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Italy’s capital markets reform 2026 and private equity landscape have shifted fundamentally with the entry into force of Legislative Decree No. 47 of 27 March 2026, which overhauls the Consolidated Law on Finance (TUF), and the parallel tax measures embedded in Law No. 199 of 30 December 2025 (the 2026 Budget Law). Together, these instruments rewrite takeover-bid thresholds, introduce an optional lighter listing regime for SMEs, reform voting-rights structures, revise board-nomination processes and tighten the participation-exemption rules that have underpinned Italian deal economics for more than a decade. For private equity sponsors mid-exit, M&A teams negotiating live transactions and boards preparing for the next renewal cycle, the practical consequences are immediate.
This guide provides the actionable checklists, comparison tables and clause-drafting guidance that deal teams need, organised around a 30/60/90-day roadmap.
The Italy 2026 capital markets reform demands action across three time horizons. The following priority items should be on every deal team’s and board’s agenda today.
Industry observers expect the combined effect of these reforms to accelerate Italian M&A activity, which already rose approximately 16 % in volume during 2025. The sections below unpack each change and translate it into concrete deal-level actions.
Two legislative pillars drive the changes. Legislative Decree No. 47 of 27 March 2026 implements the delegation granted by the Italian Parliament to modernise the TUF, the principal statute governing Italian capital markets since 1998. Its stated objectives, as outlined by MEF, are to stimulate growth, encourage savings and equity financing, and facilitate access to capital markets by Italian companies. Separately, the 2026 Budget Law (Law No. 199 of 30 December 2025) introduced fiscal measures that directly affect private equity deal structures, most notably revised thresholds for the participation exemption and adjustments to the dividend-exclusion regime.
The reform touches five core areas that every PE sponsor and M&A adviser must understand: takeover-bid rules and minority-protection mechanics; an optional lighter listing regime for newly listed companies and SMEs; expanded flexibility on voting rights, including loyalty shares and multiple-voting structures; new board-nomination and corporate-governance requirements; and the Budget Law’s tax-threshold changes. Each is explored in detail below.
| Date | Measure | Immediate Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 30 December 2025 | Law No. 199/2025 (2026 Budget Law) enacted | New participation-exemption thresholds and dividend-exclusion rules effective 1 January 2026 |
| 27 March 2026 | Legislative Decree No. 47/2026 signed | TUF reform text finalised; publication in Gazzetta Ufficiale |
| 29 April 2026 | Legislative Decree No. 47/2026 enters into force | New takeover-bid thresholds, SME listing regime, voting-rights and board-nomination rules become operative |
| Q3–Q4 2026 (expected) | CONSOB implementing regulations | Detailed procedural rules on prospectus, takeover-bid filings and lighter-regime eligibility criteria |
The amended TUF recalibrates the framework that has governed Italian takeover bids for two decades. For private equity sponsors considering public-to-private transactions and for strategic acquirers assembling stakes, the revisions demand immediate reassessment of deal structuring.
The decree adjusts the mandatory-bid trigger, revises the mechanics for squeeze-out and sell-out procedures, and broadens the remedies available to both minority and majority shareholders when voting restrictions are in play. The practical effect, as early indications suggest, is a more balanced regime, one that lowers barriers to certain acquisitions while strengthening the procedural safeguards that protect minority investors during the process.
| Topic | Pre-2026 Position | Post-2026 (Key Change) |
|---|---|---|
| Mandatory-bid thresholds | Fixed threshold at 30 % of voting rights (with a consolidation threshold at 25 % for widely held companies) | Revised calibration of thresholds and updated concert-party aggregation rules; loyalty-share voting power now factored into calculations |
| Squeeze-out / sell-out | 90 % threshold; pricing tied to offer price with limited exceptions | Updated mechanics with clearer timelines and revised pricing safeguards; streamlined CONSOB approval process expected |
| Voting-restriction remedies | Limited statutory remedies for shareholders affected by caps or ceilings | New opt-in mechanisms allowing companies to adopt, modify or remove voting caps with greater flexibility; minority veto rights on certain changes |
Private equity Italy 2026 exit strategies must be re-evaluated against three parallel shifts: the lighter SME listing regime, the revised takeover-bid framework that affects trade-sale pricing and the Budget Law’s tax changes that alter after-tax return calculations.
IPO exits. The reform introduces an optional lighter regulatory regime for newly listed companies and SMEs with a regulated-market capitalisation below €1 billion, alongside a clearer framework for movement between regulated markets and multilateral trading facilities (MTFs). Industry observers expect this to lower the cost and complexity of listing for PE-backed mid-market companies, making an IPO exit more viable for portfolio companies that might previously have been considered too small for Borsa Italiana’s main market.
Trade sales. The recalibrated takeover-bid thresholds and updated concert-party rules affect the negotiating dynamics of trade sales where the buyer will acquire a controlling stake. Bidders may face different mandatory-bid triggers, which in turn affects the premium analysis and deal timeline. Sellers should model these scenarios during pre-marketing.
Secondary transactions and block trades. The voting-rights reform and the new treatment of loyalty shares could affect the relative attractiveness of minority stakes in secondary transactions. Buyers of minority positions must factor in the potential dilution or enhancement of voting power that loyalty structures create over time.
| Factor | Lighter SME Regime | Standard Listing |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility | Regulated-market cap below €1 billion; opt-in basis | No cap restriction |
| Governance burden | Reduced initial compliance requirements for newly listed entities | Full TUF corporate-governance suite from day one |
| Prospectus | Simplified disclosure (CONSOB implementing rules pending) | Full EU Prospectus Regulation requirements |
| Transition to full regime | Automatic graduation upon exceeding cap threshold or after transition period | N/A |
PE sponsors considering an IPO exit for a mid-market Italian portfolio company should model the cost savings of the lighter regime against the potential valuation discount that reduced disclosure may attract from institutional investors.
The 2026 Budget Law (Law No. 199 of 30 December 2025) introduced changes that directly reshape PE deal structuring in Italy. The most consequential measures restrict access to the 95 % participation exemption under Article 87 of the Italian Tax Code (TUIR) and revise the dividend-exclusion regime, both of which have been foundational to Italian buyout economics.
Specifically, the Budget Law imposes new minimum-participation thresholds for accessing the participation exemption. This means that certain holding structures, particularly those involving intermediate vehicles with thin equity slices, may no longer qualify for the near-total exemption on capital gains that has historically supported Italian LBO and MBO architectures. Similarly, the dividend-exclusion rules that allowed corporate shareholders to exclude a significant portion of dividend income from taxable profits have been tightened.
For a detailed analysis of these tax changes and their modelling implications, see the companion article on Italy private equity tax changes 2026.
The reform creates new due-diligence priorities and requires updates to standard-form SPA provisions. Deal teams should treat the following as a minimum checklist for any Italian transaction signed after 29 April 2026.
New DD focus areas. Add specific workstreams for: (a) the target’s compliance with revised board-nomination and corporate-governance rules; (b) the status and terms of any loyalty-share programmes or multiple-voting structures; (c) the target’s exposure to revised takeover-bid thresholds if it is listed or contemplating a listing; and (d) the target’s holding-company chain to confirm participation-exemption eligibility under the Budget Law.
Representations and warranties. Standard rep packages should be expanded to cover the target’s compliance with the new TUF provisions, including representations on the accuracy of the shareholder register in light of loyalty-share tracking requirements and on the target’s board-nomination procedures.
Conditionality and MAC clauses. For transactions signed but not yet closed, consider whether the entry into force of Legislative Decree No. 47/2026 or CONSOB’s implementing regulations could constitute a material adverse change. Draft MAC definitions with precision to capture regulatory change risk while avoiding overly broad catch-alls that could be used opportunistically.
Compliance representation (sample):
“The Company is, and since 29 April 2026 has at all times been, in compliance in all material respects with the provisions of Legislative Decree No. 47 of 27 March 2026 and any implementing regulations issued by CONSOB thereunder, including without limitation the rules governing board nomination, loyalty shares and voting-rights structures.”
Tax-indemnity carve-out (sample):
“The Sellers shall indemnify the Buyer on an after-tax basis against any Tax Liability arising from or in connection with any failure of any Group Company to satisfy the revised minimum-participation thresholds introduced by Law No. 199 of 30 December 2025 for the purposes of Article 87 TUIR, to the extent such failure relates to a pre-Completion period.”
These snippets are illustrative starting points. They must be adapted to the specific transaction, governing law and negotiation context.
The reform imposes direct obligations on boards and creates governance risks that independent directors, in particular, must address. The following checklist is structured around the 30/60/90-day framework.
Immediate (within 30 days):
Within 60 days:
Within 90 days:
The following audience-specific checklists consolidate the actions described above into a single reference for each stakeholder group.
Italy’s capital markets reform 2026 and private equity landscape will continue to evolve as CONSOB publishes implementing regulations and the market tests the new framework on live transactions. Practitioners should monitor the official Gazzetta Ufficiale and CONSOB portals for updates.
For additional analysis on the tax dimensions of these changes, see the companion article on Italy private equity tax changes 2026. To connect with experienced Italian commercial and M&A counsel, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This guide will be updated as new regulatory guidance is published. Readers requiring transaction-specific advice should consult qualified Italian legal counsel before acting on any of the information provided.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Paolo Barozzi at Grande Stevens Studio Legale Associato, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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