Bank forced to tap funds by Katherine Ng, The Standard HK
China Merchants Bank (3968) admits it has to raise funds because its purchase of Wing Lung Bank (0096) last year reduced its capital adequacy ratio, putting pressure on it to replenish its capital base.
Chairman Qin Xiao said yesterday the mainland's fifth-largest lender will raise funds from the stock market either by issuing new shares or through a placement. He did not elaborate.
Qin added the bank's net interest margin faces a squeeze that will offset the robust loan growth this year and thereby stifle its net interest income.
The Shenzhen-based lender said buying Wing Lung Bank dragged down its tier one capital adequacy ratio to 6.56 percent at the end of 2008.
Wing Lung was the only local bank to end in the red last year with a net loss of HK$816.15 million, compared with a gain of HK$1.37 billion a year earlier.
China Merchants Bank last year wrote off 9.27 billion yuan (HK$10.54 billion) in goodwill value, representing about 54.58 percent of the acquisition cost of HK$19.3 billion for Wing Lung Bank. It will write off another 200 million yuan this year.
But Zhu Qi, executive vice president of China Merchants Bank and president of Wing Lung Bank, expects the local lender to turn around this year and record strong earnings and expand its market in three years.
CLSA maintained a "sell" on the lender and revised down its target price to HK$8.83, a 37 percent discount to yesterday's closing price of HK$14.10.
Morgan Stanley downgraded the stock to "equal weight" and cut its target price to HK$15.53.