UniCredit delivered the strongest quarterly earnings in its history on Tuesday, posting a first-quarter net profit that significantly exceeded market expectations and prompted a further upgrade to full-year guidance.

The results came on the same day it formally launched a takeover offer for Commerzbank, the German lender it has pursued for more than a year amid fierce political and boardroom resistance.

UniCredit Q1 earnings: Record quarter and guidance upgrade

UniCredit reported a first-quarter net profit of €3.2 billon, comfortably above the €2.7 billon analyst consensus the bank had compiled ahead of the results.

The result marked approximately a 14% increase on the same period a year earlier, when the group had posted a then-record €2.8 billon.

The bank’s 21st consecutive quarter of profitable growth cemented chief executive Andrea Orcel’s position as arguably the most effective operator in European banking, having rebuilt the group from a decade of underperformance.

Alongside the results, UniCredit raised its full-year 2026 net profit guidance to “at least €11 billion,” from a prior ambition of “circa €11 billion” set out in its February strategy day.

The change in language — from “circa” to “at least” — is deliberately significant: it signals management confidence that the group will exceed rather than merely meet its target, shifting from aspiration to a floor.

The bank’s FY25 adjusted net profit was €10.6 billon; reaching at least €11 billon in 2026 would represent growth of at least 4%, with the momentum of the first quarter suggesting further upside.

Revenue growth, fee income expansion and contained loan losses all contributed to the beat.

The group’s cost-to-income ratio, already among the best in the European sector, is expected to remain below 38% for the full year, reflecting the cumulative benefits of the “UniCredit Unlocked” restructuring programme completed in 2025 and the early effects of AI-driven efficiency initiatives now being rolled out across the bank’s 13 core markets.

Mandatory Commerzbank bid goes live

UniCredit launched its formal takeover offer for Commerzbank on Tuesday after its stake in the German lender crossed the critical 30% threshold, a level that triggers a mandatory public offer obligation under German securities law.

The Italian bank now controls approximately 32.64% of Commerzbank, comprising a direct equity holding of around 27% and additional exposure through financial instruments.

The offer is all-share and values Commerzbank at approximately €35 billon, though the implied price per share — around €30.80 — has traded well below Commerzbank’s current market price, complicating the offer’s appeal to independent shareholders.

Commerzbank formally rebuffed the bid in April, stating that an agreed solution was not currently evident and reaffirming its standalone strategy.

The bank is expected to release its own first-quarter 2026 results and an updated strategy through 2030 on 8 May, framed explicitly as a demonstration that Commerzbank can deliver superior returns without UniCredit.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has described any hostile takeover as “unacceptable,” and the federal government — which retains a 12% stake in Commerzbank — has been seeking alternative bidders without success.

EU single-market rules make an outright political block difficult to sustain, and with no white knight having emerged, the legal trajectory increasingly favours UniCredit.

Political and industrial opposition

The bid has drawn opposition that extends well beyond the boardroom.

Germany’s Verdi union, which represents a substantial portion of Commerzbank’s roughly 43,000 employees, has called for the bank’s independence and warned of significant job losses under any merger with HypoVereinsbank, UniCredit’s German subsidiary.

UniCredit’s “Commerzbank Unlocked” blueprint envisages deep restructuring and cost rationalisation across a combined entity, with the two banks estimated to have meaningful overlap in German corporate and retail banking.

UniCredit projects a combined entity generating net revenues of €45 billon and net profit of €21 billon by 2030, with a return on tangible equity above 25%.

Commerzbank’s own standalone targets, to be unveiled on 8 May, are expected to show net profit reaching €4.2 billon by 2028 — ambitious but still materially below what UniCredit claims a merged group could achieve.

What to watch next

Commerzbank’s 8 May results and strategy presentation will be the pivotal moment in determining whether the bid succeeds or stalls.

If Commerzbank can credibly demonstrate a path to returns matching or exceeding the implied value of the UniCredit offer, independent shareholders — who ultimately decide the outcome — may choose to back management.

If not, the pressure to engage will intensify rapidly.

UniCredit, for its part, enters the decisive month from a position of undeniable financial strength.

A record quarter, a lifted guidance floor, a pristine capital ratio and the formal offer already filed leave Orcel with the initiative.

The outcome will shape the structure of European banking for years to come.

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