Business | Schumpeter

Lessons in risk-taking from buccaneering BBVA

The Spanish lender places brave political bets at home and abroad

An illustration of the BBVA Conquistador with a collar and tie over armour, firing his pistols with their explosions creating the Mexican Peso and Spanish Peso
Illustration: Brett Ryder

Few bosses worry about European politics more than its bankers. In Italy and Spain new taxes have been levied as punishment for higher profits. The populist surge in France has redoubled concern. When Emmanuel Macron announced shock parliamentary elections in June, investors in French banks legged it. The final round of the election, held on July 7th, is likely to empower reckless spenders on the hard left or hard right. In an interview with Bloomberg in May, Mr Macron made a rare political pitch for a more integrated banking market, including cross-border deals. Now the sharp election-related fall in the price of France’s government debt has instead revived memories of the “doom loops” of the euro-zone crisis of the early 2010s, when worries about the solvency of sovereigns and of lenders fed off one another.

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “The conquistador of commerce ”

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