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Case T-305/13: Action brought on 3 June 2013 — SACE and SACE BT v Commission

ECLI:EU:UNKNOWN:62013TN0305

62013TN0305

June 3, 2013
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EN

Official Journal of the European Union

C 207/53

(Case T-305/13)

2013/C 207/89

Language of the case: Italian

Parties

Applicants: SACE SpA (Rome, Italy) and SACE BT SpA (Rome, Italy) (represented by: M. Siragusa and G. Rizza, lawyers)

Defendant: European Commission

Form of order sought

The applicants claim that the Court should:

Annul the decision in its entirety or, in the alternative, in part;

Order the Commission to pay the costs;

Order any other measure which it deems appropriate, including any measure of enquiry.

Pleas in law and main arguments

In support of the action, the applicants rely on three pleas in law.

The present action is brought against Commission Decision C(2013) 1501 final of 20 March 2013 ordering partial recovery of aid granted to the short-term export-credit insurance company SACE BT. The case is concerned in particular with the capital injections made in 2009 by the State-owned parent company (SACE S.p.A.) and with the reinsurance coverage of which SACE BT was the beneficiary. According to the Commission, in neither case did SACE take account of the risk profile of the investments and thus did not behave as a market economy investor.

1.First plea in law, alleging that the measures at issue could not be attributed to the Italian State

It is submitted in this regard that the measures at issue were adopted by the Board of SACE S.p.A., not upon a direction given by the public authorities or in order to comply with State-imposed requirements, but rather in the exercise of its own full commercial and strategic autonomy, in a way consistent with purely market logic and no differently from in the majority of its business decisions, and not within the framework of any relationship entailing control, supervision, authorisation or direction on the part of the single shareholder at that time — the Ministry of Economy and Finance.

2.Second plea in law, concerning the fact that the second measure allegedly conferred an advantage on SACE BT

The applicants maintain in this regard that the decision of SACE S.p.A. to offer reinsurance capacity, taking advantage of opportunities afforded by a phase in the economic cycle in which insurance premiums were high, was adopted without any intention of providing SACE BT with assistance or support. Moreover, only the parent company gained any economic advantage from the reinsurance relationship. Furthermore, the Commission’s observations concerning the positive correlation between the volume of risk assumed and the rate requested are not confirmed either by the reference literature or market practice, not even so far as SACE BT in particular is concerned. Lastly, the applicants do not consider persuasive the Commission’s attempt to ‘export’ to different contexts and measures the alleged rule of thumb applied by it, without a detailed statement of reasons, in the case of the Portuguese rules on short-term export credit insurance, in order to establish that the amount of the commission paid to SACE S.p.A. should have been at least 10 % higher than that of the commission applied by private reinsurers in relation to the smaller portion of reinsurance and risk assumed by them.

3.Third plea in law, alleging that the third and fourth measures did not confer an advantage on SACE BT

In undertaking the two recapitalisations of 2009, despite the lack of any forecasts relating to SACE BT’s future cash flow which might give grounds for expecting adequate profitability of it at least in the long term, SACE S.p.A. preserved the value of the very considerable investment that it had made at the time of the company’s formation barely five years earlier. Furthermore, SACE S.p.A. took the view that the liquidation of its subsidiary would also have exposed the entire SACE group to the risk of potential damage, in the form of massive loss in value and/or deterioration in its creditworthiness, the amount of which would have been far higher than that of the capital estimated outstanding for the end of 2009. The Commission failed to have regard to the broad margin of discretion of the public investor, substituting its own assessment for that of SACE S.p.A. solely on the basis of an incorrect theoretical reconstruction of the choice which the hypothetical prudent and well-informed private investor would have made in that set of circumstances.

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