The Wall Street Journal

Dutch State Cuts ABN Amro Stake as Europe Moves to Exit Crisis-Era Bailouts

Some European government moves to reduce bank stakes have allowed industry players to take strategic positions in the past

Published May 20, 2025 at 6:50 AM ET

The Dutch government trimmed its stake in lender ABN Amro to below one-third, following in the footsteps of European states that are moving to unload holdings in banks they built during the global financial crisis.
The Dutch government trimmed its stake in lender ABN Amro to below one-third, following in the footsteps of European states that are moving to unload holdings in banks they built during the global financial crisis. Photo: piroschka van de wouw/Reuters

The Dutch government trimmed its stake in lender ABN Amro to below one-third, following in the footsteps of European states that are moving to unload holdings in banks they built during the 2008-09 global financial crisis.

The exit of crisis-era bailouts has picked up in recent years as bank stocks rallied on the back of earnings-boosting interest rates and bumper cash returns to shareholders.