by winston » Thu Jul 16, 2015 5:53 am
not vested
$68b eyed for bank unit state firms only
BOC Hong Kong (2388) is seeking to sell its unit, Nanyang Commercial Bank, for a higher-than-expected HK$68 billion, but it wants interested buyers restricted to mainland corporates.
Bidding will close on August 25, BOC Hong Kong said in a statement yesterday. Potential suitors or their controlling shareholders must be financial institutions with Chinese government ownership of more than 50 percent, it said.
The asking price is higher than the market estimate of around HK$50 billion, and is equivalent to about 1.95 times Nanyang Commercial's book value at the end of 2014. The ratio could reach a local record of 2.27 times if based on the book value in the statement.
In 2013, Yue Xiu Group spent HK$11.6 billion to take a majority stake in Chong Hing Bank, valuing the lender at 2.08 times historical book value.
Last year, Singapore's Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp paid HK$38.7 billion for Wing Hang Bank, valuing the latter at 1.77 times.
If the Nanyang disposal materializes, that will become the largest sale of a Hong Kong bank to date.
Li Shanshan, a Beijing-based analyst at BoCom International Holdings, said the price for Nanyang is reasonable, as "this deal gives the potential buyer full control of NCB. That's why the seller can ask for a high price." In May, Bloomberg cited sources as saying that bad-loan manager China Cinda Asset Management., China Life Insurance, New China Life Insurance and Yue Xiu Group had been shortlisted to make offers for Nanyang.
Analysts said BOC Hong Kong is unlikely to earmark net sales proceeds as special dividend and will instead use them to buy assets in Southeast Asia from its parent, Bank of China (3988).
BOC Hong Kong closed 2.3 percent higher at HK$31.30, while Dah Sing Banking Group (2536), one of the few unsold local lenders, rose 3.5 percent.
Source: BLOOMBERG
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"