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Tag Archives: Bank of China
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The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on June 18. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY) To Become First Foreign Financial Payments Licensee (Chinese article)
New statements from 2 of China’s top 4 banks indicate a recent share buyback by their state-owned controlling stakeholder is done, raising the question of just how effective the program was and whether we might see more similar buybacks soon. Based on my own quick analysis, the program does seem have had some limited positive effect, with Shanghai-listed shares of both ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398) and Agricultural Bank of China (HKEx: 1288; Shanghai: 601288) outperforming the market over the last 6 months during the program period. Read Full Post…
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on November 30. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline. ══════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Prudential Financial (NYSE: PRU), Fosun Int’l (HKEx: 656) Launch China Life Insurance JV (Businesswire)
Bank of China (HKEx: 3988) Completes Issue of 39 Bln Yuan in Subordinated Bonds (HKEx announcement)
Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) Debuts Music Search Service (English article)
Baidu (Nasdaq: BIDU) Acquires Video Search Company Jinwan Kan Shenme – Source (Chinese article)
The near non-stop capital raising by major Chinese banks is showing no sign of slowing, with China Construction Bank (HKEx: 939; Shanghai: 601939) announcing yet another new plan to sell up to 40 billion yuan, or $6.5 billion, in subordinated debt to shore up its balance sheet. Similar to most recent cases, these bonds will be sold into the inter-bank bond market for domestic buyers, meaning that big state-backed institutions are likely to pay most of the bill for this latest recapitalization of a major Chinese bank, most of which are standing on the cusp of a major bad-loan crisis.
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 26. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline. ══════════════════════════════════════════════════════
After a flurry of capital raising in the beginning of the year, China’s banks have been silent over the last 6 months despite my previous predictions that 2012 would see a big flurry of money raising by these financially-challenged companies. But now that silence has abruptly ended with word that Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601988), one of the nation’s top 4 lenders, is preparing to raise about 23 billion yuan, or around $3.7 billion, through a subordinated bond offering. (English article) So now the question becomes: is this the beginning of a new flurry of fund-raising by China’s banks? The answer is a definite “probably”, though in this case we’ll probably simply see the banks that didn’t raise capital late last year or early this year engage in new fund raising.
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on October 20-22. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline. ══════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Bank of China (HKEx: 3988) Said to Plan 23 Billion Yuan Sale of Sub-Debt (English article)
Sohu (Nasdaq: SOHU) Completes Video Unit Spin-Off in Strong IPO Signal (Chinese article)
NetEase (Nasdaq: NTES) Microblog User Base Exceeds 260 Mln (English article)
China’s Finance Ministry Invests 4 Bln Yuan in National Cable Operator (English article)
China Unicom (HKEx: 762) Adds 3.18 Mln Users in September (Chinese article)
China’s credit card market could be heading for a major explosion soon, following the official entry of the first foreign card issuer to the market in the form of global banking giant Citibank (NYSE: C). Foreign media have given relatively little coverage to this event, but in my view the development is quite significant for reasons that I’ll explain shortly that could ultimately lead to the kind of consumer credit bust that previously wreaked havoc on the banking sectors in Taiwan and South Korea.
I’ll be the first to admit I’m far from an expert on China’s banks, but the latest signs coming from the sector lead me to wonder if perhaps Agricultural Bank of China (HKEx: 1288; Shanghai: 601288), the least respected of the country’s big 4 lenders, may be best positioned to weather the bad loan crisis sowing chaos in the industry. China’s broader banking sector is facing one of the worst crises since many of the nation’s banks started going public in the mid-2000s, as lenders are unable to collect billions of dollars in loans made for questionable infrastructure projects during the global financial crisis. The problems is being compounded by the nation’s current economic slowdown, fueled in large part by anemic exports and foreign investment as the rest of the world grapples with lingering effects of the global recession.
Investors have been anxiously watching for signs of a looming bad-loan crisis for China’s top banks, but the latest results from Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601398) indicate that Beijing may be looking to substitute slowing growth for a full-blow crisis. This kind of “compromise” could only happen in China, since Beijing’s position as both regulator and majority stakeholder of the major banks means it has the power to decide just how badly those lenders will suffer following a government-ordered lending binge in 2009 and 2010 that left most major players with billions of dollars in questionable loans.
The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 24. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline. ══════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Bank of China (HKEx: 3988) Posts Weakest Quarterly Profits Growth in 3 Years (English article)