Tag Archives: Nanyang Commercial Bank

News Digest: December 19-21, 2015

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on December 19-21. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL), Samsung to Enter China Payments Market With UnionPay (English article)
  • Qihoo 360 (NYSE: QIHU) Enters into Definitive Agreement for Going Private (PRNewswire)
  • Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Unveils Plans for China Joint Venture (English article)
  • Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN), Oriental Pearl in Cloud Computing Partnership (Chinese article)
  • BOCI (HKEx: 3988) Sells Nanyang Commercial Bank to Cinda for HK$68 Bln (HKEx announcement)

FUND RAISING: Slowing Economy Undermines BOC, Great Wall Motor Deals

Bottom line: Muted interest in Great Wall Motor’s fund-raising plan and Bank of China’s sale of a major asset reflect weakening investor interest in such deals due to the slowing Chinese economy.

Weak sentiment pressures, BOC, Great Wall Motor deals

Funding for Chinese Internet companies is showing no signs of slowing just yet, but reports of weak demand for 2 other deals reflects fading investor interest in more traditional sectors as China’s economy slows. The first of those has car maker Great Wall Motor (HKEx: 2333; Shanghai: 601633) sharply reducing plans for a new issue of A-shares on China’s domestic stock markets. The second has Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601398) attracting scant interest for the sale of a major asset in Hong Kong.

Neither of these developments comes as a huge surprise due to growing worries over China’s rapidly slowing economy. Great Wall was never one of China’s top auto makers to start with, and the big reduction in its 16.8 billion yuan ($2.6 billion) fund-raising plan comes as the domestic auto market slows and investors pile out of China’s crumbling stock markets. Meantime, Bank of China has been trying to sell its Hong Kong-based Nanyang Commercial Bank for a while now, and the latest reports say only 1 interested party has emerged. Read Full Post…

BANKING: Bank Of China Creates SE Asia Play

Bottom line: Bank of China’s plan to create a Southeast Asian unit around its Hong Kong-based BOCHK looks like a smart move that will give investors a chance to buy shares of its more commercially-focused global operations.

Bank of China to create separate SE Asia unit

Chinese banks have always been a difficult investment option for westerners due to their heavy reliance on China, where they take orders from Beijing leaders that use them as an economic policy tool rather than letting them act like real commercial lenders. The banks’ international operations are more interesting from an investor’s perspective, as they tend to behave more commercially because they have to competite in markets where they don’t enjoy any special government-granted advantages.

The problem is that international operations are usually just a tiny business for most of the big Chinese banks, even as industry leaders ICBC (HKEx: 1398; Shanghai: 601398) and Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601988) spend billions of dollars on offshore acquisitions and other overseas expansion. That’s why a new plan by Bank of China looks particularly exciting, as it will finally give stock buyers an option to invest exclusively in the company’s offshore operations, in this case in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia.  Read Full Post…

BANKING: Bank Of China Finds Few Buyers For HK Nanyang Unit

Bottom line: Bank of China’s Hong Kong arm is likely to find limited interest in a sale of its Nanyang Commercial Bank unit, as a slowing Chinese economy cools offshore interest in buying Hong Kong banks.

Bank of China looks to sell Nanyang Bank

A new report about a potential major bank sale in Hong Kong made me realize that a widely expected rush to buy locally based lenders in the former British colony never materialized. This latest report that the Hong Kong unit of Bank of China (HKEx: 3988; Shanghai: 601398) is shopping its locally-based Nanyang Commercial Bank might rekindle speculation that a flurry of new sales is coming. But the potential buyers mentioned in the report make such a gold rush look unlikely, indicating local Hong Kong banks may be losing their appeal as acquisition targets for Chinese and other global lenders. Read Full Post…