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BNP Paribas took control of the Belgian and Luxembourg businesses of troubled financial group Fortis on Sunday in a complex rescue that will make Belgium the French bank's biggest shareholder.
The deal was the most spectacular cross-border rescue since the US-born credit crisis swept into Europe last month, upending banks and rattling savers' confidence.
Under a share swap announced by Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme and BNP Paribas chief executive Baudouin Prot at a late night news conference, BNP will get 75 per cent of Fortis Bank Belgium and all the group's Belgian insurance operations.
In exchange, Belgium will receive an 11.7 per cent stake in BNP through the issue of new shares worth 8.25 billion euros ($11.43 billion).
BNP also agreed to buy 66 per cent of Fortis Bank Luxembourg in exchange for a smaller stake for the Luxembourg state.
"The result of these measures will be that a leading European bank, BNP Paribas, will ensure that Fortis Belgium fulfills the conditions necessary for sustainability and its development," Leterme said in a statement.
"These measures are perfectly in line with the commitment by the Belgian state towards savers and customers, as well as with its concern to preserve employment within the Fortis group" -- Belgium's biggest bank and private sector employer.
A portfolio of Fortis Bank Belgium's structured investment products worth 10.4 billion euros will be placed in a separate vehicle to be owned 66 per cent by Fortis Group, 24 per cent by the Belgian state and 10 per cent by BNP Paribas.
The Belgian and Luxembourg governments will keep blocking minorities of 25 per cent and 33 per cent respectively in the Fortis banks in their countries.
The European Commission was consulted on the deal prior to its agreement, an EU spokesman said.
MESSAGE OF CONFIDENCE
BNP's Prot said the deal represented "a big message of confidence" in Fortis, which had "a formidable business base."
Leterme was forced to hold a second weekend of crisis talks after the Netherlands nationalised Fortis's Dutch operations on Friday for 16.8 billion euros in a move that caused bitterness between the two Benelux neighbours.
Belgium and Luxembourg took 49 per cent stakes in the Fortis banks in their countries last Sunday in a rescue that lasted just five days because depositors and lenders fled.
The Belgian state raised its holding in Fortis Bank Belgium to 99.93 per cent on Sunday at a cost of 4.7 billion euros before selling the 75 per cent stake to...
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