1) By a complaint lodged on 5 June 2007, registered on 7 June 2007, the Commission was informed that, in May 2004, SACE S.p.A. (‘SACE’) had implemented an initial capital allocation of EUR 100 million in favour of its newly established subsidiary SACE BT S.p.A. (‘SACE BT’) (‘the first measure’).
(2) By letter dated 6 November 2009, the complainant submitted additional arguments to support its complaint and informed the Commission about an additional measure in the form of reinsurance cover provided by SACE to SACE BT in 2009 (‘the second measure’).
(3) During its preliminary investigation, the Commission discovered that SACE BT had benefited from two capital injections granted by SACE on 18 June and 4 August 2009 (respective ‘the third measure’ and ‘the fourth measure’).
(4) By letter dated 23 February 2011, the Commission informed Italy that it had decided to initiate the procedure laid down in Article 108(2) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union in respect of the four measures (‘the opening decision’).
(5) The Commission decision to initiate the procedure was published in the
Official Journal of the European Union
(2). The Commission invited interested parties to submit their comments on the measures.
(6) The Commission received comments only from SACE which were submitted on 5 May 2011. SACE annexed thereto various supporting documents, including a resubmission of the business plan for 2005-2008 for the operation of the short-term insurance prepared by SACE with the help of an external advisor, KPMG, and approved by the Board on 18 May 2004 (‘the initial business plan’), a letter from an external advisor of 7 July 2004, specifying the additional services provided (‘the advisor letter’), supplementary analyses to the business plan regarding the Italian market of the commercial information, the Italian market of the recovery of credits and its principal actors and the credit insurance market in the Central and Eastern Europe of March 2004 (‘the supplements to the business plan’), the adjustment of the Business Plan 2005-2009 approved on 19 November 2004 (‘the adjusted business plan’), extracts of the minutes of the Board of 28 April 2004, 18 May 2004, a business plan regarding potential acquisition of Assicuratrice Edile S.p.A. of May 2005 (‘Assedile acquisition business plan’), revised budget for SACE BT of 31 March 2009, SACE BT business plan for 2010-2011 of 4 August 2009 (‘the 2010-2011 business plan’).
(7) On 5 May 2011, Italy submitted its reply to the opening decision.
(8) On 23 June 2011, the Commission requested additional information. On 13 July 2011, a meeting was held with the Italian authorities and the company's representatives. Following this meeting, the request for information sent on 23 June 2011 was complemented by additional questions resulting from the discussions. The supplemented request for information was sent on 4 August 2011. By letter dated 15 September 2011, Italy submitted the reply to the request for information. It annexed thereto various supporting documents, including an invitation letter of 17 December 2003 to tender for consultancy services to draw a business plan for the preparation of the business plan for operation of the short-term export-credit insurance in the industrialised markets (‘the invitation letter’), additional documents prepared by an external consultant regarding potential acquisition of Assicuratrice Edile S.p.A. and the notes presented to the Board of SACE BT in May 2005 — September 2008 regarding various opportunities for international acquisitions and other forms of international expansion.
(9) By letter dated 25 January 2012(3), the Commission requested further information. Italy submitted the reply on 5 March 2012. It also annexed to its submission minutes of the meetings of the Board of SACE and its predecessor, the Institute for external trade insurance services — SACE, of 21 November 2003, 3 December 2003, 10 November 2004, 1 April 2008, 1 October 2008, 28 November 2008, 11 February 2009, 1 April 2009, 26 May 2009, 1 July 2009 and 9 September 2009, the additional documents regarding the acquisition of Assedile and a comparison between the financial indicators projected in the initial business plan and the actual figures.
(10) Since Italy had focused its earlier submissions on trying to demonstrate the absence of aid in the measures and had provided only limited information on potential compatibility grounds in case the measures would constitute aid, by letter of 21 February 2012(4), the Commission services requested Italy to submit additional elements that could demonstrate the potential compatibility of the aid.
(11) Italy submitted on 30 March 2012 a compilation of internal documents of SACE aiming to demonstrate the compliance of the measures granted in 2009 (the second, third and the fourth measures) with the market economy investor principle. They mainly contain:
(a) the minutes of the Board of 10 December 2008 and Annexes thereto regarding organisational changes, with the view to strengthen risk control;
(b) a summary of management changes for the period 2009-2012;
(c) the minutes of the Board of 24 November 2011 with Annexes thereto regarding the update of the business plan for 2011-2013 and
(d) the financial report for year-end 2011.

II.   

DESCRIPTION OF THE MEASURES

II. 1.   SACE AND ITS INVOLVEMENT IN THE MARKETABLE RISKS(5)

(12) SACE, the parent company of SACE BT, is a joint stock company wholly owned by the Italian State. SACE is the Italian export-credit agency (ECA). Since the beginning of 2004, it was converted from a public body into a joint stock company wholly owned by the Italian State. SACE insures short-term and long-term non-marketable risks within the meaning of the Commission Communication on short-term export credit insurance(6) (‘the Export-credit Communication’) with the guarantee of the State.
(13) According to Article 2.3 of the Legislative Decree n. 143 of 31 March 1998(7) which restated the guarantee applicable to SACE as per Law n. 227 of 24 May 1977, the operations and insurable risks, including, amongst others, the geographical coverage, are to be defined by the Inter-ministerial Committee for the Economic Programming (Comitato Interministeriale per la Programmazione Economica, ‘CIPE’). Every year not later than on 30 June, CIPE has to deliberate the financial projections as well as financial needs related to certain risks and to define global limits for the risks to be assumed under the State guarantee distinctly for the guarantees of the duration inferior and superior than 24 months.
(14) In 1997 the Commission adopted the Export-credit Communication which provides that no State aid is to be granted to support export-credit insurers in respect of marketable risks and that public export-credit insurers will, at the very least, have to keep a separate administration and separate accounts for their insurance of marketable risks and non-marketable risks for the account or with the guarantee of the State, demonstrating that they do not enjoy State aid in their insurance of marketable risks. In order to comply with the Export-credit Communication, SACE's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) in its meeting of 7 July 1998 decided to stop the activity of marketable risks (defined as such at the time, i.e. short-term export-credit insurance in respect of the 15 Member States of the Union, ‘EU-15’) regarding direct insurance contracts as from 18 September 1998.
(15) In 2001, the amendments of the Export-credit Communication(8) included, inter alia, the replacement of the list of names of all the Member States which appeared in the Annex to the 1997 version of the Communication with a generic reference to the Member States of the European Union so that the future enlargement of the European Union will not necessitate further amendments of the Communication.
(16) Consequently, at the time of accession of the 10 Member States on 1 May 2004 (‘EU-10’), the non-marketable short-term risks for these countries became marketable risks. As a result, the provisions set out in the Export-credit Communication in respect of marketable risks apply to those risks thereafter.
(17) Article 6 of the Legislative Decree n. 269 of 30 September 2003 (converted with modifications into Law n. 326 of 24 November 2003) — which laid down the rules for the transformation as from 1 January 2004 of ‘the Institute for external trade insurance services — SACE’ into a limited liability publicly held company (SACE S.p.A.) — has set out the scope of operations of the company, which takes into account the evolution of the market at issue. In particular, Article 6.12 provides: ‘SACE S.p.a. can carry out the activity of insuring and guaranteeing marketable risks as defined by the EU rules. Such activity has to have separate accounting in respect of the activity benefiting from the State guarantee or a limited liability company has to be established to that end. In the latter case the participation of SACE S.p.a. in such company cannot be lower than 30 % [and certain previously allocated funds] cannot be used for the subscription of its capital. [The activity of insuring marketable risks] does not benefit from the State guarantee.’
(18) Upon the changes in the legislative framework mentioned in recitals 14-16, SACE decided to establish SACE BT.
(19) In order to comply with Union rules, SACE decided to establish and use separate accounting for marketable risks(9) for the period between the date when the respective risks became automatically marketable (1 May 2004) and when SACE BT was established (27 May 2004) (see Table 1 under recital 19 of the opening decision). No capital was allocated to these activities in the separate accounts. The accounts were separated as per Italian legal provisions. The statutory auditors also refer thereto in SACE's Annual Report 2004 and provide that the separate accounting of marketable risks closed at the end of 2004(10).

II. 2.   THE BENEFICIARY, SACE BT

(20) On 27 May 2004(11), SACE BT was established with a share capital of EUR 100 million, paid up in full by SACE, following the approval of the initial business plan by SACE's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) on 18 May 2004. In addition, the capital contribution into reserves (so-called ‘Fondo di organizzazione’) of SACE BT in the amount of EUR 5,8 million was provided by SACE(12), which was subsequently used to absorb losses, e.g. in 2004 and 2005(13). On 3 July 2004, SACE BT received the authorisation from the regulatory authority,
Istituto per la vigilanza sulle assicurazioni private e di interesse collettivo — ISVAP
, as an insurance provider and started to operate on 15 October 2004.
(21) Presently, SACE BT operates in the credit (54 % of premiums in 2011), surety (30 %) and other damage to property insurance sectors (13 %).
(22) Within the credit insurance segment, SACE BT is active in the short term export-credit insurance business of ‘marketable risks’ within the meaning of the Export-credit Communication. It also provides credit insurance for transactions within Italy (insurance of domestic trade transactions). For a small part of its portfolio, SACE BT has remained active in the short-term non-marketable risks (see Table 1). As submitted by Italy, this activity, as the others, is carried out on market terms and without the guarantee of the State.
Table 1
SACE BT's geographical split of credit insurance risks

(%)

 

2005(14)

2006(14)

2007(14)

2008

2009

2010

2011

Domestic, within Italy

42,5

47,5

55,4

67,3

73

76,7

77,4

Foreign — marketable

39,8

46,6

37,4

25,1

21

18,1

17,3

Foreign — non-marketable

17,7

5,9

7,2

7,6

6

5,2

5,3

(23) SACE BT's surety business has developed from an acquisition of Assicuratrice Edile S.p.A. (‘Assedile’). In 2005, SACE BT acquired an initial stake of 70 % thereof. The acquisition process was initiated in March 2005. Assedile was specialised in surety business and offered guarantees for the construction risk and changed its name to SACE Surety in January 2009. Following the acquisition of the remaining outstanding minority stakes in SACE Surety, SACE BT became its sole owner and merged it through incorporation into SACE BT(15).
(24) SACE BT is the sole shareholder of SACE Servizi S.r.l., a company set up to provide services in connection with the acquisition and management of commercial information. In 2011, SACE Servizi has also started the activity of recovery of credits for the account of SACE BT.
(25) The departments responsible for SACE BT's internal auditing, risk management and compliance are externalised to the parent company, SACE(16).
(26) In the second year after its creation SACE BT recorded a small profit, with Return On Equity (ROE) of 0,11 %. However, starting from 2007 (third year of its operation) it recorded losses (see Table 2).
Table 2
SACE BT's ROE

(%)

Year

ROE

2005

– 1,51

2006

0,11

2007

– 1,02

2008

– 38,0

2009

– 30,6

2010

– 4,4

2011

0,23

Source:SACE BT's Financial Reports.

(27) Notably, SACE BT registered significant losses both in 2008 (of around EUR 29,5 million) and in 2009 (of around EUR 34 million). In 2009, the insurance claims paid by SACE BT amounted to EUR 66,4 million, up 42,6 % compared to 2008(17). While the major credit insurance and surety companies reduced their volumes insured in 2009, SACE BT insured transactions for a total of EUR 20,4 billion, an increase of 34,2 % compared to the EUR 15,2 billion insured in 2008.
(28) The situation of the company improved in 2010 when the combined ratio(18) decreased to 108 %, from 163 % in 2009 (see Table 5) and in 2011 when the company registered a small profit (of EUR 0,247 million).

II. 3.   THE COMPLAINT

(29) The complainant argued that the initial capital allocation to SACE BT from the parent company, SACE, carried out in 2004 and amounting to EUR 100 million (the first measure) is imputable to the State, is not compliant with the market economy investor principle (‘MEIP’) and constitutes incompatible State aid (see recitals 29 and 30 of the opening decision). On 6 November 2009, the complainant also informed the Commission about the reinsurance granted by SACE to SACE BT that was allegedly imputable to the State and did not meet the MEIP test, thus constituting a new aid measure incompatible with Article 107 of the Treaty (the second measure).
(30) On the opening decision, the complainant did not provide any comments.

II. 4.   DESCRIPTION OF THE MEASURES COVERED BY THE PRESENT DECISION

(31) The formal investigation, initiated by the Commission on 23 February 2011, concerns the following four measures granted by SACE to SACE BT (for further details see recitals 33-41 of the opening decision):
(a)   
First measure
: the initial capital allocation of EUR 100 million in the form of share capital and the capital contribution into reserves (so-called ‘Fondo di organizzazione’) of EUR 5,8 million in 2004(19);
(b)   
Second measure
: reinsurance coverage, of the type Excess of loss reinsurance(20) for the marketable credit risk of 2009, provided on 5 June 2009. The second measure was granted by SACE, when SACE BT did not succeed to place 100 % of it with the private market participants. In particular, it seems that prior to 2009 SACE BT obtained its reinsurance prevalently from the private operators. However, when renewing its reinsurance contracts for the year 2009 in the context of the financial crisis, SACE BT faced difficulties. Albeit SACE BT contacted a significant number of market operators, it succeeded in raising cover solely from five private reinsurers for 25,85 % of the Excess of loss reinsurance for the marketable credit risk of 2009. The contracts were signed on 30 January 2009. 16 other operators contacted by SACE BT were offered the same terms as those having provided the cover, but they decided not to participate in the reinsurance coverage. The reinsurers had to cover the part of the loss that exceeded EUR 5 million up to EUR 40 million. The five private reinsurers that participated in the excess of loss reinsurance in 2009 were: Hannover Rückversicherung AG (10 %), Sirius International Insurance Corporation (7,5 %), DEVK Rückversicherungs und Beteiligungs AG (3 %), Atradius Reinsurance Ltd (2,5 %), and Assurisk S.A. (2,85 %). The parent company, SACE, subscribed the remaining part of the coverage, i.e. 74,15 % on 5 June 2009, on the same terms of priority, capacity and premium as the five private reinsurers.
(c)   
Third measure
: a recapitalisation of EUR 29 million carried out on 18 June 2009 so as to cover losses registered in 2008;
(d)   
Fourth measure
: a recapitalisation of EUR 41 million carried out on 4 August 2009(21).
(32) A chronology of the four measures and the main decisions and milestones for SACE and SACE BT (as per the information and the supporting documents submitted to the Commission) are presented in Table 3. This Table also illustrates the time when certain documents were produced or discussed, documents which are referred later in the present decision.
Table 3
Chronological order of the four measures and main decisions and milestones for SACE and SACE BT

21.11.2003

Study of an external consultant, McKinsey, regarding the scenarios for the potential market of SACE;

17.12.2003

Invitation letter to tender for consultancy services to draw a business plan for the short-term credit insurance activity of SACE;

1.1.2004

Transformation of ‘the Institute for external trade insurance services — SACE’ into a limited liability publicly held company (SACE S.p.A.);

March 2004

KPMG carried out supplementary analyses to the business plan regarding the Italian market of the commercial information, the Italian market of the recovery of credits and its principal actors and the credit insurance market in the Central and Eastern Europe;

28.4.2004

Calculation of the ‘free capital’ of SACE;

1.5.2004

Accession of the 10 new Member States to the Union;

The non-marketable short-term risks for EU-10 became marketable risks;

18.5.2004

KPMG presents the business plan that includes the main elements supporting profitability expectations for the period 2005-2008 to SACE's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’).

SACE's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) approves the business plan for 2005-2008 regarding the establishment of SACE BT;

27.5.2004

SACE BT was established;

The capital of EUR 105,8 million was granted thereto; (first measure)

3.7.2004

SACE BT received the authorisation from the regulatory authority, ISVAP, as an insurance provider;

15.10.2004

SACE BT started to operate;

19.11.2004

SACE BT's Board of Directors approves the adjustment to the business plan for 2005-2009;

March 2005

The process of acquisition of Assedile was initiated(22);

15.4.2005

Presentation on the valuation of Assedile by the external consultant, KPMG (preceded by the examination of the data room);

Discussion by the Board of SACE BT regarding the potential acquisition of Assedile;

18.4.2005

The first non-binding offer of SACE BT for 70 % of Assedile;

30.5.2005

Presentation of the addendum to the valuation of Assedile by the external consultant, KPMG;

30.9.2005

SACE BT signs the final contract for the acquisition of 70 % of Assedile;

19.9.2006

Business plan — joint bid of SACE BT and Ducroire for the acquisition of 66 % of KUP;

December 2006

Report of the external consultant to SACE BT and Ducroire on the valuation of 66 % of KUP;

October 2007

SACE BT and Ducroire jointly acquire 66 % of KUP;

6.3.2008

SACE BT acquires the remaining 30 % in Assedile;

30.1.2009

SACE BT succeeds in raising from five private reinsurers 25,85 % of the Excess of loss reinsurance for the marketable credit risk;

25.2.2009

SACE BT sells at a loss to SA Ducroire its 33 % shareholding in KUP;

26.5.2009

SACE's Board of Directors approves the transfer of EUR 29 million to SACE BT;

5.6.2009

SACE subscribes the remaining 74,15 % of the Excess of loss reinsurance for the marketable credit risk; (second measure)

18.6.2009

The Ordinary Assembly of shareholders of SACE BT approves to cover the losses registered at the end of 2008 by means of the transfer of EUR 29 million from SACE (third measure) and of EUR 0,49 million from reserves ‘Fondo di organizzazione’;

1.7.2009

SACE's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) approves the capital transfer (‘versamento in conto capitale’) of EUR 41 million to SACE BT;

4.8.2009

The Ordinary Assembly of shareholders of SACE BT approves the capital transfer (‘versamento in conto capitale’) of EUR 41 million from SACE; (fourth measure)

SACE BT's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) approves the business plan for 2010-2011;

7.12.2010

SACE BT's Board of Directors approves a business plan for 2011-2013;

24.11.2011

The meeting of SACE BT's Board of Directors: Adjustment of the business plan for 2011-2013;

23.2.2012

The meeting of SACE BT's Board of Directors: Revision of the organisational model of SACE BT.

II. 5.   GROUNDS FOR INITIATING THE PROCEDURE

(33) As regards the
first measure
, the Commission first clarified that the qualification of aid could be excluded from the initial capital endowment if it was provided to non-marketable risks and/or if it was simply the transfer to SACE BT of capital that had already been allocated to short-term insurance activity that existed before within SACE (including to previously non-marketable risks turned into marketable risks on 1 May 2004). The Commission indicated that at that stage it had not sufficient information to assess whether these conditions were met or not.
(34) Secondly, the Commission raised doubts that Italy acted as a private investor would have acted in similar circumstances. This is the so called MEIP test, which, if fulfilled, excludes the existence of an advantage for the beneficiary of the measure.
(a) As regards the
first measure
, based on the information submitted, the Commission raised doubts that the assessment of expected profitability of SACE BT done at the time of its establishment in 2004 would have been sufficient to convince a market economy investor to make the capital contribution. The Commission underlines that the sole business plan submitted at the time merely provided projections for the years 2005-2008, with Return On Average Equity (ROAE) reaching only 5 % in 2008 (including a deduction of EUR 1,1 million for equalisation reserve)(23). No further assessment of a potential further increase in returns to cover for the initial losses appeared as having been made. The Commission at the time was not made aware of any analysis of the potential profitability of possible acquisitions in the sector. Italy was invited to present additional elements that would demonstrate that the investment was done on market terms.
(b) As regards the
second measure
, based on the information provided by the Italian authorities illustrating the difficulties to find the reinsurance cover on the market, the Commission raised doubts whether the second measure has not conferred an advantage to SACE BT.
(c) As regards
the third and the fourth measures
, the Commission considered that in view of the registered losses by SACE BT, it could not have raised that capital on the market.
(35) Thirdly, the Commission indicated that the measures granted by SACE (a public undertaking) seemed to be imputable to the State (State resources criterion), but did not take a final position on that issue.
(36) Finally, the Commission raised doubts that, if the measures were to be found aid, they could not be found compatible with the internal market. There seems to be no legal basis to find such aids compatible.

III.   

COMMENTS FROM INTERESTED PARTIES

(37) The Commission received comments only from SACE.

IV.   

COMMENTS ON THE OPENING DECISION AND ADDITIONAL SUBMISSIONS OF ITALY AND SACE

IV. 1.   IMPUTABILITY

(38) Italy and SACE maintained that all the four measures granted by SACE would not be imputable to the Italian State. In the reply to the opening decision, Italy quotes extensively the Court judgments in the Stardust Marine(24), Olympic Airways(25) and SIC-RTP(26) cases. At the request of the Commission, Italy has submitted a list provided by SACE that included SACE Board members at the time when each of the four measures at stake was adopted by SACE's Board of Directors(27). When applicable, SACE indicated the position held in the public administration by the respective Board member.
(39) Furthermore, as regards the first measure, Italy argued that the investment into SACE BT was very small as compared to the size of SACE and hence this should also indicate that the State had no reason to be involved in such a small investment, which is therefore not imputable.
(40) As regards the second measure, Italy clarified that CIPE does not decide on the reinsurance activity of SACE(28).

IV. 2.   ADVANTAGE CRITERION: THE FIRST MEASURE

(41) In the submissions after the opening decision, Italy and SACE provided that the investment was in line with market practices.
(42) To complement previously submitted documentation mainly consisting from the initial business plan, Italy and SACE notably submitted additional supporting documents (see recitals 6-9). In reply to an additional question of the Commission, Italy also communicated that there were no exchanges between ISVAP and SACE/SACE BT as from 2003 regarding projections made by SACE/SACE BT on the capital requirements and available capital, nor assessments made in this respect by the national supervisory authority(29).
(43) First, SACE stresses that it is a profitable company. It is a well-managed company and there is therefore no ground to put into doubt that it made the investment into SACE BT as a normal investor. To illustrate this, SACE provided data showing that SACE was profitable in 2004-2010 with ROE exceeding 6 % for all those years and annual dividend pay-out ratio varying from 40 % to 95 % of the profits summing up to the total amount of dividends of EUR 2,1 billion in addition to the restitution of part of the capital of EUR 3,5 billion to the State as a shareholder. SACE also claims that its investment into SACE BT was made out of ‘free capital’ unused and available at SACE, quantified at around EUR 250 million on 28 April 2004(30). Moreover, SACE submits that the amount of capital was negligible compared to the assets and the profits generated by SACE (the amount invested into SACE BT in 2004 was equivalent to only 1,2 % of the equity of SACE and 20 % of net profit of SACE in 2004)(31).
(44) In that context, Italy also clarified that it is not SACE which has been benefitting of the counter-guarantee of the State, but such a guarantee was intended to counter-guarantee SACE's counterparties. In this regard, Italy stressed that, during the period 2004-2010, the counter-guarantee was never called, nor the State had carried out payments in favour of SACE in that period(32).
(45) Secondly, SACE submitted that the investment aimed at the diversification of risks insured by SACE group (in terms of geographical and sector coverage). The coverage of credit risks by SACE group, previously limited to non-marketable countries, was thus to be expanded into Italy and the area of marketable export-credit risks (short-term risk within OECD). In addition, the scope of business was to be expanded into other lines of business as exploited by the three largest private market players.
(46) Thirdly, SACE argued that there were significant unexploited market opportunities for a new market entrant, such as SACE BT. This consideration was analysed before making the investment. In particular, the domestic Italian market had a significantly lower credit insurance penetration ratio if compared to other big European markets. Also, there was an opportunity to operate in the markets of the EU-10, where the major credit insurance market players were not yet present at the time. Before the investment was made, the market opportunities were also analysed by the external consultant in great details.
(47) Fourthly, SACE argued that the ROE of SACE BT cannot be compared to the market average because SACE BT was a start-up at the time while the other short-term export-credit insurance companies were already established in the market.
(48) Fifthly, SACE argued that, when it created SACE BT in 2004 so as to enter the short-term export-credit market, the management expected a sufficient profitability to be achieved from the capital invested through a
three pillars strategy
(33) relying on organic growth in credit insurance business (of start-up character for which the initial business plan contains four years forecast) for the first pillar, on ancillary activities to the credit insurance (other types of insurance or services), potentially including acquisitions of other firms, in Italy (diversification in terms of business lines) for the second pillar and on geographical expansion through acquisitions of companies operating abroad (geographical diversification) for the third pillar.
(49) According to SACE, the rationale for such strategy was underpinned by the external consultant's analysis(34).
(50) According to SACE, it should be evident that the economic and financial projections elaborated in 2004 could not incorporate or anticipate the effects of future acquisitions which were carried out in the following years(35). In other words, the projections were based solely on the organic growth of SACE BT in the Italian credit insurance market (first pillar mentioned in recital 48)(36).
(51) Given the start-up character of the company, the parent company chose to
inject more capital at once in the initial stage
. Italy is arguing that this approach is comparable with the one used by private equity funds which are investing up-front money to be used for potential transactions, which should however be subject to independent evaluations and consistent with the pre-determined strategy(37).
(52) Further, Italy argued that even if the initial plan included solely the profitability for the first pillar of business, the other two pillars of business were mentioned/contemplated at the time. They were mentioned as early as in the letter dated 17 December 2003 inviting a consultant to provide an offer to draw a business plan for the short-term activity of SACE(38). In particular, in the invitation to tender to the external consultant, SACE requested the presentation of a limited number of scenarios (maximum 2), which should envisage an endogenous growth of SACE using its own resources and means and a collaboration with other entities, either Italian or foreign which might include various options such as a collaboration with one of the biggest market players, a collaboration with a secondary player (e.g. CESCE — Spain, OND — Belgium) and a collaboration with an Italian player operating in another market segment or in another financial sector.
(53) As regards possible relations with third parties, the consultant was requested to underline the possible advantages deriving from putting in common technology and expertise, economies of scale and specialisation and upstream and downstream integration of activities.
(54) SACE argued that the Board of Directors started discussing such opportunities around the same period when SACE BT was created. To further support that allegation, SACE provided a preliminary outline of cooperation with OND (Belgium) and CESCE (Spain) prepared on 5 March 2004, i.e. before granting the first measure(39).
(55) To provide basis for future expansion into other markets and lines of business, in March 2004, the consultant provided SACE with detailed analysis of market players operating in other business segments in Italy (commercial information services and recovery of credits) and credit insurance in the Central and Eastern Europe(40) and benchmarking to the market practices (mainly major market players) in terms of costs (i.e. for provision of commercial information, for credit recovery), timing of business operations, multiple analysis of the pricing of recent acquisitions in the sector of provision of commercial information as well as benchmarking to the best market practices — so considered due to their leadership position in the respective market segment — in terms of operative business solutions.
(56) Italy recalls that the acquisition strategy started to be put in place in less than one year of the start of operations by SACE BT (the first non-binding offer of SACE BT for 70 % of Assedile dates from 18 April 2005, while the whole process was initiated in March 2005, five months after the start of operations by SACE BT). Further, Italy submitted to the Commission various communications presented to the Board of Directors of SACE BT in the period 2006-2008 considering the subsequent opportunities for acquisitions(41) (all of them were underpinned by the valuations by the external advisors, due diligence exercise, etc., though a number of them were not successful for various reasons).
Financial projections
(57) In the invitation letter to tender for the consultancy services, SACE asked for financial projections for three years ahead, 2005-2007. inter alia, SACE asked for a quantification of the financial resources (i.e. capitalisation) necessary for the development of the short-term activity and the expected profitability (i.e. return on invested capital)(42).
(58) SACE argued that, as the acquisition opportunities were not yet clear and their valuation not yet available, the initial business plan was conservatively solely based on the first pillar of business (organic growth in credit insurance business). The projected profitability, even if limited since not including acquisition strategies, was still positive starting from 2007 (third full year of business)(43) and, if synergies with the parent company (i.e. SACE) were to be included, from 2006 (second full year of business).
(59) Further, already in November 2004, after only one month after the start of operations by SACE BT, an adjustment to the business plan for 2005-2009(44) was discussed by the Board(45) (‘the adjusted business plan’), containing an analysis of SACE BT's operations at the start of its business, new assumptions for its development, economic-financial simulations and scenarios for development. The accompanying note to the Board clearly specifies the extension of the business into the surety market and the delineation of the evolutionary scenario regarding other opportunities of the external growth into the sectors presenting opportunities for synergies with the activity of SACE BT, so as to realign the return on the entire capital investment into SACE BT with the market benchmarks.
(60) In particular, in the adjusted business plan, the different pillars of future development of the business were mentioned explicitly: organic growth in credit insurance business (first pillar, see recital 48), expansion into other business segments in Italy (second pillar, see recital 48) and external growth, with a mention ‘to be developed further’ (second and third pillars, see recital 48), depending on the activities of a target firm). Capital required for the first pillar was estimated at EUR 40,3 million. As regards the second pillar, only endogenous expansion into surety business (‘cauzioni’) was specified in detail including separate financial projections for that line of business and estimated capital at EUR 3,7 million.
(61) Further, a more detailed analysis of expected profitability in function of capital allocated to the credit insurance and surety businesses was added: ROAE for the first two types of products (credit insurance and surety — cauzioni) on the required capital of EUR 44 million was estimated at 12,5 % (with respectively EUR 40,3 million and 12,1 % for solely credit insurance business)(46). The document stated that the analysis was preliminary and to be further elaborated upon preparation of the restated business plan for the regulatory purposes (expected in February/March 2005).
(62) According to the adjusted plan, the projected profits were of EUR 4,8 million in 2008 and the estimated ROAE on the entire amount of capital was projected to reach 4,4 % in 2009.
(63) Further, in its submissions dated 15 September 2011 and 5 March 2012, Italy provided SACE's calculation of an ‘implied
ex ante
’ profitability which includes the synergies and the acquisitions of KUP and Assedile (see Table 4). To construct such analysis, Italy took into consideration the
ex ante
valuations as available at different periods of time: when the initial business plan was prepared, when the acquisition of 70 % of Assedile was contemplated and evaluated, when the acquisition of 100 % of Assedile and 33 % of KUP was contemplated and evaluated. The expected synergies from acquisitions are presented separately at the bottom of the table. The initiated and evaluated, but not finalised acquisitions are not taken into account in such analysis. Any excess capital not needed for the acquisitions mentioned in recital 56, before they are identified and evaluated, is allocated to the standalone credit insurance business (the first pillar).
Table 4
SACE's calculation of ‘implied
ex ante
’ profitability

 

Reference year

Amount of capital

(EUR million)

Profit, after taxes expected in the reference year

(EUR million)

ROE

Situation as of 18 May 2004

 

Standalone credit insurance business as per the May 2004 initial business plan

2008

105

3,7

3,5 %

 

 

 

105

3,7

3,5 % (47)

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘Implied ex ante’ after the acquisition of 70 % of Assedile

 

Acquisition of Assedile(48)

2009

27

2,7

10,2 %

 

Stand alone after the acquisition of Assedile

2008

78

3,7

4,7 %

 

 

 

105

6,4

6,1 %

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘Implied ex ante’ after the acquisition of 100 % of Assedile and 33 % of KUP

 

Acquisition of Assedile (70 % + 30 %)

2009

41,7

3,9

9,4 %

 

Acquisition of KUP (33 %)(49)

2011

13,3

1,2

8,7 %

 

Stand alone after the acquisition of Assedile + KUP

2008

50

3,7

7,4 %

 

 

 

105

8,8

8,3

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘Implied ex ante’ after acquisitions and the revenues from synergies

 

Synergies SACE BT/SACE

 

 

1,9

 

 

Synergies SACE BT/Assedile

 

 

0,6

 

 

 

 

105

11,3

10,8 % (47)

(64) As to the rate of return, a private investor would have requested to make a similar investment (‘requested rate of return’), Italy contested the ratio provided by the complainant (ROE of 11,5 %). Italy considers that the sample of companies on which the ROE was calculated was not representative and the time period over which that ROE was calculated was not adequate. SACE provided that the adequate rate of return for the credit insurance business in Italy should be established on the basis of average profitability of companies operating in Italy, i.e. Coface Italy (Viscontea Coface) and Euler Hermes SIAC, in the years 1998 to 2003 and would equal 10,25 % based on non-weighted average. SACE explained that Atradius (Italy) was excluded from the calculations as during the period considered it showed a volatility that significantly influenced the results to such an extent that the results showed a negative benchmark (– 2,4 % in case of using simple non-weighted average)(50).
(65) However, Italy argued in favour of the required rate of return being based on the weighted average rate. In Italy's submission, SACE calculated the weighted average ROE rate for the period 1998-2003 of Coface Italy and Euler Hermes SIAC by weighting their ROE averages of the period with the weight percentage share of gross premiums written for the same period for their credit insurance business. Thus calculated, the rate of return would equal 8,7 %.
(66) Italy argues that the difference between the estimated rate of return using non-weighted and weighted averages, i.e. between 10,25 % and 8,7 %, is not significant enough so as to substantially impact the decision of an investor with a time horizon of medium to long-term. Nonetheless, Italy considered more appropriate to use the weighted average ROE, as provided above, for the following two reasons(51):
(a) a weighted average calculation is a better method compared with a non-weighted average, because it reflects better the required rate of return in a sector with 2 players with significant differences in terms of return among the players and among the years and significant differences in turnover between the two players(52);
(b) as the basis for weighting, Italy used gross premiums written in the credit insurance business with the goal of having a homogeneous sample comparison with the activity of the new SACE BT back in 2004 (it started with credit insurance business and only later expanded into other related activities). The surety insurance business (‘ramo cauzioni’) was excluded from the basis of the calculation, as being characterised by a different dynamics than the credit insurance business. Only Coface operated in surety business in 2004(53).
(67) Italy also provided that a calculation of the required rate of return based on total premiums (i.e. without limiting solely to credit insurance premiums as explained above) would amount to 9,5 %.

IV. 3.   ADVANTAGE CRITERION: THE SECOND MEASURE

(68) SACE argues that the measure was driven by profit consideration and thus corresponded to reinsurance activity in line with market practices. It stresses that the main terms of the reinsurance cover provided by SACE to SACE BT in 2009 were the same as those agreed to by the private reinsurers a few months earlier (see recital 31).
Ex post
, it can be concluded that it only benefited the parent company, SACE, which received EUR 1,56 million(54) of premium income, as SACE BT did not make use of the reinsurance to cover the pre-specified excess of loss.
(69) Furthermore, Italy asserts that at the level of capital requirements (‘
requisito patrimoniale
’) calculated according to the Solvency 2 proposal at that time in 2009 (QIS4 technical specifications), the second measure did not reduce the capital requirements of SACE BT. In particular, the coverage of excess of loss did not produce any benefits because it is not recognised within the standard formula used by SACE BT as a method for quantifying the capital requirements. As regards the impact on the capital absorption (‘
assorbimento di capitale
’), Italy explained that per definition all forms of reinsurance produce effects on the level of capital, including reinsurance in the form of excess of loss cover(55). The Commission has specifically requested Italy on 4 January 2012 to provide the amount of capital relief at SACE BT's level following the excess of loss reinsurance concluded in 2009 with SACE. Italy did not provide the requested information, but repeated that the excess of loss reinsurance does not generate any relief in terms of supervisory capital requirements (‘
requisiti patrimoniali di vigilanza
’)(56).
(70) However, SACE submitted(57) that one of the main purposes of reinsurance is to increase the capacity of the ceding insurer to subscribe further contracts.
(71) As regards the application of the escape clause laid down in the Export-credit Communication(58), Italy submitted that it did not find appropriate to grant public support to this sector and decided not to make use of the escape clause(59). SACE did not find relevant the request of the Commission to submit information that might prove lack of coverage on the market for exporters(60).

IV. 4.   ADVANTAGE CRITERION: THIRD AND FOURTH MEASURES

(72) SACE argues that by the adoption of the third and the fourth measure, SACE wanted to bring SACE BT in a status of ‘financial equilibrium’ with the objective to guarantee the solvency of the enterprise, according to the constraints imposed by the legislative framework. Once the solvency of SACE BT been guaranteed, it would have been possible to reach a sufficient profitability level(61). Moreover, SACE underlines that many private Italian competitors of SACE BT have registered losses in 2008 and 2009. This triggered the intervention of their shareholders, which contributed with important capital injections (internationally also Natixis recapitalised Coface twice in 2009 and beginning of 2010, whilst Coface recorded losses of EUR 163 million in 2009).
(73) SACE also notes that, while basically all market operators have been affected by the economic crisis, the effects of the crisis have had a particularly severe impact on SACE BT. In this respect, SACE argues that SACE BT is still in the start-up phase. For this reason, SACE BT could not make use of the ‘equalisation provision’ (‘riserva di perequazione’)(62) to cope with the economic and financial contingencies as this reserve has not yet been established. All other major competitors of SACE BT — including also Coface — have benefited from this reserve during the present economic crisis.
(74) In reply to the Commission's request in the opening decision to provide the estimated costs that could be incurred by SACE, if it were to sell or liquidate SACE BT, SACE submitted that the liquidation of SACE BT is a purely theoretical option which cannot be put in place at this moment. The main reasons quoted by SACE refer to: (i) the lack of an immediate benefit to SACE as a shareholder, since the liquidation would have rather crystallised the negative results in the context of particularly adverse circumstances of the market at the time and would have caused significant reputational damage for SACE; (ii) the possibility that such action could be interpreted by the markets as a crisis of liquidity within SACE; (iii) the likely event that the price of sale would not be adequate(63). When replying to the separate Commission's request regarding the exposure of SACE in respect of SACE BT at the time before granting the second, third and fourth measures, Italy indicated that, in theory, in the case of termination of activity and liquidation of SACE BT's assets during 2009, liabilities totalling EUR 2,09 million towards SACE were potentially at risk. Italy indicated that the net balance between assets and liabilities towards SACE for the year 2008 had been positive at EUR 8,43 million(64), meaning that in net terms SACE would owe money to SACE BT.
(75) SACE stated that the application of the MEIP has to take also into consideration the legislative constraints. […](65) Moreover, SACE argues that an investor is not only focused on the profitability of an investment, but also on other considerations, such as safeguarding the group's public image or a reorientation of its business operations(66).
(76) Italy provided that the amount of EUR 70 million (third and fourth measures) was part of the capital needs identified in May 2009 by the Risk Management department(67) necessary to comply with the future Solvency 2 requirements(68) (69). This simulation was based on the revised budget for 2009.
(77) According to SACE, the decisions to recapitalise SACE BT were taken in view of the expected return to profitability, with the break-even in 2011(70).
(78) According to Italy, starting with 2009, SACE BT was subject to deep transformations in the organisation, management and business processes, which have restored the long-term viability of the company, allowing it to return to profit in 2011, ahead of the forecasts made in the business plan for 2011-2013. In light of the changing economic and market terms, SACE BT's business plan for 2011-2013 was updated to take into account the on-going crisis and to set out a number of initiatives to further improve profitability (see Table 5). The adjusted business plan for 2011-2013 was approved by SACE BT's Board of Directors on 24 November 2011. The minutes of the meeting of the Board of 24 November 2011 (i.e. two years after the capital injections) refer to the objective of gradually improving profitability (as measured in terms of ROE) so as to reach the sector average.
Table 5
SACE BT's financial highlights provided in the business plan for 2010-2011 and the adjusted plan for 2011-2013

 

Actual

Projected in the business plan for 2010-2011 approved by the Board on 4 August 2009(72)

Projected in the adjusted business plan for 2011-2013 approved by the Board on 24 November 2011(73)

EUR million

2008(71)

2009

2010

Revised budget

2009

Business Plan

2010

Business Plan

2011

2011

Proj.

2012

Proj.

2013

Proj.

Gross written premiums(74)

99,7

95,2

94,6

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

Insurance technical expenses born by SACE (‘Sinistri di competenza’)

– 70,6

– 104,9

– 59,8

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

General expenses

– 36,1

– 38,2

– 37,3

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

Technical result before reinsurance

– 63,0

– 60,0

18,2

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

Technical result after reinsurance

– 39,3

– 56,4

5,0

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

Income before tax

– 39,5

– 47,3

– 4,8

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

Net income

– 29,5

– 34,1

– 4,8

[≤ 0]

[≤ 0]

[≤ 0]

[…]

[…]

[…]

ROE pre Tax (%)(75)

na

– 41,7 %

– 4,4 %

na

NA

na

[…]

[…]

[…]

ROE post Tax (%)(76)

– 38,0 %

– 30,6 %

– 4,4 %

na

NA

na

[…]

[…]

[…]

Loss Ratio (%)

131,0 %

119 %

67 %

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

Cost ratio (%)

44,6 %

43 %

41 %

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

Combined ratio (%)

175,6 %

163 %

108 %

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

[…]

(79) In the last submission of 30 March 2012, Italy reiterated the non-imputability of the measures to the State and their compliance with the MEIP. Firstly, Italy explained that those were intragroup decisions to protect the reputation of the group. Secondly, Italy argued that SACE operates like a market operator and invests its resources in the development of the business in which it operates without relying in any way on public support. During the crisis, the parent company, SACE, remained profitable and distributed dividends to the State. For this reason, Italy submitted that SACE never deemed necessary to draw up a restructuring plan to be submitted to the Commission in accordance with the Commission Communication on the return to viability and the assessment of restructuring measures in the financial sector in the current crisis under the State aid rules (‘Restructuring Communication’)(77). Nor the national supervisory authority, ISVAP, raised any objection or requested particular procedures after the recapitalisation of SACE BT. Finally, Italy recalled its assessment that it would have been very difficult at that time to find a potential buyer for SACE BT.
(80) Italy argues that SACE BT's crisis was not caused by internal processes, changes in demand or other factors that would impose a deep rethinking of the business model and a subsequent restructuring, but rather by the significant increase of claims triggered by the crisis. In light of this situation, Italy submits that SACE decided to provide the additional capital and introduce the necessary organisational and management changes in total autonomy and according to the perspective of a market operator.

IV. 5.   COMPATIBILITY OF AID

(81) Italy and SACE devoted the largest part of their comments to the opening decision on arguing that the measures are MEIP compliant and not imputable to the State and, hence, do not involve aid. In case the Commission would nevertheless find that these measures constitute state aid in the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty, SACE submitted that the measures should be recognised and declared compatible with the internal market(78). As regards the second measure, SACE considers the doubts expressed by the Commission on the compatibility of that measure as purely speculative(79). As regards the third and the fourth measures, SACE reiterated that in any case it would be possible to find them compatible with the internal market under Article 107(3)(b) of the Treaty on the basis of the Communications quoted by the Commission(80).

V.   

ASSESSMENT OF THE MEASURES

V. 1.   EXISTENCE OF AID WITHIN THE MEANING OF ARTICLE 107(1) OF THE TREATY

(82) It has to be examined whether the four measures set out in Section II.4 constitute State aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty. As set out in Article 107(1) of the Treaty any aid granted by a Member State or through State resources in any form whatsoever which distorts or threatens to distort competition by favouring certain undertakings or the production of certain goods shall, in so far as it affects trade between Member States, be incompatible with the internal market, save as otherwise provided.
(83) The qualification of a measure as State aid therefore presupposes that the following conditions are met: it must be imputable to the State and financed by a Member State or through State resources, it must grant a selective advantage susceptible to favour certain undertakings or the production of certain goods and it must distort or threaten to distort competition and have the potential to affect trade between Member States.
(84) These conditions being cumulative, they must all be present before a measure is characterised as State aid. As a result, if one of the conditions is not fulfilled then the relevant measure cannot be considered to be State aid.
(85) In recital 61 of the opening decision, the Commission indicated that the part of measures which would meet one of two following conditions would not constitute aid:
(a) the capital/reinsurance benefiting the non-marketable risks (as opposed to marketable risks) (
the first exclusion criterion
); indeed, there is no market for these risks and therefore state support would not distort competition between insurance firms, such that the qualification of aid could be excluded; and
(b) the amount of capital endowed to SACE BT that was already implicitly allocated to (turned) marketable risks within SACE (since such capital, if transferred to SACE BT with activities it was supporting already within SACE, would be the continuation of the same activity with the same capital under a different legal form. The transfer of that capital would therefore not constitute an advantage to these activities and the qualification of aid could be excluded) (
the second exclusion criterion
).
(86) As regards the second exclusion criterion, SACE confirmed that no capital was allocated to the non-marketable risks in relation to the EU-10 Member States that turned into marketable risks before the creation of SACE BT(81). This is coherent with Italy's repeated line of reasoning that the company was a start-up (see also recitals 96-100).
(87) As regards the first exclusion criterion, in reply to the Commission's request to provide the division between marketable and non-marketable risks(82), SACE replied that the relative volumes of non-marketable activities in SACE BT are very small(83). Moreover, Italy submitted that SACE BT is managing the non-marketable risks at market terms, without the guarantee of the State and they are not subject to the threshold established by CIPE every year for the non-marketable risks inferior than 24 months(84).
(88) The Commission notes that the Export-credit Communication provides that if Member States wishes to subsidise their non-marketable risks, they have to introduce separate accounting, ensuring that there is no flow of aid to the marketable risks. In the present case, none of SACE's measures was targeted specifically at supporting the small non-marketable risk activities. Italy does not invoke that it wanted to aid the non-marketable risks and considers that all the measures were granted to SACE BT as a whole (and not to one specific activity) and on market terms. Italy does not contest that all these measures are analysed under the MEIP test to identify the presence of an advantage.
(89) The Commission therefore agrees with Italy and SACE that the exclusions provided in chapters 4.1.1 and 4.1.2 of the opening decision do not apply in the present case. Hence, the qualification of aid of (part of) the four measures cannot be excluded based on these exclusion criteria. The entire capital injected into SACE BT of EUR 105,8 million (first measure) and the other measures in their entirety could constitute aid and are subject to the assessment.

V.1.1.   

Presence of an advantage

V.1.1.1.   

General principles for the assessment of the presence of an advantage

(90) As provided in recitals 80-82 of the opening decision, in accordance with settled case-law, in order to establish whether a capital injection is granting a competitive advantage it is necessary to assess whether, in similar circumstances, a private investor in a market economy would have made capital contributions of the same size(85), having regarded in particular to the information available and foreseeable developments at the date of those contributions(86).
(91) The MEIP is a test that should be applied
ex ante
, i.e. one should determine whether at the time of planning the investment a private investor in a market economy would have prevailed upon making such a capital contribution. A market investor would duly take into account the risks associated with the investment — so as to require higher profitability from more risky investments. It would take as a constraint the existing regulatory framework, e.g. in the financial services sector. If the specific regulatory requirements on the minimum capital, liquidity and similar makes the investment not profitable, a market economy investor would not proceed with the investments, instead of proceeding with an investment which complies with the regulatory requirement but does not provide an adequate level of profitability.
(92) A private investor is not content merely with the fact that an investment does not cause him a loss or that it produces only limited profits. A market economy investor would attempt to maximise the return on his assets in accordance with the circumstances in his interests, even in the case of an investment in an undertaking in which he already had a shareholding(87). Even if the average return in the sector is only one of the elements the Commission may consider, a prudent market economy investor, when making estimations of the appropriate remuneration, would, in principle, require a minimum return for the investment being at least of the level of the average profitability in the respective sector(88).
(93) According to the recent jurisprudence(89), a Member State that invokes the MEIP compliance must, where there is doubt, establish unequivocally and on the basis of objective and verifiable evidence that the measure implemented falls to be ascribed to the State acting as shareholder, i.e. that it acted on market terms. In that regard, it may have to produce evidence showing that the decision was based on economic evaluations comparable to those which, in the circumstances, a rational private investor in a situation as close as possible to that of the Member State would have had carried out, before making the investment, in order to determine its future profitability. For the purposes of applying the private investor test, the only relevant evidence is the information which was available, and the developments which were foreseeable, at the time when the decision to make the investment was taken. That is especially so where, as in the present case, the Commission is seeking to determine whether there has been State aid in relation to an investment which was not notified to it and which, at the time when the Commission carries out its examination, has already been made by the Member State concerned.
(94) The Commission, when making its own assessment regarding the compliance with the MEIP, has to carry out a global assessment, taking into account — in addition to the evidence provided by the Member State — all other relevant evidence enabling it to determine whether the Member State took the measure in question in its capacity as shareholder, i.e. as a market economy investor, or as a public authority. In particular, the nature and subject-matter of that measure are relevant in that regard, as is its context, the objective pursued and the rules to which the measure is subject(90).

V.1.1.2.   

Presence of an advantage in the first measure

(95) In recitals 95 and 96 of the opening decision, the Commission expressed doubts on whether the first measure met the MEIP. In the opening decision, the Commission provided that the parameter that needs to be ascertained is the expected profitability of the investment according to the business plan. Indeed, according to the established case-law and practice(91) the parent company, SACE, as would a market investor in comparable circumstances, had the alternative not to allocate capital and to use it for its other activities or return it as dividends to the State.
(96) It is noteworthy that SACE used separate accounting for the marketable risks for the period between the date when the respective risks became automatically marketable (1 May 2004) and when SACE BT was established (27 May 2004) (see Table 1 under recital 19 of the opening decision). However, no assets, liabilities or contracts were transferred from the established separate account to SACE BT (the contracts for marketable risks accounted in the separate accounting ended either as a result of natural expiration of insurance contracts, either through the termination of contracts in place; the marketable risks in question were gradually covered under new insurance contracts within SACE BT(92)). The business activity of the latter was started anew.
(97) Further, it has to be emphasised that SACE BT was established to focus on new business activities, which were not previously operated by SACE. Before the establishment of SACE BT and granting the initial capital thereto, already at the end of 2003, SACE sought external expertise to confirm and further elaborate the business opportunities identified by SACE so as to enter into the segment of marketable risks. The main opportunities were identified in the market segments, where the major credit insurance market players were not yet present at the time, i.e. provision of credit insurance in Italy for domestic credits and export-credit insurance for the Italian exporting companies, mainly SMEs, towards the marketable risk countries.
(98) Also, the business plan of SACE BT was based on market benchmarking and creating the structure of the company anew, rather than the continuation of any past business. In other words, it was not based on the existing track record of the business (or restructuring of the past business), but it was set up anew.
(99) Therefore, SACE BT is not the continuation of an activity which existed within SACE, but the result of a decision to set up a start-up and develop an economic activity which was not carried out within SACE.
(100) As a result, it can be concluded that the factual elements provided by Italy and SACE in the framework of the formal investigation procedure allow the Commission to conclude that SACE BT was created as a start-up and was not the mere continuation of activities carried out already within SACE.
(101) The Commission considers that the business plan prepared for a start-up should consist of a careful analysis of business opportunities into the market in which the start-up intends to operate in and the likely return to be generated, demonstrating thereby that the expected profitability is sufficient for the initial investment to be worthwhile.
(102) However, there may be a degree of uncertainty and thus some scope for adjustment and refinement of the scope of operations and of the financial forecasts. This may particularly be the case in the initial years of the company's operation. By definition, start-ups do not have a history of financial performance on which to base a valuation. Therefore, the investor has to develop a process for valuing the company based on comparable businesses (benchmarking) and financial projections. Since young businesses may take time to become profitable, the key of valuing start-ups is to focus on the activities allowing generation of adequate profits in the future.
(103) There are sufficient factual elements confirming that, before deciding to create SACE BT and to allocate its initial capital, SACE has undertaken analysis of the market in which SACE BT would operate. Initial discussions and preliminary elements of the business plan for the development of SACE's activities for the years 2004-2006 have been presented in the meetings of SACE's(93) Board of Directors of 21 November and 3 December 2003(94). During the meeting of 21 November 2003, SACE's Board of Directors discussed the new directions for development and the possibility to operate in the short-term credit insurance in the OECD countries on the basis of a study prepared by an external consultant and SACE. The Board of Directors concluded that for the marketable risks, the resources, investments and objectives would be defined on the basis of a feasibility study (
studio di fattibilità
)(95).
(104) Consequently, a business plan was sought from a reputable external consultant. The tasks of the consultant were, amongst others, to identify the opportunities related especially to the short-term risks in OECD countries (where SACE evaluated the size of the market to EUR 2,5-5 billion(96)) and set out the operational terms for a new undertaking.
(105) In the tender letter of 17 December 2003, it was clearly stated that the start-up will not be able to rely on any State support, either directly (financial support) or indirectly (using the resources allocated to the non-marketable risks)(97).
(106) The initial business plan drawn on 18 May 2004 contained benchmarking(98) to the market practices (mainly major market players) in terms of expected pricing, claims expenses and other costs ratios and other details on how to set up and operate the business in line with market practices. This could serve as a solid basis for a start-up company to make its operations conform to market practices.
(107) In light of the foregoing, the Commission concludes that the process and steps followed by SACE before taking the decision to invest the initial capital into SACE BT were comparable to market practices in similar circumstances. Notably, before deciding on the investment, SACE sought a feasibility study from an external advisor and before proceeding with the investment it carefully assessed and identified significant market opportunities for growth in the credit insurance market in Italy as well as to further expansion into the CEE markets or into other services related to the credit insurance.
(108) As regards the limited time period of the financial projections contained in the initial business plan (i.e. only the four years 2005-2008) and limited profitability to be achieved at the end of that period, the Commission observes that it was due to the fact that some of key elements still had to be refined and the plan therefore only contained financial projections only for part of the envisaged activities (first pillar, see recital 48).
(109) In that context, the Commission notes that the adjusted business plan — formally adopted by SACE's Board of Directors only one month after the start of operations of SACE BT, changed some of the initial assumptions, extended the financial projections with one year, up to 2009, and presented estimations of the required capital and its return separately for the endogenously developed credit insurance business (first pillar) for which the required capital in relation to the projected premiums was estimated at EUR 40,3 million. The projected return upon this capital for 2009 was EUR 4,8 million and the expected ROAE was 12,1 %). The accompanying note to the Board clearly specified the extension of the business into surety market and the delineation of the evolutionary scenario regarding other opportunities of the external growth into the sectors presenting opportunities for synergies with the credit insurance activity of SACE BT, so as to align the return on the entire capital investment into SACE BT with the market benchmarks. The document stated that the analysis had to be further elaborated upon preparation of the restated business plan for the regulatory purposes (expected in February/March 2005).
(110) Italy and SACE also provided documents showing that the plan was constantly kept under review. This demonstrates that the plan was really followed and used by the management and updated regularly on the basis of new information. This practice appears to be comparable to that expected to be done in the case of a start-up, where evaluation of future profitability is uncertain and needs to be adjusted after the start of operations of the start-up.
(111) As regards other pillars of business, i.e. expansion of SACE BT operations through acquisitions (‘external growth strategy’), the Commission observes that the company identified at an early stage, with the help of a reputable external advisor (see recital 113), market opportunities in other market segments, which present significant synergies to its core credit insurance activity (including the potential targets for acquisitions). Given the concentrated structure of the market in Western Europe, SACE explored opportunities to expand in the CEE markets, where, at the time, the three big credit insurance players were significantly less present than in Western Europe.
(112) The Commission observes that, while SACE BT received a capital larger than the one needed for the organic growth of its credit insurance business (first pillar), Italy and SACE have provided documents showing that SACE had already considered and analysed the national and international expansion of SACE BT (respectively second and third pillar) before establishing SACE BT on 27 May 2004.
(113) Notably, the second and the third pillars were considered in the letter dated 17 December 2003 (see recitals 52 and 53) where the external consultant, apart from being requested to look at the endogenous growth of SACE, it had been requested to analyse a collaboration with other entities, either Italian or foreign (such as a collaboration with one of the biggest market players, a collaboration with a secondary player (e.g. CESCE — Spain, OND — Belgium) and a collaboration with an Italian player operating in another market segment or in another financial sector). Moreover, in March 2004, the external consultant had already provided supplementary analyses regarding the Italian market of the commercial information, the Italian market of the recovery of credits and its principal actors on the credit insurance in the Central and Eastern Europe (the supplements to the business plan). Consequently, even though at the time when the first measure was granted no exact financial projections were made regarding the expected profitability from expansion into other services in Italy and other geographical markets by means of acquisitions, SACE had already had the analysis prepared by a reputable external consultant to support such prospective identification of potential targets.
(114) The Commission acknowledges that further consolidation of the smaller players in the market could reasonably be expected as well as potential privatisation of the credit insurers in the CEE. It also understands the difficulties of SACE in spite of iterative process to precisely evaluate in money terms the amount of capital to be spent for these future acquisitions and the returns to be generated by such companies, before the owner of the potential target agrees to sell and the expected returns are evaluated for such potential acquisition targets.
(115) In light of the considerations of SACE done before the investment as well as the detailed analysis sought from the reputable external advisor, which preliminary identified the potential targets, the Commission can agree with the claim of Italy and SACE that the acquisition plans were considered by SACE, when investing the capital into SACE BT, without being able to estimate their profitability or expected synergies without having access to internal data of such potential targets and without knowing the sale price.
(116) In view of the extensive acquisition strategy, common to the sector and expected by SACE, the Commission can also agree with the argument of Italy and SACE that the capital to be used in the future acquisitions can be approximated to an investment into an equity fund. Indeed, in an equity fund only expected rate of return may be defined in line with market benchmarks (in this case approximating the required rate of return by the three biggest credit insurance players having expanded significantly through acquisitions), whilst more specific evaluation is done before each investment, once such opportunity arises. There may also be some delay before all the capital is invested.
(117) In terms of profitability from acquisitions, the Commission observes that an external consultant's advice was consistently sought before making acquisitions. As regards Assedile, the price offered was below (for the first acquisition of 70 % of the stake in Assedile) or within the valuation range (when considering combined acquisition of 100 % of Assedile) proposed by the external consultant(99). However, as regards investment in KUP in 2007 jointly with SA Ducroire, the price paid was above the valuation made by the consultant (Rothschild) by 5 %. On the other hand, quite quickly after realising that KUP's profitability could not be restored, SACE BT sold this investment(100). SACE BT sold its participation in KUP at a loss to SA Ducroire on 25 February 2009 to minimise its future losses(101).
(118) The Commission also notes that SACE, being a firm working on long-term export credit insurance, has some knowledge of the market for credit insurance risk. It was therefore not investing without any own knowledge of the sector.
(119) In summary, the Commission notes that the business plan was prepared
ex ante
and with the help of a reputable external consultant which looked into new market opportunities that were presented to SACE before the creation of SACE BT. Moreover, the investment was clearly targeted to a start-up company and was underpinned by a plan based on a detailed benchmarking to market practices, notably in terms of costs and pricing, and adequately identifying business opportunities for its growth and development. Finally and, as a subsidiary argument, the performance of the start-up has been subject to close monitoring by the parent company and timely adjustments in its first years of business.
(120) Given all the circumstances listed above and notably the level of profitability that could be expected from the second and the third pillars of business of SACE BT, which was explored in detail at the time, it can be concluded that an expectation to reach an adequate return from the initial capital investment, i.e. from the first measure, was realistic and in line with market practices.
(121) Therefore, it can be concluded that when SACE injected money in SACE BT, it required (as stipulates in the minutes and notes to the Board) and could have reasonably expected a sufficient return on its investment.
(122) In conclusion, the first measure is deemed as not having conferred an advantage to SACE BT. Hence, it did not constitute aid and the other criteria required to qualify as state aid do not have to be assessed.

V.1.1.3.   

Presence of an advantage in the second measure

(123) In recital 100 of the opening decision, the Commission expressed its doubts that the reinsurance by the market operators and parent company SACE was provided under comparable terms. The reinsurance provided by the State indirectly (i.e. via a public export-credit insurer SACE) seems to lead to the artificial creation of capacity that would not be available from the private market. Furthermore, in recital 103 of the opening decision the Commission did not exclude that the second measure conferred an advantage to SACE BT.
(124) Italy and SACE did not provide new factual elements that would change the preliminary assessment set out in the opening decision.
(125) According to point 4.2 of the Export-credit Communication, the Member States were requested to end granting of certain types of State aid within one year of the publication of this Communication, including a reinsurance by the State, either directly, or indirectly via a public or publicly supported export-credit insurer, on terms more favourable than those available from the private reinsurance market, which leads either to under-pricing of the reinsurance cover or to the artificial creation of capacity that would not be forthcoming from the private market (point 4.2(f)). Point 4.2 further states that existing complementary reinsurance arrangements remained permissible for an interim period, provided that, inter alia, the State reinsurance is a minority element in the insurer's overall reinsurance package and the State reinsurance for marketable risks is open to all credit insurers who are able to satisfy the common eligibility criteria. It is very clear that the latter provisions are not complied with in the case at hand since the State took the majority of the reinsurance. In addition, it did not open a scheme open to all credit insurers.
(126) In the assessment of the existence of an advantage, the Commission will first demonstrate that the measure could not be obtained from the rest of the market. Secondly, it will demonstrate that SACE did not act as a private reinsurer. Third, it will demonstrate that even when one takes into account the fact that SACE was the parent company of SACE BT, this does not allow to conclude that SACE acted as a private company in such a situation would have done. Fourth, the Commission will demonstrate that the reinsurance provided by SACE provides an advantage to SACE BT.
(127) The Commission observes that, in order to renew its reinsurance contracts for 2009, on 30 January 2009, SACE BT succeeded in raising 25,85 % of the Excess of loss reinsurance from the market for the marketable credit risk of 2009(102). A number of market operators were approached and declined to provide reinsurance for the remaining part in spite of its alleged profitability (16 operators decided not to participate). Consequently, ‘
after numerous attempts to reach an agreement with the market participants
’(103), SACE BT decided to seek the remaining part of the excess of loss reinsurance from SACE. SACE subscribed 74,15 % of the excess of loss reinsurance on 5 June 2009 on the same terms of priority, capacity and premium as the private reinsurers. It is therefore clear that the provision by SACE of 74,15 % excess of loss reinsurance could not have been received from the rest of the market(104).
(128) To ascertain whether such measure constitutes an advantage, one has also to verify that, by granting this measure, SACE did not act as a private insurer would have done in similar circumstances. The Commission observes that Italy and SACE themselves acknowledged that the global financial crisis influenced significantly the world reinsurance market and triggered restrictive reinsurance conditions in 2009. As a result, a number of private reinsurers have significantly reduced their credit insurance capacity by decreasing their activity in this sector and were refocusing on more profitable areas which had an impact on the availability of such credit insurance and reinsurance on the market. Secondly, the failure of SACE BT to find reinsurance on the market was also caused by its difficult financial situation and various private reinsurers involved in the discussions on the renewal of SACE BT's reinsurance have raised concerns about the situation of the company. SACE BT had registered significant losses in 2008 (around EUR 29,5 million). This weak situation entails that the risk on the reinsurance was higher(105). The behaviour of the reinsurers which participated in the reinsurance demonstrates that a private reinsurer would only take a limited part of such a risky reinsurance in the absence of a significantly higher fee. It would never accept to cover such a high percentage as 74 % and under same conditions as were required by reinsurers for much smaller percentage of reinsurance. A rational investor would have asked for a fee that takes into account the higher level of risk assumed(106). Thus, the fee charged by SACE should have been in fact higher than the fee charged by the five private reinsurers for the much smaller percentage of reinsurance(107). Therefore, the Commission calculates the aid amount in the second measure as the difference between the reinsurance fee that a private reinsurer would have charged for such a high portion of reinsurance and the one that was charged from SACE BT. In line with the Commission's case practice(108), the Commission considers that the fee for such a high portion of reinsurance and risk should have been at least 10 % higher than the fee charged by the private reinsurers for the smaller part of reinsurance and risk. For an amount of EUR 1,56 million paid by SACE BT to SACE, the aid amounts to EUR 156 000. Finally, the Commission notes that the allocation of such a high portion of reinsurance to one single company might have not been in compliance with the company's general principles on reinsurance, i.e. ‘
the number of participating reinsurers to the treaties shall be such as to ensure an appropriate allocation of risk
’(109). For the above reasons the Commission concludes that SACE did not act as a private reinsurer.
(129) As regards the question whether a parent company would have provided such a large share of reinsurance in a situation where its subsidiary would not be able to find on the market enough reinsurance at the proposed price, one has to note that such reinsurance contract increases the exposure of the parent company towards the operations of the subsidiary. In the present case, SACE was in 2009 in a situation where it needed a large recapitalisation and reinsurance. The decision to grant this measure should therefore be analysed in parallel with the granting of the third and fourth measures. Indeed, the second, third and fourth measures were all contemplated by SACE's Board of Directors already on 26 May 2009(110) in order to support SACE BT(111). As it will be concluded in the assessment of those measures, a private investor would not have proceeded with these recapitalisations but would have let the company go bankrupt. It has therefore to be concluded that a private parent company would not have proceeded with providing the second measure, which increases even more the exposure of the parent company to its subsidiary.
(130) Finally, as regards the question whether the reinsurance provided an advantage to SACE BT, as acknowledged by SACE (see recital 70), the measure allowed SACE BT to increase its credit insurance provision capacity and hence allowed it to subscribe more contracts than it would have been able to do otherwise. Alternatively, without this measure SACE BT would have had to support these risks on its balance sheet/putting its own capital more at risk or offer a higher premium to obtain that reinsurance, at least 10 % higher (see recital 128). Therefore, the measure allowed SACE BT to obtain reinsurance at a lower price, reinsurance which allowed it to subscribe more insurance than what it could have done without SACE's reinsurance or to bear less of risks on its own account.
(131) The Commission concludes that the second measure provided an advantage to SACE BT corresponding to the difference between the fee actually paid by SACE BT and that, at least 10 % higher, that a private reinsurer would have requested taking into consideration the higher level of risk assumed.

V.1.1.4.   

Presence of an advantage in the third and fourth measures

(132) In recital 107 of the opening decision, the Commission expressed its doubts on the possibility that a private economic operator would have invested the amount currently assessed in SACE BT. As acknowledged by the Italian authorities, the third and the fourth measures cover the needs of capital of SACE BT in order to cope with the effects of the financial crisis(112). In the document for discussion (
materiale per discussione
) in the SACE BT's Board of Directors of 31 March 2009 it is provided that SACE BT ‘
needs a recapitalisation (ricapitalizzazione) of up to EUR 70 million in order to constitute adequate assets to cover the reserves at the end of 2009
’(113). The same document provides that already at the end of the first semester of 2009 the assets were insufficient to cover the reserves, i.e. an amount of EUR 23 million was needed at the end of June 2009 and EUR 68 million at the end of 2009. The opening decision indicates that it seems that SACE BT was not in a position to cover the losses registered at the end of 2008 and its assets at the time were not sufficient to cover reserves. It seems that SACE BT could not have raised the capital injected into the company on the market since its expected profitability was insufficient. There is no evidence that SACE BT had a positive value at that time.
(133) In recital 108 of the opening decision, the Commission invited Italy to comment, whether the third measure was necessary to allow SACE BT to continue operating and, if so, what would be the estimated costs that could be incurred by SACE, if it were to sell or to liquidate SACE BT. The Commission noted that a parent company would have recapitalised its subsidiary, but only if there is a reasonable likelihood that the assisted undertaking will become profitable again(114). A market economy investor would not have injected additional capital into SACE BT, if in economic terms this was more costly than to liquidate the respective assets (e.g. by selling the respective investment).
(134) In recitals 111 and 117 of the opening decision, the Commission raised doubts on the compliance of the third and fourth measures with the MEIP. The Commission further provided that the two measures seemed to have conferred an advantage to SACE BT.
(135) The opening decision (recital 109) indicates that the plan available at the time of the investment plays a central role. The plan has a key significance because a private investor will provide fresh capital to a company with an earnings deficit only if he expects a return to a sufficient profitability level. Otherwise, the invested capital would only go towards repayment of the company's existing debt, without ensuring that it will begin to earn a profit again in the future(115). Without a compelling ‘restructuring’ plan, a rational private investor would not invest(116).
(136) The Commission noted that in the business plan for the period 2010-2011 SACE BT envisaged mainly measures to increase the market share and the expansion of the activity rather than measures to return to profitability, e.g. to cut costs and restructure the business model. SACE BT expected to increase its market share in the credit insurance and surety business market up to a target level of 15 % in 2011 and to become the second market player in the credit insurance by 2011. For 2009, SACE BT estimated that it would rank third or fourth in the credit insurance and surety business market. As for SACE BT's distribution network, the plan provides, inter alia, the assessment of possible opportunities for further acquisitions. Moreover, the business plan relies, inter alia, on exogenous factors like the improvement of the economic and market scenario and a progressive opening of the reinsurance market starting with 2011 rather than on internal changes.
(137) The elements submitted by Italy and SACE during the formal investigation procedure have not changed the Commission's initial assessment laid down in the opening decision.
(138) The Commission's position regarding the qualification of the third and the fourth measures as a capital increase (‘
aumenti di capitale
’) has not changed. Even though according to Italy the operation did not increase the amount of the share capital (‘
capitale sociale
’), the Commission notes that it influenced positively the shareholders' equity (‘
patrimonio netto
’), being a wider category than the share capital (‘
capitale sociale
’), by means of transfer from the parent company SACE to SACE BT's capital(117).
(139) According to SACE, the decisions to recapitalise SACE BT were taken in view of the expected return to profitability in 2011.
(140) However, the Commission recalls that, when it granted the third measure, SACE did not dispose of updated financial projections or a business plan taking into account the capital injection and the latest financial data. Therefore, SACE had no basis to expect SACE BT's return to profitability.
(141) The main document considered by SACE when granting the fourth measure consists of the business plan for 2010-2011. The Commission notes that this business plan was a very short document, which merely set out the negative outlook in the market and, with specific regard to SACE BT, only provided few main financial ratios and figures for 2010 and 2011. In particular, the business plan provided data illustrating that the market situation was worsening (the loss ratio was progressively deteriorating, increased by 71,4 % in 2008 as compared to 2007) and the losses amounted to approximately half of the turnover of the sector. In that context, the plan projected a significant improvement in SACE BT's credit insurance ratios so as to reach zero profitability in 2011 (see Table 5). However, it did not detail the changes to the pricing or how the reduction of costs would be achieved to that end.
(142) It has to be emphasised that the business plan for 2010-2011 only included a projection of zero profitability in 2011, while it did not provide any element indicating that the situation would improve after 2011, nor any estimation of future profitability of SACE BT after that date (in fact the possibility that the company would produce profits after 2011 was not even mentioned). Also, the stated objective in the plan was limited to stop generating the losses by the company and to further expand its market presence, without foreseeing any future profit. In that respect, the Commission considers that a prudent market investor would have required a reliable estimation of restoration of future profitability to adequate levels.
(143) It also appears from the minutes of the Board of Directors of SACE approving the third and fourth measures that it agreed to the capitalisation measures so as to cover the losses and to satisfy the regulatory requirements, thus allowing the company to continue the business. No consideration of the future profitability of the company was provided in those minutes. The Board did not take into consideration a potential liquidation of SACE BT, comparing a liquidation scenario with the chosen path to inject further capital into the company in difficulty. Hence, it did not require nor consider any estimation of liquidation costs and, therefore, was not in a position to conclude that the injection of capital would have led to a better economic outcome than the liquidation of the company.
(144) As a result, the Commission concludes that, when adopting those measures, SACE did not assess whether providing the additional capital was a more economically beneficial scenario for it as a shareholder than the liquidation of the subsidiary. Given the market circumstances and the absence of any profitability forecasts for SACE BT at the time, a prudent private market operator would not have proceeded with the investment without such consideration. For this reason alone, one can therefore conclude that SACE did not behave like a prudent private market operator and, therefore, the capital injections made with the third and fourth measure should be qualified as state aid.
(145) The Commission also adds, for the sake of completeness, that it is not in a position to support SACE's argument that the compliance with the regulatory capital requirements would have been sufficient to a prudent private market investor to inject further capital into a company. As provided in the Commission communication on the application of Articles 92 and 93 of the EEC Treaty (‘MEIP Communication’)(118), investors are often obliged by law to contribute with additional equity to firms whose capital base has been eroded by continuous losses to below a predetermined level. To answer Member States' claims that these capital injections cannot be considered as aid as they are merely fulfilling a legal obligation, the MEIP Communication provides that private investors faced with such a situation would consider all other options — including the liquidation or run-down(119) — and choose the one which is financially the most advantageous.
(146) In the present case, the Commission considers that SACE could have let SACE BT go bankrupt, as it was a limited liability company. SACE would not have to cover the liabilities of SACE BT. SACE is correct to argue that other considerations like public image(120) may be taken into account by private investors. The Court of Justice ruled in ENI/Lanerossi that a parent company's temporary absorption of losses generated by a subsidiary ‘which is experiencing temporary difficulties but is capable of becoming profitable again, possibly after a reorganization’, could be justified not only by the prospect of an indirect material benefit, but also by other considerations, i.e. the protection of public image of the group and the reorientation of its operations(121). However, the Court ruled that if there is no prospect of profitability, even in the long-term, then any capital infusions should be viewed as state aid(122). Consequently, as upheld by the case-law, the arguments have limited significance in connection with the application of the private investor test in the absence of any prediction, at the time of the capital injections, that SACE BT could produce profits after 2011, not even in the longer term.
(147) In addition, Italy and SACE did not provide any element to show and quantify the negative economic effects that the alleged deterioration of SACE's public image would produce for this company.
(148) The Commission also observes that the insurance activities of SACE are operated under a state guarantee. Consequently, the insured parties know that the state will ensure that they are paid any indemnification they are entitled to under those insurances. So the Commission fails to see why insured customers of SACE would be worried that a subsidiary of SACE which is not state guaranteed and has the form of a liability company is liquidated. Italy and SACE did not provide justification why these activities of SACE operated under the state guarantee would be affected.
(149) Moreover, the Commission considers that, since SACE operates its insurance activities with a state guarantee, they do not constitute market activities which a private operator could carry out (precisely, the guarantee on the insurance activities of SACE does not constitute aid because these activities are considered not to be offered by the market and therefore there is no distortion of competition). The Commission considers that, when assessing whether a private investor in the position of SACE would have let a subsidiary like SACE BT go bankrupt or recapitalise it, one cannot take into account the possible negative effect of the liquidation of SACE BT on these non-market activities carried out by SACE, since a private investor would never be in the position of carrying out such activities.
(150) As indicated, at the time when it took the third and the fourth measure SACE did not compare a liquidation scenario with the chosen path to inject further capital into SACE BT despite its difficulties. For the sake of completeness, in the paragraphs below the Commission will in any event show that, if SACE had made such a comparison, it would have realised that the liquidation of SACE BT would have been more convenient than injecting further 70 million of capital in SACE BT despite its difficulties.
(151) To determine whether SACE, as the only shareholder of SACE BT, was better off investing additional capital of EUR 70 million rather than liquidating SACE BT (running down its activities), one has to compare the expected cash flows, if any, to SACE as a shareholder in the liquidation (running down) scenario with those expected in the capital injection scenario. Based on the information submitted, Italy and SACE have not made at the time (nor
ex post
) the valuation of the equity stake in SACE BT in pre-injection or post-injection scenarios.
(152) The Commission observes that at the end of May 2009 and early July 2009, when the Board of SACE BT decided to grant the third and fourth measures, it was already expected that, on top of the large losses recorded in 2008 (EUR 29,5 million), SACE BT was estimated to generate further significant losses in 2009 (of EUR 53,4 million(123)), such that the remaining capital at the end of 2009 was expected to amount to EUR 24,2 million. In particular, at the end of first quarter 2009 (1Q2009) SACE BT's book value of equity (taking into account the losses recorded in that period of EUR 22,6 million) was of EUR 55 million and the expected losses for the whole year 2009 were of EUR 53,4 million. Hence, in a pre-injection scenario the expected book value of equity at the end of 2009 would amount to the difference between book value at 1Q2009, EUR 55 million, and the remainder of the expected losses for the year, i.e. EUR 30,8 million (EUR 53,4 million minus EUR 22,6 million), equalling EUR 24,2 million.
(153) In the post-injection scenario, the book value of the equity would be expected to be increased by the amount of the recapitalisations (EUR 70 million) and to amount to EUR 94,2 million.
(154) In that context, it has to be noted that in the liquidation scenario, shareholders are only entitled to the residual proceeds, if any remain after covering all liabilities of the company and all due costs of liquidation. The outcome of the liquidation depends on the value and saleability of the assets of the company.
(155) To make a very conservative assessment, the Commission considers the hypothesis that in the liquidation scenario SACE would not have recovered any of its capital investment in SACE BT.
(156) As a next step, in order to assess the relative attractiveness of the injection of EUR 70 million of capital in SACE BT compared to a liquidation scenario, it has to be assessed what was the value of the company (i.e. market value of a 100 % equity stake in the company) after this EUR 70 million injection.
(157) If the value of the company after the 2009 capital injections was equal or higher than EUR 70 million, then a private investor could have been inclined to proceed with this investment.
(158) Such value of the company depends on the estimation of the present value of future cash flows (cash flow stream) to the shareholder.
(159) In that respect, the Commission recalls that in the business plans and/or projections available at the time there was no expected stream of future profits which could demonstrate that the market value would be close to EUR 70 million. In addition, since the company was not profitable pre-crisis, one could not expect that, once the macroeconomic situation and the financial markets would normalise, the company would automatically return to adequate profitability. The Commission therefore concludes that, based on the absence of expected cash flow stream projected for SACE BT, there was no indication that the market value thereof after the implementation of third and fourth measures could be equal or higher than EUR 70 million. As a result, a prudent private investor would have preferred to let SACE BT go bankrupt (or sell it, if a buyer could be found) instead of proceeding with its recapitalisation. Hence, also this additional analysis shows that SACE, when granting the third and fourth measures, did not behave as a market economy investor.
(160) As a secondary argument, an investor may have used another indicator to value the company, such as the valuation method of multiplying a price-to-book multiple (P/B), derived from comparable companies the shares of which are traded on stock exchange, by the book value of the company.
(161) To the Commission's knowledge Euler-Hermes is the only European credit insurance company quoted in the stock exchange, and hence its P/B may be observed. It is a company of relatively low risk(124), since it proved to overcome the past downturns relatively well, was profitable in 2008 and 1Q2009 and even distributed dividends in 2008. Hence, the value of a higher risk company such as SACE BT would fall below the valuation resulting from applying P/B multiple of Euler-Hermes. P/B of Euler-Hermes at 1Q2009 was of around 0,60(125). Hence, applying this multiple to SACE BT expected book value at the end of 2009 of EUR 94,2 million, the value of the company would amount to EUR 56,52 million, if the risk profiles of the companies were comparable.
(162) However, the Commission notes that SACE BT was not profitable pre-crisis (contrary to its own business plan) and there was no business plan showing the possibility for it to return to profitability. As a result it can be considered a significantly riskier company than Euler-Hermes at the time, and hence the value of the company at the times of granting the measures would have been significantly lower than EUR 56,52 million.
(163) Furthermore, Italy also acknowledged that the market circumstances were such that the market valuation of the insurance companies at the times was highly depressed(126).
(164) In conclusion, similarly to the application of a valuation based on future cash flows, the application of the price to book valuation would also lead a private investor to conclude that it is better off with letting its subsidiary go bankrupt instead of investing an additional 70 million in it.
(165) Also as a result of the above analysis, it can therefore be concluded that SACE was worse off after granting the third and the fourth measures than in the liquidation scenario.
(166) The Commission further notes that, as stressed by SACE, several market investors injected further capital into their export credit subsidiary during the crisis. Given the high level of uncertainty and urgency, fully fledged projections may not have been immediately available to these investors at the time of their investments. However, the export credit companies which received recapitalisations from their shareholders had a track record of profitability pre-crisis, such that it was more likely that a return to profitability could be achieved. However, SACE BT had a track record of losses. In front of a subsidiary which was already loss making or just break-even in the years before the crisis (whereas its business plan anticipated a steady increase in profitability), a private investor would be more reluctant to inject a large amount of capital. It would verify whether there is any hope to make that company sufficiently profitable one day. The Commission observes that no financial forecasts showing the way to profitability were made in 2009. A prudent investor would not invest a large amount of additional capital into the company in such circumstances.
(167) SACE argues that SACE BT was still in a start-up phase and thus, it was more difficult for the company to cope with the effects of the financial crisis. First, the Commission observes that the year 2008, when the crisis broke out, was already the fourth year of activity for SACE BT. From the Commission's practice, a company is in principle considered as newly created for the first three years following the start of operations in its relevant field of activity(127). Secondly, even if it had been true that SACE BT was still in a start-up phase, it is not clear what effect this would have had on the application of the MEIP. Indeed, a private investor would still compare the expected market value of the company post-recapitalisation (based on its expected profitability) and compared it with the option of letting the company fail or sell it. Italy and SACE did not demonstrate that, because SACE BT would still be in a start-up phase, SACE could expect from it a higher profitability in the future. As indicated in recital 77, the only business plan available at the time just showed a return to break-even accounts in 2011. It did not show a return to profits.
(168) The Commission therefore concludes that the third and the fourth measures constitute an advantage to SACE BT, by providing it with capital it could not have found on the market. This capital allowed the company to survive despite the lack of projections indicating that it would produce profits, not even in the long-term.

V.1.2.   

Imputability and State resources

(169) In recitals 73-78 of the opening decision, the Commission applied the ‘Stardust Marine’(128) indicators to prove the imputability of the measure, taking into consideration that SACE is fully owned by the State. According to settled case-law (see, in particular, the
Stardust Marine
judgment), even if the State is in a position to control a public undertaking and to exercise a dominant influence over its operations, actual exercise of that control in a particular case cannot be automatically presumed. Consequently, it is necessary to determine whether the public authorities must be regarded as having been involved in any way in the adoption of the measures at stake.
(170) Nonetheless, according to the
Stardust Marine
judgment:
‘53.
It cannot be demanded that it be demonstrated, on the basis of a precise inquiry, that in the particular case the public authorities specifically incited the public undertaking to take the aid measures in question. In the first place, having regard to the fact that relations between the State and public undertakings are close, there is a real risk that State aid may be granted through the intermediary of those undertakings in a non-transparent way and in breach of the rules on State aid laid down by the Treaty.
54.
Moreover, it will, as a general rule, be very difficult for a third party, precisely because of the privileged relations existing between the State and a public undertaking, to demonstrate in a particular case that aid measures taken by such an undertaking were in fact adopted on the instructions of the public authorities.
55.
For those reasons, it must be accepted that the imputability to the State of an aid measure taken by a public undertaking may be inferred from a set of indicators arising from the circumstances of the case and the context in which that measure was taken.’
(171) Subsequently, the Court has indicated the following indicators allowing to infer the imputability to the State of a measure taken by a public undertaking: (i) the fact that the undertaking in question could not take the contested decision without taking account of the requirements of the public authorities; (ii) the fact that, apart from factors of an organic nature which linked the public undertakings to the State, a public undertaking, through the intermediary of which aid had been granted, had to take account of directives issued by a central government body, i.e. Comitato Interministeriale per la Programmazione Economica (CIPE); (iii) integration of the public undertaking to the structures of the public administration of the State; (iv) the nature of the undertaking's activities and whether such activities are exercised out on the market in normal conditions of competition with private operators; (v) the legal status of the undertaking (in the sense of its being subject to public law or ordinary company law); (vi) the intensity of the supervision exercised by the public authorities over the management of the undertaking, or (vii) any other indicator showing, in the particular case, an involvement by the public authorities in the adoption of a measure or
the unlikelihood of their not being involved, having regard also to the compass of the measure
, its content or the conditions which it contains.
(172) The Commission further concluded in recital 79 of the opening decision that it was highly unlikely that the measures under investigation had been adopted without any State involvement.
(173) In reply to the opening decision, Italy and SACE maintain that none of the four measures is imputable to the State as the decisions were taken by SACE acting in complete independence from the State. Italy provided additional factual elements and justification arguing that the measures are not imputable to the State.
(174) To assess the case-law invoked by Italy, it has to be noted that in the
Olympic Airways
case, the Commission decision mentioned the ‘Stardust Marine’ criteria but did not really apply them. The Court observed that in fact the Commission simply assumed the measure was attributable to the Greek State, without mentioning any reasons which might support its assumption(129). The Court therefore found the Commission's reasoning insufficient to establish imputability to the case, not that the measure was in itself not imputable.
(175) As regards the SIC-RTP judgment(130), evoked by the Italian authorities, the Commission notes that in that judgment the CFI confirmed the Commission's assessment that certain contested decisions of the formerly State owned company Portugal Telecom (consisting in the acceptance of late payments of the network fee by the public broadcaster RTP) were not imputable to the State. However, the CFI judgment was based on the specific circumstances of that case. In particular, in the SIC-RTP case the CFI noted — inter alia — that the applicant did not contest the Commission's assessment that the payment facilities were mainly caused by a dispute between RTP and Portugal Telecom as to the level of the network fee(131). Moreover, the CFI noted that the Commission had found, without being contested by the applicant, that Portugal Telecom's behaviour did not change after its privatisation(132). It is therefore clear that the CFI assessment concerned a particular situation which was very different from that of the present decision.
(176) The Commission found further evidence on the imputability of the measures in the additional documents submitted by Italy and SACE. Similar to the opening decision, the ‘Stardust Marine’ indicators are applied in the present decision in order to prove the imputability of the second, third and fourth measures.
(177) Even though SACE is not integrated in the public administration and does not exercise official authority, the Commission considers that the following general indicators demonstrate imputability of measures granted by SACE to the State(133):
(a) All members of SACE's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) are nominated on a proposal of the Italian State, according to Article 6(2) of Legislative Decree No 269/2003(134).
(b) SACE does not exercise its activities ‘on the market in normal conditions of competition with private operators’:
(i) The mission of SACE in 2004 was (and, to this day, continues to be) to maintain and promote the competitiveness of the Italian economy and it essentially covers non-marketable risks within the meaning of the Export-credit Communication (i.e. it operated in the field, which is not considered to be subject to normal conditions of market competition).
(ii) The activity of SACE has always benefited of a State guarantee, unlike allowed under the state aid rules for other public undertakings operating in competition with private market operators.
(iii) The financial statements of SACE are subject to the control of the Court of Auditors and the Ministry of Economy and Finance has to present annual reports to the Italian Parliament as regards its activity.
(iv) Regarding the influence of the State on the allocation of SACE's resources, the CIPE has to deliberate every year not later than on 30 June on the financial projections as well as financial needs related to certain risks and to define global limits for the non-marketable risks to be assumed by SACE, distinctly for the guarantees of the duration inferior and superior than 24 months(135).
(c) The Statutes of SACE BT provide that besides the legal provisions regularly applying to private insurance companies, SACE BT is also subject to the provision of a law(136) stating that in case a new legal entity is created to provide cover for marketable risks, SACE should hold not less than 30 % of its capital. It would thus appear that even after the constitution of SACE BT the continuous support to it (second, third and fourth measures) was influenced by the Italian State to the extent that the above mentioned legislative provision excluded that such risks be run down and/or sold in their entirety to a market operator(137).
(178) In addition to the general indicators provided in recital 177, other indicators specific to the conditions of granting the second, third and fourth measures can be identified:
(a) Two of the four members (‘Consiglieri’) of the Board of Directors of SACE (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) had management positions in the Italian administration(138), i.e. the former Ministry of Foreign Trade (the current Ministry for Economic Development) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, at the time when the second, third and fourth measures were granted. From this position, the member of SACE's Board of Directors, also having a management position in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Minister Plenipotentiary, Director-General for Multilateral Economic and Financial Cooperation, Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs), stated in SACE's meeting of the Board of Directors of 1 April 2009 that a decrease of the insurance capacity should not occur, ‘nor in the non-marketable sector, nor for the marketable risks’(139). Moreover, the member of SACE's Board of Directors, also having a management position in the Ministry of Foreign Trade (the current Ministry for Economic Development — Director of the General Division for the internationalisation policy of the Ministry for Foreign Trade), stated in the same meeting of SACE's Board of Directors of 1 April 2009 that ‘the support provided to the system [of Italian enterprises] by the businesses carried out by SACE is not always clearly perceived externally, which coincides, also, with the importance of supporting SACE BT, also through its recapitalisation’(140).
(b) The role of the parent company, SACE, and the other companies of the group, thus includingSACE BT, was recognised as an important one in the recovery of the Italian economy. In its meeting of 1 April 2009, SACE's Board of Directors recognised the importance of supporting SACE BT, whereby SACE Group fulfils its institutional function of sustaining the Italian companies(141). This position was repeated in the press release of 1 April 2009 on the publication of the consolidated results of SACE Group(142) where it was stated that: ‘The Board of Directors stressed
the SACE Group's role in supporting the Italian economy
. This role is of particular strategic importance in the current economic and financial situation, which is not merely a typical business cycle downturn. The Board is confident that SACE's financial measures and expertise can make
a major contribution to the recovery of the Italian economy
’. Such statements confirm the above-stated conclusion that the nature of SACE's activities is not purely profit oriented and on normal conditions of market competition(143). In this way, SACE distinguishes from other State owned companies which have purely commercial objectives, such as to solely generate the return on equity and distribute the generated profits through dividends. This reinforces the conclusion that SACE has been used by the State as an instrument to discharge its main mission of promoting economic development of the country. Similarly, from the minutes of SACE's Board of Directors of 26 May 2009, when the Board stated its intentions to support SACE BT through the second, third and fourth measure, it appears that such support was motivated also by SACE BT's role of contributing to the development of Italian enterprises(144). Furthermore, it appears that the measures taken during the financial crisis in support of SACE BT may also relate to the group's role in supporting the recovery of the Italian economy.
(c) There are sufficient elements to claim that the mission of SACE BT goes beyond the goals of a private economic operator. Such mission was also recognised in the minutes of the meeting of SACE BT's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) of 27 May 2009 as regards the discussions on the revised budget of SACE BT for 2009, where a recapitalisation of EUR 70 million was needed in order to comply with the solvability requirements: ‘[…]’(145) (146).
(179) As regards the second measure, SACE's Risk Management division, in a note dated 19 March 2009(147) (which had as objective to verify if the estimated profitability of SACE resulting from the reinsurance contract was in line with the risks taken), gave a favourable opinion to SACE's management regarding the company's participation in the reinsurance contract. In its meeting of 1 April 2009, SACE's Board of Directors approved the participation of SACE into SACE BT's Excess Loss contract for the amount not covered by the market reinsurers and up to a potential loss of EUR 48 million, in the same conditions like the ones accepted by the private reinsurers. This measure in favour of SACE BT would help the company in maintaining its insurance capacity, in particular for small and medium-sized enterprises(148).
(180) In conclusion, the assessment provided by the Commission in recitals 177, 178 and 179 demonstrates that SACE is strictly linked to the Italian public authorities and it is used to implement tasks in economic matters that traditionally fall within the responsibility of the former. Considering also the economic and policy significance of the measures at stake and the persistent tight links between the State and SACE, the Commission considers that there are enough elements to consider the second measure, the third measure and the fourth measure as imputable to the State.

V.1.3.   

Selectivity

(181) As regards the
second measure
, the Commission takes note that Italy submitted that SACE had the possibility to conclude reinsurance and co-insurance contracts with other private insurers than SACE BT, according to SACE's by-laws(149). However, despite that provision, Italy did not demonstrate that SACE could have offered reinsurance to all private insurers under the same conditions. In any event, it has been demonstrated that it concluded a reinsurance contract only with SACE BT and at terms that did not correspond to market conditions. There is therefore no doubt that this specific measure concerning SACE BT is selective
(182) As regards the
third measure
, the operation envisaged only one company, SACE BT. Consequently, the measure is selective.
(183) As regards the
fourth measure
, the operation envisaged only one company, SACE BT. Consequently, the measure is selective.

V.1.4.   

Distortion of competition

(184) As regards the
second measure
, it allowed SACE BT to subscribe more insurance than what it could have done without SACE's reinsurance or to bear less of risks on its own account. The Commission therefore concludes that the second measure distorted competition(150).
(185) Regarding the
third and the fourth measures
, point 3.2 of the Export-credit Communication states that the provision of capital by the State granted to certain enterprises which involve State aid if the latter did not act as a private investor in a market economy, distorts competition(151). The Commission has serious doubts whether SACE BT's activity could have continued under normal conditions without the measures taken by SACE. It is likely that without that capital SACE BT could not have fulfilled its regulatory capital requirements and would have been insolvent. At the very least, without the State capital injection, SACE BT would have had to write much less new insurance. It would have had to severely reduce its market presence. However, as illustrated in Table 6, it significantly expanded its market presence. Thus also the third and fourth measures distorted competition.

V.1.5.   

Effect on trade

(186) The export credit insurance market and other insurance services in which SACE BT is active are open to trade between Member States and many operators from different Member States are active in the Union. In Italy, SACE BT is in competition with subsidiaries of foreign firms (see Table 6).
Table 6
SACE BT's position in the Italian credit insurance and surety business market (%)

 

 

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

1.

Gruppo Allianz

27,3

27,1

25,5

23,3

20,8

2.

Coface Assicurazioni

14,2

13,7

13,5

13,7

15,9

3.

Atradius

13,4

12,6

11,0

8,8

7,7

4.

Gruppo Fondiaria-SAI

8,5

8,8

9,1

9,3

9,7

5.

Gruppo Generali(152)

10,3

8,6

8,4

9,0

8,8

6.

Gruppo SACE BT

4,7

6,4

8,2

9,0

8,6

7.

Gruppo Unipol (UGF)

4,4

4,4

4,4

4,3

4,3

8.

Gruppo Reale Mutua

4,4

4,3

4,3

3,9

4,3

9.

Gruppo Zurich Italia(152)

3,1

2,7

3,1

2,9

2,7

10.

Others

9,6

11,3

12,5

15,7

17,2

(187) As a consequence, and in line with point 3.2 of the Export-credit Communication, any advantage provided to the company has an effect on trade.

V.1.6.   

Application of the Commission Regulation (EC) No 1998/2006 of 15 December 2006 on the application of Articles 87 and 88 of the EC Treaty to de minimis aid (‘de minimis aid Regulation’)

(153)

(188) Regulation (EC) No 1998/2006 defines a threshold under which aid measures are deemed not to meet all the criteria of Article 107(1) of the Treaty and therefore do not fall under the notification procedure provided for in Article 108(3) of the Treaty. In light of the amounts of aid granted to SACE BT, the threshold of EUR 200 000 provided in
de minimis
Regulation would not be exceeded only for the second measure. In recital 128 the Commission has calculated that the aid in the second measure amounts to EUR 156 000.
(189) However, Italy did not invoke Regulation (EC) No 1998/2006 and did not prove that, at the time of granting the second measure, SACE BT met the conditions specified in that regulation.
(190) Moreover, Regulation (EC) No 1998/2006 does not apply to undertakings in difficulty. In this respect, Italy did not consider SACE BT as an undertaking in difficulty in line with the Rescuing and Restructuring Guidelines(154). However, Italy has not provided enough evidence to support this position. As provided in the Rescuing and Restructuring Guidelines, increasing losses, excess capacity and falling or nil net asset value are among the usual signs of a firm being in difficulty. SACE BT registered significant losses both in 2008 (around EUR 29,5 million) and in 2009 (around EUR 34 million) which triggered the intervention of its shareholder with a significant recapitalisation. Moreover, as submitted by Italy, already at the end of the first semester of 2009 the assets were insufficient to cover the reserves, i.e. an amount of EUR 23 million was needed at the end of June 2009 and EUR 68 million at the end of 2009(155).
(191) Secondly, even if SACE BT were to be eligible for the
de minimis
aid, prior to granting such aid, Italy should have obtained a declaration from SACE BT about any other
de minimis
aid received during the previous two fiscal years and the current fiscal year(156). In addition, if Italy had intended to grant
de minimis
aid to SACE BT, it should have informed SACE BT in writing of the prospective amount of aid (expressed as gross grant equivalent) and of its
de minimis
character. Italy has not provided the Commission with such documents.
(192) Considering all the above, the Commission cannot consider the second measure as
de minimis
aid.

V.1.7.   

Conclusion on the existence of State aid

(193) In view of the above, the Commission concludes that the second, third and fourth measures constitute State aid.

V. 2.   QUALIFICATION AS NEW AID OR EXISTING AID

(194) The Commission considers that the second, third and fourth measures cannot be considered being granted before the acceptance of the Export-credit Communication by Italy and, hence, must be qualified as new aid.
(195) More specifically, Italy accepted the recommendations of the Export-credit Communication of 1997 at the latest on 14 September 2001 when it accepted the version of the Export-credit Communication of 2001 (see recital 5 of the opening decision). As the second, third and fourth measures have been granted after that date, those measures are qualified as new aid.
(196) Therefore, they are considered as unlawful aid, since Italy has not notified them to the Commission before their implementation in 2009.

V. 3.   COMPATIBILITY OF THE POTENTIAL AID WITH THE INTERNAL MARKET

(197) As it was found in the above section that the second, third and fourth measure constitute State aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty, their compatibility with the internal market should be assessed.

V.3.1.   

Legal basis for the assessment of compatibility

(198) As Italy and SACE considered the measures not to constitute aid, they did not provide reasoning and evidence on how the measures would meet compatibility conditions. As stated in recital 81, SACE invoked the Recapitalisation Communication and the Restructuring Communication(157) as possible compatibility grounds for the third and fourth measures. However, neither Italy, nor SACE substantiated their arguments that the conditions of those Communications would be fulfilled.
(199) The Commission recalls that, according to points 3.2 and 4.1 of the Export-credit Communication, the exemptions provided for in Article 107(2) and (3) of the Treaty to the prohibition laid down in Article 107(1) do not apply to marketable risks (‘State aid […] enjoyed by public supported export-credit insurers for the marketable risks […] may distort competition and would therefore be ineligible for exemption under the State aid rules of the Treaty’). Therefore no grounds for compatibility can normally be found for aid in support of credit insurers operating in the area of marketable risks.
(200) Nevertheless, the Commission will demonstrate that the three aid measures would in any event not meet any of the conditions to be found compatible under Article 107(3) of the Treaty.

V.3.2.   

Compatibility under the Community Guidelines on State aid for rescuing and restructuring undertakings in difficulty (‘the Rescue and Restructuring Guidelines’)

(158)

(201) The Rescue and Restructuring Guidelines define rescue aid as a short-term aid, granted in principle for a period of no longer than six months to give the beneficiary the necessary breathing space to develop a detailed restructuring or liquidation plan. By its nature, rescue aid is temporary and reversible. Rescue aid consists usually of loan guarantees or loans granted to an ailing firm while its future is being assessed.
(202) As regards the possibility to find the second measure compatible as rescue aid, the Commission notes that the second measure does not present the characteristics of a liquidity support nor had as primary objective to keep SACE BT afloat. Therefore, the second measure cannot be qualified as rescue aid. As regards the third and fourth measures, they cannot be qualified as rescue aid since they are a permanent and irreversible capital injection.
(203) Under the Rescue and Restructuring Guidelines, the beneficiaries of restructuring aid:
(a) have to show that they can achieve long-term viability without State aid within a reasonable period of time;
(b) need to demonstrate that they would contribute at least 50 % of the costs of restructuring for large firms (or less in the case of small or medium-sized enterprises) from their own resources.
(c) have to provide measures to address the distortions of competition caused by the aid, in particular through capacity reductions and through divestments going beyond those required to restore viability.
(204) However, the Commission notes that the second, third and fourth aid measures do not fulfil such conditions to be found compatible as restructuring aid under the Rescue and Restructuring Guidelines. It observes for instance the following problems:
(a) Firstly, the business plan of 2009 for 2010-2011 does not demonstrate that it would lead to long-term market-conform profitability of SACE BT (see sections V.1.1.3, V.1.1.4 and V.3.4 assessment);
(b) Second, there was no measure to limit distortion of competition. On the contrary, according to Italy, SACE BT planned to dramatically increase its market presence up to […] % market share in 2011 in the credit insurance and surety business market and to become the […] market player in the credit insurance by 2011.

V.3.3.   

Compatibility under the Export-credit Communication and the Temporary Framework

(205) As the second, third and fourth measures have been unlawfully granted in 2009, in accordance with the Commission notice on the determination of the applicable rules for the assessment of unlawful State aid(159), the Commission is assessing their compatibility according to the provisions of the Export-credit Communication applicable at that time (i.e. the 1997 Export-credit Communication, subsequently amended and prolonged in 2001(160), 2004(161) and 2005(162))(163).
(206) Under point 4(2) of the Export-credit Communication, the Member States were requested to amend their export-credit insurance systems for marketable risks in such a way that the granting of certain types of State aid to public or publicly supported export-credit insurers in respect of such risks is ended within one year of the publication of this Communication. Among the prohibited measures mentioned in point 4(2)(d) of the Export-credit Communication is ‘
award of aid or provisions of capital or other forms of finance in circumstances in which a private investor acting under normal market conditions would not invest in the company or on terms a private investor would not accept
’. Therefore, the third and the fourth measures, consisting in recapitalisation, are not compatible under the Export-credit Communication. As the Temporary Framework for State aid measures to support access to finance in the current financial and economic crisis(164), applicable at the time when the measures were granted, does not cover the public provisions of capital, the third and the fourth measures cannot be found compatible under that legislative framework.
(207) As regards the
second measure
, in recital 142 of the opening decision, the Commission expressed its doubts on the compatibility of that measure with the Export-credit Communication and the Temporary Framework.
(208) The escape clause provided in the Export-credit Communication (reiterated in the Temporary Framework) aims at addressing temporary lack of insurance coverage available to exporters. It thus allows for the State supported insurance or reinsurance to be provided in line with the State aid rules during the crisis subject to the following: a Member State should demonstrate the lack of coverage in the market for the provision of short-term export-credit insurance to the exporters by providing sufficient evidence of the unavailability of cover for the risk in the private insurance market, the scheme is open to all operators and the State charges a price in line with the one that would be charged by private operators for the risks covered (in case practice this provision was interpreted that the State by covering residual risk should apply a higher fee).
(209) First, in order for Italy to comply with the escape clause, the Commission provided that Italy should submit the respective evidence. However, Italy decided not to make use of the escape clause. SACE replied that it did not find relevant the request of the Commission to submit information that might prove lack of coverage on the market for exporters.
(210) Second, Italy and SACE repeated their position that the provision of reinsurance by SACE was open to all market operators, as stipulated in the by-laws of SACE. In this case, SACE intervened by providing reinsurance coverage in favour of SACE BT, an insurer, and allegedly available to other private insurers. However, we have no evidence that there was lack of coverage in the market for the provision of short-term export-credit insurance to the exporters. As the limited availability of cover would seem to have affected also other operators in the market, the Commission does not have evidence whether other operators than SACE BT had also difficulties to obtain reinsurance cover on the market and, if so, whether they could obtain reinsurance cover from SACE under the same conditions as well. In practice, none of the operators requested this. Without this information, the Commission cannot conclude that the measure is proportional to the objective, i.e. to remedy the serious disturbance in the economy of Italy. It has to be therefore concluded that, instead of applying a measure opened to all operators, Italy implemented a selective measure in favour of one operator, SACE BT.
(211) Third, as regards the premium charged, as indicated previously, SACE did not charge a higher price but a price equal to the private reinsurers, whilst it assumed a higher risk (because residual and much larger) that the market participants were not ready to insure, given the situation on the market and SACE BT's financial situation.
(212) Finally, the Commission observes that the aid amount calculated for the second measure, i.e. EUR 156 000, cannot be declared compatible with the internal market on the basis of the conditions provided in point 4.2.2 of the Temporary Framework because the second measure was not granted in the form of a scheme and because there was no declaration on
de minimis
aid.
(213) In conclusion, the aid as it was granted under the second measure is not in line with the provisions of the Export-credit Communication and the Temporary Framework.

V.3.4.   

Compatibility under the Recapitalisation Communication and the Restructuring Communication

(214) In recital 144 of the opening decision, the Commission raised doubts on the compatibility of the third and fourth measures with the Recapitalisation Communication and the Restructuring Communication for the financial sector during the crisis. As the second measure was also granted during the financial crisis, the Commission will also assess its compatibility under this legal framework.
(215) As following Italy's and SACE's comments to the opening decision the Commission found the submitted information still insufficient to allow for a complete assessment of the measures as potential restructuring aid, in February 2012 the Commission offered Italy the possibility to provide additional elements on potential compatibility ground, by submitting a fully-fledged restructuring plan, in line with the Restructuring Communication. The Commission's letter set out the main elements that the restructuring plan should include with references to the relevant points of the Restructuring Communication.
(216) The Commission found that the documents submitted by Italy included only a compilation of internal documents of SACE which aimed at reiterating Italy's position that the three measures implemented in 2009 are not imputable to the State and comply with the MEIP.
(217) The Commission notes that, at the time the three measures were granted, Italy did not envisage the possibility to submit a restructuring plan to the Commission according to the requirements of the Restructuring Communication. Italy argues that such restructuring measures were not either requested by the national supervisory authority, ISVAP.
(218) According to point 10 of the Restructuring Communication, the restructuring plan should identify the difficulties and weaknesses of the aid recipient and outline how the proposed restructuring measures remedy the beneficiary's problems. In this respect, Italy argues that SACE BT's crisis was not caused by internal processes, changes in demand or other factors that would impose a deep rethinking of the business model and a subsequent restructuring, but rather by the significant increase of claims triggered by the crisis. The Commission does not find this information sufficient, in particular because SACE BT suffered severe losses in 2008 and 2009. Also, private reinsurers have raised concerns regarding the situation of the company when refusing to participate in the reinsurance coverage of SACE BT for 2009. Moreover, SACE BT had not succeeded to become profitable in its first years of operation (2005-2007) contrary to the forecasts of the business plan. This demonstrates that the difficulties encountered by SACE BT were not only triggered by the financial crisis, but also by its own weaknesses.
(219) As regards the restoration of long-term viability, the Commission notes that starting with 2009 SACE BT was subject to some transformations in the organisation, management and business processes. Among the measures taken to improve its situation, SACE BT increased premiums, reduced costs, changed its management. Moreover, SACE BT sold its participation in KUP on 25 February 2009.
(220) However, the Commission considers that these measures were insufficient to expect a restoration of SACE BT's long-term viability.
(221) The projections done at the time in the business plan for 2010-2011, approved on 4 August 2009 (when the fourth measure was implemented), for solely two years ahead showed break-even in the second projected year 2011, but not a return to profitability. There was therefore no evidence of possibility to achieve appropriate profitability within a reasonably short period, in principle, not exceeding five years, i.e. not later than by the end of 2014. Moreover, the underlying assumptions should have been explained and stress-tested. Italy did not submit information in this respect.
(222) Italy submitted an update of the business plan for 2011-2013, approved on 24 November 2011, i.e. two years after the measures had been granted. SACE BT's objective of gradually improving profitability (ROE) so as to reach […], as stated by the company's Board of Directors of 24 November 2011, was not supported by sufficiently detailed and robust financial projections as required in the Restructuring Communication. As per the financial projections as of end-2011, SACE BT expects to achieve a pre-tax ROE of only […] % in 2013, which correspond to a (post tax) ROE of […] %. The latter is manifestly below the cost of capital previously estimated by Italy to be of around [5-10] %.
(223) In line with points 22-23 of the Restructuring Communication, the restructuring plan should have demonstrated that the aid granted is limited to the minimum necessary, i.e. the aid restores viability of SACE BT, but does not allow it to expand in the new markets or market segments. On the contrary, according to the submitted data, during the crisis, SACE BT slightly increased its market presence in the credit and surety (‘
cauzioni
’) market in Italy, moving from sixth position in 2008 to fifth in 2010 (at the same time, for instance, Atradius reduced its market presence from third position to sixth) (see Table 6).
(224) In short, the basic elements of a restructuring plan, such as identification of the difficulties, viability under base case and stressed scenario, limitation of the aid to the minimum necessary and compensatory measures are entirely missing.
(225) In conclusion, even if the measures submitted by Italy and the adjusted business plan for 2011-2013 were to be accepted as a restructuring plan, they do not fulfil the restructuring plan requirements of the Restructuring Communication.
(226) As regards the Recapitalisation Communication, it defines the terms which a recapitalisation instrument has to comply with. If these terms are complied with, the aid can be temporarily approved. In order to be definitively approved, such recapitalisation aid has to be accompanied by a restructuring plan complying with the Restructuring Communication. However, no plan complying with the Restructuring Communication existed. Consequently, it is not necessary to assess whether the terms of the third and fourth measures comply with the Recapitalisation Communication since in any event they could not be found definitively compatible.

V.3.5.   

Conclusion on compatibility

(227) The Commission did not find any grounds for the compatibility of the second, third and fourth measures. The Commission concludes that Italy did not use the opportunity to provide the needed elements to claim the aid granted under the second, third and fourth measures as compatible restructuring aid. The submitted documents do not meet the requirements of the Restructuring Communication as the cumulative requirements for compatibility of restructuring aid, i.e. establishment of long-term viability, limitation of the aid to the minimum necessary and measures to limit distortions of competition, are not met.

VI.   

CONCLUSION

(228) The Commission finds that the initial capital allocation of EUR 100 million in the form of share capital and the capital contribution into reserves (so-called ‘Fondo di organizzazione’) in the amount of EUR 5,8 million by SACE for the establishment of SACE BT in 2004 (first measure) did not confer an advantage to SACE BT and thus do not constitute State aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty.
(229) The Commission finds that Italy has unlawfully implemented the aid granted under the second, third and fourth measure in breach of Article 108(3) of the Treaty and concludes that the aid has to be recovered,
HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION:

Article 1

The initial capital allocation of EUR 105,8 million from SACE for the establishment of SACE BT in 2004 which included the share capital paid up in full by SACE amounting to EUR 100 million and SACE's contribution of EUR 5,8 million to SACE BT's reserves (‘Fondo di Organizzazione’) does not constitute aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) of the Treaty.

Article 2

The 74,15 % Excess of loss reinsurance provided by SACE on 5 June 2009 in favour of SACE BT contains aid, which has been put into effect in breach of Article 108(3) of the Treaty and which is incompatible with the internal market.
The aid element within the measure corresponds to the difference between the reinsurance fee that a private reinsurer would have charged for such a high portion of reinsurance and the one that was charged from SACE BT. In line with the Commission's case practice(165), the Commission considers that the fee for such a high portion of reinsurance and risk should have been at least 10 % higher than the fee charged by the private reinsurers for the smaller part of reinsurance and risk. For an amount of EUR 1,56 million paid by SACE BT to SACE, the aid to recover amounts to EUR 156 000.

Article 3

The recapitalisation of SACE BT carried out on 18 June 2009 in the form of a transfer of EUR 29 million to cover SACE BT's losses registered in 2008 constitutes aid, which has been put into effect in breach of Article 108(3) of the Treaty and which is incompatible with the internal market.

Article 4

The recapitalisation of SACE BT carried out on 4 August 2009 when the Ordinary Assembly of SACE BT's Shareholders approved the transfer of the amount of EUR 41 million from SACE into the capital account of SACE BT (‘
versamento in conto capitale
’) constitutes aid, which has been put into effect in breach of Article 108(3) of the Treaty and which is incompatible with the internal market.

Article 5

1.   Italyshall recover from SACE BT the incompatible aid such as defined in Articles 2, 3 and 4.
2.   The sums to be recovered shall bear interest from the date on which they were put at the disposal of SACE BT until their actual recovery, namely: EUR 156 000 as of 5 June 2009 (Article 2), EUR 29 million as of 18 June 2009 (Article 3) and EUR 41 million as of 4 August 2009 (Article 4).
3.   The interest shall be calculated on a compound basis in accordance with Chapter V of Regulation (EC) No 794/2004(166).
4.   Recovery of the aid shall be immediate and effective.
5.   Italy shall ensure that this Decision is implemented within four months following the date of notification of this Decision.

Article 6

1.   Within two months following notification of this Decision, Italy shall submit the following information:
(a) the total amount (principal and recovery interests) to be recovered from SACE BT;
(b) a detailed description of the measures already taken and planned to comply with this Decision;
(c) documents demonstrating that SACE BT has been ordered to repay the aid.
2.   Italy shall keep the Commission informed of the progress of the national measures taken to implement this Decision until recovery of the aid referred to in Articles 2, 3 and 4 has been completed. It shall immediately submit, on simple request by the Commission, information on the measures already taken and planned to comply with this Decision. It shall also provide detailed information concerning the amounts of aid and recovery interest already recovered from SACE BT.

Article 7

This Decision is addressed to the Italian Republic.
Done at Brussels, 20 March 2013.
For the Commission
Joaquín ALMUNIA
Vice-President
(1)  
OJ C 177, 17.6.2011, p. 6
.
(2)  Cf. footnote 1.
(3)  An advanced copy in English was sent on 4 January 2012.
(4)  An advanced copy in English was sent on 2 February 2012.
(5)  Marketable risks are defined following two criteria: (i) geography (location of the debtor in the EU and/or OECD area), and (ii) duration (risk period of less than two years).
(6)  
OJ C 281, 17.9.1997, p. 4
. Starting with 1 January 2013, the Commission applies the new Communication on short-term export-credit insurance published on 19 December 2012 (
OJ C 392, 19.12.2012, p. 1
).
(7)  It enabled the establishment of the Institute for external trade insurance services — SACE.
(8)  
OJ C 217, 2.8.2001, p. 2
.
(9)  The usage of separate accounting until SACE's marketable risks insurance had been established was already envisaged by SACE on 3 December 2003, during the discussions in the context of the preparation of the initial business plan. See p. 13 of Annex No 11 to the submission of Italy of 5 March 2012.
(10)  See p. 68 of the 2004 Annual Report available online at: http://www.sace.it/GruppoSACE/export/sites/default/download/ar_bilanci/AR_e_bilanci/annual_report2004.pdf
(11)  SACE, Annual Report, 2004.
(12)  See Annexes 5 and 6 to the Notes (‘Nota Integrativa’) to SACE's Financial Accounts of 2004 illustrating the financial relations between SACE and its controlled entities. These financial accounts illustrate the incremental increase of SACE BT's capital through the funds provided by SACE in the year 2004 (EUR 100 million increase in social capital and EUR 5,8 million as other increases).
(13)  SACE BT's losses amounting EUR 152 087 (at the end of 2004) and EUR 1 573 090 (at the end of 2005) were covered from the Organisational Fund (Fondo di organizzazione).
(14)  For 2005, 2006 and 2007 it was considered that the risks in the OECD countries are entirely marketable, while those in the non-OECD countries — non-marketable.
Source:
Submissions of Italy, SACE and SACE BT Financial statements.
(15)  On 14 January 2009, SACE announced the incorporation of SACE Surety into SACE BT. The merger was authorised by ISVAP in December 2008. See SACE Annual Report, 2008.
(16)  See Annex No 14 — ISVAP: Minutes of the inspection findings at SACE BT, 11 October 2010 (Verbale degli accertamenti ispettivi effettuati presso SACE BT, 11.10.2010), p. 11, submission of Italy of 5 March 2012.
(17)  Information available on the website of SACE.
(18)  An insurer's underwriting performance is measured in its combined ratio which is the ratio of losses and expenses to insurance premiums. A combined ratio of less than 100 per cent indicates underwriting profitability, while anything over 100 indicates an underwriting loss. A company with a combined ratio over 100 % may nevertheless remain profitable due to investment earnings. In non-life insurance segment and notably in the case of credit insurance, a combined ratio is expected to be lower than 100 per cent.
(19)  The capital investment into SACE BT of EUR 105,8 million was recorded in the annual accounts of SACE for 2004 (as investments in the controlled entities).
(20)  The reinsurance structure for the marketable risks of SACE BT, as approved by its Board of Directors on 22 April 2008 includes a quota share reinsurance and an excess of loss reinsurance (See Annex No 14 — ISVAP: Minutes of the inspection findings at SACE BT, 11 October 2010 (Verbale degli accertamenti ispettivi effettuati presso SACE BT, 11.10.2010), p. 55, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012). The quota share reinsurance is a form of reinsurance in which the ceding insurer cedes an agreed-on percentage of every risk it insures that falls within a class or classes of business subject to a reinsurance treaty. An excess of loss reinsurance contract is one in which the reinsurance responds only when a particular loss (or group of losses) exceeds an agreed-upon level, called the retention, and typically responds only up to an agreed limit.
(21)  This capital increase was subsequently partially (EUR 31,5 million) used to cover the losses registered by SACE BT in 2009. See Annex No 14 — ISVAP: Minutes of the inspection findings at SACE BT, 11 October 2010 (Verbale degli accertamenti ispettivi effettuati presso SACE BT, 11.10.2010), p. 5, submission of Italy of 5 March 2012. When approving the financial statements for the year ending 31 December 2009, the General Assembly of Shareholders of SACE BT decided on 20 April 2010 to cover the losses registered at the end of 2009, i.e. EUR 34 081 254, by using ‘Fondo di Organizzazione’ for an amount of EUR 2 534 805 and the capital transfer (‘
versamento in conto capitale
’) for an amount of EUR 31 546 449.
(22)  See SACE — Reply to the request for information, 15 September 2011, p. 11.
(23)  For purposes of calculating ROAE, a figurative fiscal effect (‘effetto fiscale figurativo’) has been taken into account, when determining net profit (see p. 163 of the initial business plan).
(24)  
Stardust Marine
Judgement of 16 May 2002 in case C-482/99 [ECR I] p 4397.
(25)  CFI, T-68/03, ECR 2007, II-2911 —
Olympic Airways/Commission
.
(26)  CFI, T-422/03, ECR 2008, II-1161 —
SIC/Commission
.
(27)  See Annex 1 to the Reply of the Ministry of Economy and Finance, 15 September 2011.
(28)  
Source:
Ministry of Economy and Finance, Reply to the request for information, submitted on 5 March 2012, p. 2.
(29)  
Source:
SACE — Reply to the request for information, point 9, submitted on 5 March 2012, p. 2.
(30)  The material prepared for the meeting of SACE's Board of Directors of 28 April 2004 had the specific objective to provide the estimations for the ‘free capital’ of SACE in view of the capital endowment of SACE 2 — the future SACE BT. See Annex 1 — Comunicazione dell'AD al CdA di SACE S.p.A. in vista della riunione del CdA del 28 aprile 2004, to the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision.
(31)  For the data, see p. 4 of the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision.
(32)  
Source:
Ministry of Economy and Finance — Reply to the request for information, submitted on 5 March 2012, p. 2.
(33)  
Source:
Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 8, and minutes of the meeting between the representatives of SACE BT, SACE, the Italian authorities and the Commission services of 13 July 2011.
(34)  See, for instance, Chapter II, p. 7 of the initial business plan.
(35)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 9. SACE reiterated the position already expressed by Italy before the opening decision. See paragraph 1 on p. 15 of the submission of Italy of 12 February 2008.
(36)  The initial business plan envisaged that SACE BT would hold a share of 12,6 % in the Italian market in 2008 with a volume of premiums of EUR 67,2 million.
(37)  See SACE — Reply to the request for information, 15 September 2011, p. 17.
(38)  See Annex 1 to the Reply of SACE, 15 September 2011, p. 8.
(39)  Annex 8 to the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision.
(40)  See Annexes 5-7 to the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision.
(41)  See Annex 2 to the Reply of SACE submitted on 15 September 2011, where several initiatives for acquisitions are mentioned, either in cooperation with other operators, i.e. KUP (with SA Ducroire) in the communication dated 19 July 2006, TINUBU SQUARE (with ONDD and CESCE) in the communications dated 19 July and 8 September 2006 and MEHIB (with SA Ducroire) in the communication dated 8 February and 18 June 2007, or on a stand-alone basis, i.e. CGIC (with the option that the parent company, SACE, might decide to participate itself as a bidder instead of SACE BT) in the communication dated 15 September 2008.
(42)  See Annex 1 to the Reply of SACE submitted on 15 September 2011, p. 8.
(43)  SACE also submitted that ahead of the plan SACE BT generated profits already in 2006 and provided the following comparison between the actually recorded profits/losses and those projected. In 2005: EUR – 1,5 million (in the plan: EUR – 2,4 million); in 2006: EUR + 0,1 million (in the plan: EUR – 0,4 million); in 2007: EUR – 1 million (in the plan: EUR + 3,1 million); in 2008: EUR – 29,4 million (in the plan: EUR + 3,7 million). See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 6, footnote 2.
(44)  Thus also including extension of projections into 2009.
(45)  See Annex 9 to the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision.
(46)  See p. 8 and 10 of the adjusted business plan.
(47)  In case the reference year is 2009 (as provided in the adjusted plan) and not 2008, and hence the profit of EUR 4,8 million is taken into consideration, the ‘implied
ex ante
’ ROE after acquisitions and synergies reaches
11,8 %
.
(48)  According to Italy's submission of 5 March 2012 — Reply of SACE (point 16, p. 5), the external consultant projected for 2009 (in the fifth year after the acquisition) a ROE of 9,8 % for an acquisition of 100 % in Assedile valued at around EUR 40 million (See Progetto Zorro, 30 May 2005, p. 30). Thus, SACE calculated a profit of EUR 3,9 million following the acquisition of 100 % in Assedile: EUR 40 million * 9,8 % ROE (and EUR 2,7 million for 70 % of Assedile).
(49)  According to the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision (p. 21), the financial projections prepared by the external consultant for the acquisition of KUP provided for expected net profits of EUR 3,5 million in 2011 (in the fifth year after the acquisition). Thus, 33 % * 3,5 million = EUR 1,2 million. Dividing the expected return by the initial investment, SACE BT would achieve a ROE of 8,7 %.
(50)  See SACE — Reply to the request for information, 15 September 2011, p. 4.
(51)  See SACE — Reply to the request for information, point 12, submitted on 5 March 2012, p. 2-3.
(52)  In accordance with the adjusted business plan, in 2003 in Italy, Euler Hermes SIAC held a market share of 47,5 %, Atradius-SIC (Italy) of 20,1 % and Coface Italy (Viscontea Coface) of 17,9 %.
(53)  This allegation of Italy is not supported by the initial business plan prepared by the external advisor. According to Annex 1 to the plan — ‘La best practice del mercato. Benchmarking sui principali players’, dated February 2004 (see submission of Italy of 12 February 2008, Annex 1), both Viscontea Coface and Euler Hermes SIAC were active in surety business (see p. 17 and 34 thereof).
(54)  For the remuneration paid by SACE BT to SACE see the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 30.
(55)  See SACE — Reply to the request for information, 15 September 2011, p. 7.
(56)  See SACE — Reply to the request for information, point 13, submitted on 5 March 2012, p. 3.
(57)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 25.
(58)  According to the Export-credit Communication, the escape clause is used in the case of temporarily non-marketable risks, i.e. marketable export-credit risks for which coverage may be temporarily unavailable from private export-credit insurers or from public or publicly supported export-credit insurers operating for their own account, owing to a lack of insurance or reinsurance capacity. In such circumstances, those temporarily non-marketable risks may be taken on to the account of a public or publicly supported export-credit insurer for non-marketable risks insured for the account of or with the guarantee of the State. Any Member State intending to use that escape clause has to notify it immediately to the Commission.
(59)  See Comments of the Ministry of Economy and Finance submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 5.
(60)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 29.
(61)  Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 33, 36 and 37.
(62)  According to the Insurance Directives the purpose of the equalisation provisions is to equalise fluctuations in loss ratios in future years or to provide for special risks. Equalisation provisions are part of the technical provisions on the balance sheet and the change in equalisation provisions is included in the technical account of the profit and loss account. See CEIOPS — Summary of a survey on equalisation provisions, January 2009, p. 2, available online at: https://eiopa.europa.eu/fileadmin/tx_dam/files/publications/reports/CEIOPS-DOC-32-08-Summary-of-a-survey-on-equalisation-provisions.pdf.
(63)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 45. SACE quotes the data of the company Dealogic which found that mergers and acquisitions in the European financial sector in 2009 (EUR 176 billion) have basically halved compared to 2008. Around 50 % of transactions in 2009 focused on distressed assets.
(64)  See SACE — Reply to the request for information, point 14, submitted on 5 March 2012, p. 4.
(65)  Confidential information.
(66)  To illustrate that argument Italy referred to the following Court case: C-303/88, ECR 1991, I-1433 — Italy/Commission (‘ENI/Lanerossi’), paragraph 21 (see Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 36).
(67)  The risk management is externalised to the parent company, SACE. See recital 25.
(68)  See SACE — Reply to the request for information, point 19, submitted on 5 March 2012, p. 6.
(69)  […].
(70)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 33.
(71)  includes also the life insurance (‘include il ramo vita’), which was divested in 2009.
(72)  Projections included in the Business Plan 2010-2011, p. 8, approved by the Board of Directors of SACE BT on 4 August 2009 (See Annex 4 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE BT's Board of Directors, 4 August 2009, submitted on 9 June 2010).
(73)  Projections included in the Adjusted Business Plan 2011-2013 (‘Aggiornamento Piano Industriale’), p. 8 and 19, approved by SACE BT's Board of Directors on 24 November 2011. (See Annex 8 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE BT's Board of Directors, 24 November 2011, submitted on 30 March 2012).
(74)  Gross premiums as opposed to premiums net of reinsurance cost cover also the cover of part of risk ceded to reinsurers.
(75)  ROE calculated as income before taxes/net worth (‘patrimonio netto’), assuming undistributed profits and a capital endowment of EUR 108,7 million at 31 December 2011.
(76)  Commission's calculations on the basis of the financial statements and the projections for 2011-2013.
(77)  
OJ C 195, 19.8.2009, p. 9.
(78)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 52.
(79)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 30-31.
(80)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 47.
(81)  Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 6-7.
(82)  See recital 64 of the opening decision.
(83)  See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 7.
(84)  See Ministry of Economy and Finance — Reply to the request for information, 15 September 2011, p. 6.
(85)  Case C-261/89
Italy
v
Commission
[1991] ECR I-4437, paragraph 8; Joined Cases C-278/92 to C-280/92
Spain
v
Commission
, cited above, paragraph 21; Case C-42/93
Spain
v
Commission
[1994] ECR I-4175, paragraph 13.
(86)  See, points 3.1 and 3.2 of the Export-credit Communication, the Commission's notice regarding
Application of Articles 92 and 93 of the EEC Treaty [now 107 and 108 of the TFEU] to public authorities' holdings
, Bulletin EC 9-1984, and the Commission Communication to the Member States on the application of Articles 92 and 93 of the EC Treaty and of Article 5 of Commission Directive 80/723/EEC to public undertakings in the manufacturing sector (
OJ C 307, 13.11.1993, p. 3
).
(87)  See judgment of 6.3.2003, T-228/99, T-233/99 WestLB and the Lando f Nordrhein-Westfalen vs Commission, paragraph 314.
(88)  See judgment of 6.3.2003,
Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale
/
Commission
(T-228/99 and T-233/99, ECR II-435, paragraphs 254-255, 270).
(89)  See
Commission
v
Électricité de France (EDF)
judgment of 5 June 2012 in case C-124/10 P [ECR I] p. 0000, paragraphs 82-84 and 105.
(90)  See
Commission
v
Électricité de France (EDF)
judgment of 5 June 2012 in case C-124/10 P [ECR I] p. 0000, paragraph 86.
(91)  As regards the comparison of the State intervention to the alternative scenario of winding up the respective business and the costs that would need to be taken into account in the latter scenario, see judgments of 28.2.2003,
Gröditzer
(ECR I-1139, C-334/99, paragraphs 133-141) and of 14.9.1994,
Kingdom of Spain
v
Commission of the European Communities
(ECR I-04103, joined cases C-278/92, C-279/92 and C-280/92, paragraphs 21-22).
(92)  See p. 41 of Annex 22 — Financial statements of SACE at 31.12.2004, submission of Italy of 12 February 2008: ‘
Detta “gestione” si è conclusa nel corso dell'anno, sia in seguito alla naturale scadenza dei contratti assicurativi che prevedevano la copertura dei rischi di mercato, sia mediante disdetta dei contratti in essere. I rischi in argomento sono stati progressivamente assunti con nuovi contratti dalla società partecipata SACE BT S.pA., costituita in data 27 maggio 2004.
(93)  At that time the Institute for external trade insurance services — SACE (Instituto per i Servizi Assicurativi del Commercio Estero — SACE).
(94)  See Annexes No 10 and 11, SACE — Reply to the request for information, submitted on 5 March 2012.
(95)  See Annex No 10 — Minutes of the meeting of the Board of Directors of the Institute for external trade insurance services — SACE of 21 November 2003 (Verbale della riunione del Consiglio di Amministrazione dell'Instituto per i Servizi Assicurativi del Commercio Estero, 21 novembre 2003), p. 5-7, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012.
(96)  See Annex No 10 — Presentation to the Board of Directors: Evaluation of the potential market for SACE for possible development, 21 November 2003 (Presentazione al Consiglio di Amministrazione: Valutare il mercato potenziale di SACE per definirne gli spazi di crescita possibili, 21 novembre 2003), p. 43, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012.
(97)  See Annex 1 to SACE's reply to the request for information, 15 September 2011, p. 7.
(98)  Evaluating or checking by comparison with a benchmark (a standard or point of reference against which things may be compared or assessed).
(99)  The total price paid for 100 % of Assedile was EUR 41,8 million, with the consultant providing a range between EUR 41,2-44,7 million (see Comments of SACE S.P.A. submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 20, and Annex 11 thereto). As for the initial acquisition of 70 % of Assedile, the price was even below the valuation range, EUR 27 million for 70 %, corresponding to EUR 38,5 million for the entire company. The price for the acquisition of 30 % of Assedile on 6 March 2008 was determined on the basis of a re-evaluation of Assedile, as envisaged in the shareholders' agreement at the date of buying the 70 % (30 September 2005). The price corresponded to a value of around EUR 41,8 million for 100 %, thus SACE BT paid in 2008 the remaining part of EUR 14,8 million (See SACE — Reply to the request for information, 15 September 2011, p. 10-11).
(100)  According to SACE BT Annual Report 2008 (see p. 22-23), due to the global crisis the strategy of international expansion has been rethought and the emphasis was increased on the domestic market. Since KUP was attaining worse financial results than expected and in the light of the economic situation in the Eastern Europe the Board considered that the amounts invested would not be recovered.
(101)  SACE BT registered a loss of EUR 2,2 million as compared to the acquisition value of EUR 13,3 million. At the end of 2009, Ducroire booked a EUR 12,3 million downward adjustment for the valuation of its 66 % share in KUP (for which it paid EUR 13,3 million for 33 % and further EUR 11,1 million to SACE BT = EUR 24,4 million), see observations of SACE of 5 May 2011 at p. 22 and Annual Report 2009 of Ducroire, p. 28.
(102)  As per submission of Italy of 8 April 2010 (p. 5, paragraph 2), the cover relates solely to the marketable risks.
(103)  See Annex No 14 — ISVAP: Minutes of the inspection findings at SACE BT, 11 October 2010 (Verbale degli accertamenti ispettivi effettuati presso SACE BT, 11.10.2010), p. 56, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012.
(104)  […].
(105)  […].
(106)  See recital 93 of the Commission Decision C(2011) 7756 final of 23 November 2011 in case SA.27386 (C 28/2010) — Short-term export-credit insurance scheme — Portugal, not yet published.
(107)  See recital 68 of the Commission Decision C(2011) 7756 final of 23 November 2011 in case SA.27386 (C 28/2010) — Short-term export-credit insurance scheme — Portugal, not yet published.
(108)  In the case of the Short-term export-credit insurance scheme — Portugal (Commission Decision C(2011) 7756 final of 23 November 2011 in case SA.27386 (C 28/2010), recital 93, not yet published), the Commission has developed a method for the calculation of the amount to be recovered (explained in the Annex to that decision) based on reasonable assumptions and on common market practice. Under that method, a theoretical market price of the cover granted by the State is equal to 110 % of the price (in terms of premium rate) charged by the private insurer in the case of each individual client.
(109)  […].
(110)  At that time, the parent company, SACE, was already aware of the significant losses that SACE BT had registered in the first quarter of 2009.
(111)  See Annex No 1 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE's Board of Directors of 26 May 2009 (Verbale della riunione del CdA di SACE S.p.A., 26 maggio 2009), p. 4, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012.
(112)  See submission of Italy by letter dated 8 June 2010, p. 2.
(113)  See submission of Italy by letter dated 8 June 2010, Annex 7, p. 29.
(114)  See CFI, T-129/95, T-2/96 and T-97/96, [1999] ECR II-00017
Neue Maxhütte Stahlwerke GmbH and Lech-Stahlwerke GmbH
v
Commission
, paragraph 116.
(115)  See Commission Decision 96/278/EC (
OJ L 104, 27.4.1996, p. 25
) — Iberia, paragraph 15 of Part VII.
(116)  See ECJ, C-305/89, ECR 1991, I-1601, paragraph 22 — Italy/Commission (‘ALFA Romeo’); Commission Decision 94/662/EC (
OJ L 258, 6.10.1994, p. 26
), paragraph 21 of Part VII — Air France; and Commission Decision 97/789/EC (
OJ L 322, 25.1.1997, p. 44
) — Alitalia, paragraph 6 of Part VII.
(117)  As per SACE 2009 Financial Accounts and Annexes 5-7 to notes to the Accounts, the increases in the controlled entity SACE BT amounted to EUR 70 million.
(118)  Commission communication to the Member States on the application of Articles 92 and 93 of the EEC Treaty and of Article 5 of Directive 80/723/EEC to public undertakings in the manufacturing sector,
OJ C 307/3 of 13 November 1993
.
(119)  See Commission communication to the Member States on the application of Articles 92 and 93 of the EEC Treaty, paragraph 36.
(120)  SACE also quotes the reorientation of business operations as one of the arguments (See Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 36.). However, in practice, following a specific request from the Commission, Italy submits that SACE does not foresee a significant change of SACE BT's business (See SACE — Reply to the request for information, 15 September 2011, p. 13)
(121)  See ENI/Lanerossi judgment, paragraph 21.
(122)  See ENI/Lanerossi judgment, paragraph 22.
(123)  
Source:
submission of Italy by letter dated 8 June 2010, Annex 7, p. 28.
(124)  Its Beta, a measure of riskiness of the company as compared to the overall financial market, was 0,8 in 2000-2004, where 1 would correspond to the overall financial market risk.
(125)  Source for the data used in the calculation: for the book value of equity — http://www.eulerhermes.com/finance/financial-resources/Documents/Financial-results/2009/Q1/Q1-2009-Presentation-analysts.pdf, for share price: http://www.eulerhermes.com/finance/share/share-price.aspx
(126)  In the presentation of its 1Q2009 results dating from 6 May 2009, Euler-Hermes stated that the world was experiencing the deepest trade recession since 50 years and the business insolvencies were on the rise (see p. 5 and 7 of the presentation available at http://www.eulerhermes.com/finance/financial-resources/Documents/Financial-results/2009/Q1/Q1-2009-Presentation-analysts.pdf).
(127)  See Communication from the Commission — Community guidelines on State aid for rescuing and restructuring firms in difficulty,
OJ C 244, 1.10.2004, p. 2
, paragraph 12.
(128)  
Stardust Marine
Judgement of 16 May 2002 in case C-482/99 [ECR I] p 4397.
(129)  CFI, T-68/03, ECR 2007, II-2911 —
Olympic Airways/Commission
, paragraph 312-319.
(130)  Case T-442/03
SIC
v
Commission
[2008] ECR II-1161.
(131)  Point 110.
(132)  Point 105.
(133)  See paragraphs 52, 54, 55 and 56 of the
Stardust Marine
judgment.
(134)  See also Article 13(2) of the SACE's Statutes available at: http://www.sace.it/GruppoSACE/export/sites/default/download/normativa/nuovo_statuto.pdf
(135)  See
Stardust Marine
judgment of 16 May 2002 in case C-482/99 [ECR I] p. 4397, paragraph 55 quoting Case C-303/88,
Italian Republic
v
Commission
, [1991] ECR I-01433, paragraph 11 and 12 and Case C-305/89,
Italian Republic
v
Commission
, [1991] ECR I-01603, paragraphs 13 and 14.
(136)  Article 6.12 of the Decree Law n. 269 of 30 September 2003 as converted with the modifications to the Law n. 326 of 24 November 2003.
(137)  In that context, it is to be noted that when considering the first measure, the Ministry of Economy and Finance had been consulted on the amount of social capital of SACE BT. See Annex 2 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) of 28 April 2004 (Verbale della Riunione del Consiglio di Amministrazione di SACE S.p.A., 28 aprile 2004), to the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision, p. 74-75: ‘… as regards the amount of social capital of SACE 2 [the temporary name of the new company to be created, the subsequent SACE BT], after hearing the Ministry of Economy and Finance, this was preliminary quantified to EUR 100 million’ (‘… riguardo all'ammontare del capitale sociale di Sace 2, sentito il Ministero dell'Economia e delle Finanze, esso e stato preliminarmente quantificato in 100 milioni di euro’.)
(138)  In 2004, when SACE became a joint-stock company and the first measure was granted, most of the members of the Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) of SACE maintained their position in the Italian administration, i.e. the Ministry of Economy and Finance, Ministry of Foreign Affairs or other public institutions (Institute of Industrial Promotion — Istituto per la Promozione Industriale, the Communication Regulatory Authority — Autorità per le garanzie nelle comunicazioni and the Italian Institute for Foreign Trade — Istituto nazionale per il Commercio Estero). In particular, the president of the Board of Directors of SACE at the time also preserved his management position within the Ministry of Economy and Finance. The field of responsibility concerned international financial relations.
(139)  See Annex No 8 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE's Board of Directors of 1 April 2009 (Verbale della riunione del CdA di SACE S.p.A., 1 aprile 2009), p. 8, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012:
‘… (iii) sull'opportunità che, in tale ottica, non vi sia una diminuzione di volume tanto sul versante assicurativo “non a mercato” quanto sel versante dell'assicurazione dei rischi a mercato’.
(140)  See Annex No 8 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE's Board of Directors of 1 April 2009 (Verbale della riunione del CdA di SACE S.p.A., 1 aprile 2009), p. 9, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012:
‘… l'attività di support al sistema delle imprese svolta dalla SACE non sempre viene chiaramente percepita all'esterno, concordando, altresì, sull'importanza del percorso di sostegno a SACE BT, anche mediante la ricapitalizzazione della stessa’.
(141)  See Annex No 8 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE's Board of Directors of 1 April 2009 (Verbale della riunione del CdA di SACE S.p.A., 1 aprile 2009), p. 8, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012:
‘… (ii) l'importanza del percorso di sostegno a SACE BT, mediante il quale il Gruppo SACE adempie alla propria funzione istituzionale di supporto al sistema delle imprese italiane’.
(142)  See p. 1 of the press release available at: http://www.sace.it/GruppoSACE/export/sites/default/download/comunicati/2009/20090401_-_Comunicato_Bilancio_2008_Gruppo_SACE_e_controllate_-_final__11_.pdf
(143)  SACE was a public body subject to public law and became a limited company on 1 January 2004, i.e. only shortly before SACE BT was created and the first measure was granted. Further, the fact that SACE BT was created with a capital of EUR 105,8 million shortly after the change of legal status of SACE seems to indicate that the State's decision to reorganise SACE in 2004 included the creation of SACE BT.
(144)  See Annex No 1 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE's Board of Directors of 26 May 2009 (Verbale della riunione del CdA di SACE S.p.A., 26 maggio 2009), p. 3-4, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012:
‘[…]’.
(145)  Minutes of the meeting of SACE BT's Board of Directors (‘Consiglio di Amministrazione’) of 27 May 2009 (Verbale della Riunione del Consiglio di Administrazione di SACE BT S.p.A., 27 maggio 2009), submitted on 9 June 2010, p. 5: ‘nella valutazione dei risultati della Società e del
revised budget
deve considerarsi la
mission
di sostegno al mercato che SACE BT deve continuare a perseguire’.
(146)  Furthermore, it is noted that in 2009, when approving the transfer of life insurance from SACE BT to Vittoria Assicurazioni S.p.A., the Italian Competition Authority (Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato) presented SACE BT as ‘[…] a company indirectly controlled by the Ministry of Economy and Finance […]’. See Bollettino n. 15 del 4 maggio 2009, p. 7, C10007 — Vittoria Assicurazioni/Ramo di Azienda di SACE BT, Provvedimento n. 19768, available online at: http://www.agcm.it/trasp-statistiche/doc_download/868-15-09.html
(147)  See Annex No 16 — ‘Memo Risk Managament SACE S.p.a., 19 March 2009’, to the Comments of SACE submitted on 5 May 2011 in reply to the opening decision. The note was based on the report drafted by the insurance broker […], dated 14 November 2008: ‘Analisi pro Rinnovo 2009 — Portafoglio Marketable’. The report includes a detailed analysis of the technical trend of the company, and especially the impact that the current reinsurance contracts (the ones at the end of 2008) have had on the results and the present and future capital requirements (‘
requisiti patrimoniali
’).
(148)  See Annex No 5 — Minutes of the meeting of SACE's Board of Directors of 1 April 2009 (Verbale della riunione del CdA di SACE S.p.A., 1 aprile 2009), p. 3, submission of Italy, 5 March 2012:
‘… una dotazione riassicurativa da parte di SACE S.p.A. in favore della controllata SACE BT, al fine di consentirle un mantenimento della propria capacità di affidamento, in particolare nel segmento delle piccole medie imprese.
Il Consiglio di Amministrazione approva la partecipazione della società al Tratatto Excess Loss a copertura delle quote non accettate da riassicuratori di mercato e fino ad una massima perdita potenziale di EUR 48 mln. Le condizioni economiche praticate dovranno essere a mercato e pari a quelle accettate dai riassicuratori privati’
.
(149)  Article 4(6) of SACE's Statutes provides that: ‘The company may conclude reinsurance and co-insurance contracts with authorised Italian entities or firms, with foreign entities or companies or international organizations, as well as enter into contracts to cover insurable risks, at market conditions, with leading operators on the market’ (‘La Società può concludere accordi di riassicurazione e coassicurazione con enti o imprese italiani autorizzati, con enti o imprese esteri o con organismi internazionali, nonché stipulare contratti di copertura del rischio assicurativo, a condizioni di mercato, con primari operatori del settore’).
(150)  See also points 3 and 2.1 of the Export-credit Communication.
(151)   
‘3.2. The types of treatment listed in paragraph 3.1 [inter alia the provisions of capital] give, or may give, the export-credit insurers that receive them a financial advantage over other export-credit insurers. Such financial advantages granted to certain enterprises distort competition and constitute State aid within the meaning of Article 92(1) of the Treaty.
[…]
The financial advantages listed in paragraph 3.1 in respect of marketable risks […] lead to variations in the insurance cover available for marketable risks in different Member States, thereby distorting competition between companies in Member States’
(the Commission's highlight).
(152)  The information available refers only to the surety business (i dati riportati sono relativi solo at ramo cauzioni)
Source:
Business Plan 2010-2011, approved by SACE BT's Board of Directors of SACE BT on 4 August 2009 and the Adjusted Business Plan 2011-2013, approved by SACE BT's Board of Directors on 24 November 2011.
(153)  
OJ L 379, 28.12.2006, p. 5
.
(154)  See Opening decision, recital 137.
(155)  See submission of Italy by letter dated 8 June 2010, Annex 7, p. 29.
(156)  See Rescuing and Restructuring Guidelines, Article 3(1).
(157)  Communication from the Commission — Recapitalisation of financial institutions in the current financial crisis: limitation of the aid to the minimum necessary and safeguards against undue distortions of competition (
OJ C 10, 15.1.2009, p. 2
).
(158)  Community guidelines on State aid for rescuing and restructuring firms in difficulty (
OJ C 244, 1.10.2004, p. 2
).
(159)  
OJ C 119, 22.5.2002, p. 22
.
(160)  
OJ C 217, 2.8.2001, p. 2
.
(161)  
OJ C 307, 11.12.2004, p. 12
.
(162)  
OJ C 325, 22.12.2005, p. 22
.
(163)  After being amended again in 2010 (
OJ C 329, 7.12.2010, p. 6
), after the adoption of the measures in question, this Export-credit Communication has recently been replaced by a new Communication on short-term export-credit insurance (
OJ C 392, 19.12.2012, p. 1
), which applies only as from the 1 January 2013 (‘the new Export-credit Communication’). In any event, the Commission notes, for the sake of completeness, that its assessment as explained in the paragraphs below would not change following the provisions of the new Export-credit Communication.
(164)  
OJ C 16, 22.1.2009, p. 1
.
(165)  See Commission Decision C(2011) 7756 final of 23 November 2011 in case SA.27386 (C 28/2010) — Short-term export-credit insurance scheme — Portugal, not yet published.
(166)  
OJ L 140, 30.4.2004, p. 1
.

ANNEX

INFORMATION ABOUT THE AMOUNTS OF AID RECEIVED, TO BE RECOVERED AND ALREADY RECOVERED

Identity of the beneficiary

Total amount of aid received under the scheme(1)

Total amount of aid to be recovered(1)

(Principal)

Total amount already reimbursed(1)

Principal

Recovery interest

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(1)  Million of national currency.
Markierungen
Leseansicht