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Understanding how to structure an LBO in Italy step by step has never been more critical for deal teams. The regulatory landscape shifted materially when the Decreto Transizione 5. 0 amended Italy’s golden power rules on 9 February 2026, expanding the government’s screening authority over acquisitions in strategic sectors. At the same time, CONSOB’s takeover regime under the Testo Unico della Finanza (TUF) continues to set hard thresholds that can transform an otherwise private transaction into a mandatory public tender offer.
Financial assistance restrictions under Article 2358 of the Codice Civile remain the single most important structural constraint on any Italian leveraged buyout, dictating whether a sponsor proceeds via a standalone SPV acquisition or opts for the merger leveraged buyout (MLBO) route. This guide walks through the complete process, from vehicle selection and due diligence to debt structuring, regulatory clearance and post-closing governance, with a compliance-first orientation calibrated to 2026 requirements.
A leveraged buyout uses a significant proportion of borrowed funds to acquire a target company, with the target’s own cash flows ultimately servicing the acquisition debt. In Italy, sponsors typically choose between two principal structuring routes: the SPV acquisition model and the merger leveraged buyout (MLBO). Each carries distinct legal, tax and timing implications that shape how an LBO in Italy is structured step by step.
At its core, an LBO capital stack comprises three layers: sponsor equity (typically 30–50 per cent of enterprise value), mezzanine or subordinated financing, and senior secured bank debt. The sponsor incorporates a special purpose vehicle (SPV), injects equity, arranges debt facilities, and uses the combined proceeds to acquire 100 per cent (or a controlling stake) of the target. Post-acquisition, the target’s operating cash flows are directed toward debt service through dividends, management fees or, if the merger route is selected, direct assumption of the acquisition debt by the merged entity.
| Structuring Route | Reporting / Filing Obligations | Typical Timeline Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Italian SPV (s.r.l. / s.p.a.) | Company formation filings, notarial deeds, Italian tax registration; security filings (mortgage / pledge registrations) | Formation 2–4 weeks; security registrations add 1–3 weeks |
| Merger route (MLBO) | Public notices, shareholders’ meetings, registry filings; potential TUF / CONSOB disclosure if the target is listed | Process often 6–12 weeks (statutory notice periods extend timeline) |
| Direct share purchase (share deal) | SPA completion, transfer of shares, tax clearances; if takeover thresholds crossed → potential mandatory OPA | Faster (1–4 weeks) unless OPA triggered; if OPA: 4–8+ weeks (CONSOB timelines) |
The choice between SPV-only and MLBO is rarely a binary decision, it is driven by the interaction of financial assistance constraints, tax efficiency goals and the regulatory profile of the target. The sections below unpack each variable in sequence.
This section sets out the core procedural steps for structuring an LBO in Italy step by step, using the standard SPV acquisition route. Where the MLBO path diverges, it is addressed in Section 3.
Before any structuring decision, the sponsor must complete legal, financial and regulatory due diligence on the target. The key DD workstreams with LBO-specific relevance include:
The acquisition vehicle is almost always a newly incorporated Italian company, either a società a responsabilità limitata (s.r.l.) for smaller mid-market deals or a società per azioni (s.p.a.) for larger transactions where bond issuances, structured equity incentive plans or listing-track governance are anticipated. Incorporation requires a notarial deed and registration with the Registro delle Imprese. Minimum share capital is €1 for an s.r.l. and €50,000 for an s.p.a., although acquisition SPVs are typically capitalised well above minimums once equity is committed.
Industry observers expect that most Italian LBOs in 2026 will continue to favour the s.p.a. form for larger transactions, given its compatibility with sophisticated shareholder agreements, stock option plans and multi-tranche financing structures.
Modelling the sources and uses of funds is the financial spine of every LBO. On the sources side, the deal team maps committed equity (sponsor cash and any management roll-in), senior secured debt (term loan A / B), and mezzanine or subordinated financing. On the uses side, the model accounts for the equity purchase price, transaction costs (legal, DD, arrangement fees), and any refinancing of the target’s existing indebtedness.
Practical steps for building the LBO model in an Italian context:
Lenders to the SPV will require a comprehensive security package. In a typical Italian LBO, this includes a pledge over the shares of the target (and the SPV itself, if a holdco layer exists), an assignment of receivables, and, post-MLBO, mortgages over key real-estate assets. Perfection requirements differ by asset class: share pledges require annotation in the shareholders’ register and filing with the Registro delle Imprese; real-estate mortgages require notarial inscription at the relevant Conservatoria.
Critically, all upstream guarantees and security granted by the target to secure the SPV’s acquisition debt must be tested against the financial assistance prohibition. If the transaction will not proceed via MLBO, the security package at the target level must either fall within one of the narrow Article 2358 exceptions or be deferred until the merger is completed.
The typical document suite for an Italian LBO includes:
In practice, the documentation timeline from signing a term sheet to closing runs 8–14 weeks for a mid-market deal, extending to 16+ weeks where golden power notifications, antitrust filings or CONSOB clearances are required.
Closing typically involves simultaneous execution of the SPA, drawdown under the SFA, equity injection, and share transfer. Funds are frequently routed through a notarial or escrow account. Post-closing, the sponsor files updated shareholder details with the Registro delle Imprese, notifies relevant regulators (including tax authorities for group consolidation elections) and registers any security interests.
Red flags to monitor at closing: unresolved golden power conditions, outstanding change-of-control consents from commercial counterparties, and any pending antitrust review under either the Italian Competition Authority (AGCM) or the EU Merger Regulation (if thresholds are met).
The merger leveraged buyout in Italy involves a post-acquisition merger of the SPV into the target (forward merger) or of the target into the SPV (reverse merger). The legal basis sits in Articles 2501-bis and 2501-sexies of the Codice Civile, which impose specific disclosure and procedural safeguards when a merger is financed with acquisition debt.
The statutory steps for an MLBO include:
The primary advantage of the MLBO route is debt pushdown: once the merger is effective, the acquisition debt sits on the balance sheet of the surviving entity, enabling direct debt service from operating cash flows and, equally important, giving lenders recourse to the full asset base without offending the financial assistance prohibition. The process typically takes 6–12 weeks from the filing of the merger plan, driven primarily by the mandatory creditor opposition period.
Article 2358 of the Codice Civile is the single most consequential provision for sponsors assessing how to structure an LBO in Italy step by step. It prohibits a company from advancing loans, providing guarantees, or otherwise furnishing financial assistance for the acquisition of its own shares, unless strict conditions are met.
The prohibition is broadly drafted. It captures direct lending by the target to the acquirer, upstream guarantees, and the granting of security over the target’s assets to secure the SPV’s acquisition debt. In substance, any arrangement in which the target’s balance sheet supports the financing of its own purchase is prima facie caught.
Following the 2003/2004 reform of Italian company law, Article 2358 permits financial assistance by an s.p.a. provided that:
In practice, satisfying these conditions for a large-scale LBO is burdensome and introduces deal uncertainty, which is precisely why most Italian LBOs proceed via the MLBO route instead. By merging the SPV and the target, the surviving entity services debt that is now its own obligation, rather than providing “assistance” for a third party’s acquisition.
Where a direct financial assistance path is chosen (common only in smaller or closely held situations), the following safeguards are standard:
Lenders should be aware that structuring around financial assistance is not risk-free: a transaction that is later found to violate Article 2358 is void, and lender security interests could be unwound. Early independent legal review is essential.
Debt quantum in an Italian LBO depends on sector, target quality and prevailing credit-market conditions. Rather than prescribing fixed leverage multiples, sponsors should benchmark against recent comparable transactions and stress-test the capital structure under multiple operating scenarios. Industry observers expect that Italian mid-market LBO leverage in 2026 continues to settle around levels consistent with 3–5x senior debt / EBITDA, with total leverage (including mezzanine) extending further depending on sector resilience and sponsor track record.
Understanding how an LBO is structured at the debt level is essential for both sponsors and target management. The typical Italian LBO debt stack includes a senior term loan (amortising), a revolving credit facility for working capital, and, in larger deals, a mezzanine tranche or high-yield bond.
| Covenant Type | Senior Lender (Bank) | Mezzanine / Subordinated Lender |
|---|---|---|
| Leverage ratio | Maintenance test (tested quarterly); tightens over time | Incurrence test only (tested at new debt issuance) |
| Interest coverage | Maintenance; minimum EBITDA / interest-expense ratio | Typically none or soft incurrence test |
| Capex limit | Annual cap with carryover baskets | Rarely imposed directly |
| Restricted payments | Dividends / distributions blocked unless leverage below agreed threshold | Subordinated to senior restricted-payment test |
| Change of control | Mandatory prepayment trigger | Put option at par (or par plus premium) |
Amortisation profiles for Italian LBO term loans typically feature modest scheduled amortisation (1–5 per cent per annum) with a bullet repayment at maturity (5–7 years), supplemented by mandatory cash sweep provisions that accelerate repayment from excess cash flow.
Two regulatory regimes require early analysis in every Italian LBO: golden power screening and the mandatory OPA rules under the TUF. Both received significant policy attention heading into 2026.
Italy’s golden power framework empowers the Presidency of the Council of Ministers to block, impose conditions on, or unwind acquisitions of companies operating in strategic sectors. As of 9 February 2026, the Decreto Transizione 5.0 broadened the scope of golden power screening, expanding the definition of strategic assets to include additional critical-technology and digital-infrastructure categories.
Practical compliance steps for sponsors:
If the target is listed on a regulated Italian market, an acquisition that results in the purchaser holding more than 30 per cent of voting rights triggers a mandatory offerta pubblica di acquisto (OPA) under Article 106 of the TUF. A further consolidation OPA may be triggered at the 90 per cent threshold (Article 108 TUF), while squeeze-out and sell-out rights crystallise at 95 per cent.
LBO structuring must account for these thresholds from the outset. A share purchase that is structured to remain below 30 per cent at signing but that is intended to reach control via subsequent steps (options, convertible instruments, concert-party arrangements) may still be caught by CONSOB’s look-through approach and related regulations under the Regolamento Emittenti.
Compliance checklist for LBO deal teams:
Once the acquisition closes, the sponsor must establish the governance framework, manage ongoing tax compliance, and respect minority-shareholder protections, particularly where the target is listed or retains third-party minority investors.
| Entity Type | Key Post-Closing Reporting Obligations | Typical Deadline / Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| SPV (s.p.a.) | Annual financial statements; filing with Registro delle Imprese; corporate tax return | Within 120 days of financial year-end (180 days in limited cases) |
| Target (operating company) | Same as SPV; plus any sector-specific reporting (e.g., CONSOB for listed entities) | Quarterly interim reports if listed; annual filing otherwise |
| Merged entity (post-MLBO) | All obligations of surviving entity; updated creditor disclosures | First post-merger financial statements due within ordinary deadlines from the effective date |
Successfully structuring a leveraged buyout in Italy in 2026 demands a compliance-first mindset that integrates legal, regulatory and financial considerations from the earliest stages of deal origination. The expanded golden power framework, the enduring strictness of Article 2358 on financial assistance, and the hard triggers embedded in the TUF’s mandatory OPA rules mean that structuring choices made at the term-sheet stage can have irreversible consequences at closing and beyond.
For deal teams seeking a concise reference on how to structure an LBO in Italy step by step, the following ten-point checklist summarises the critical path:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marco Carbonara at Alpeggiani Avvocati Associati, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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