BIZCHINA / Center |
CDB makes global finance forayBy Zhang Ran (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-07-24 10:19
In an unprecedented sortie into the global financial market, a State-owned bank has teamed up with an international partner to join Europe's most heated competition in a banking takeover. Yesterday, China Development Bank (CDB) - the largest of the three policy banks specializing in government-sponsored domestic infrastructure investment - dramatically increased its international profile by announcing that it will buy up to 5 percent in London-based Barclays, Britain's third largest lender. Barclays is trying to close a merger with ABN Amro, Europe's eighth largest bank in total assets. In an official statement, CDB Governor Chen Yuan expressed "strong support" to the Barclays management's global strategy. And that support is mainly in cash, John Studzinski, senior managing director of Blackstone - which is providing financial advisory services to CDB in its Barclays deal - told China Daily. CDB's Barclays deal is the first time that a State-backed financial organization has become an active player in an international buyout of a large financial service network. According to an announcement by CDB, it will join Temasek Holdings of Singapore to invest up to 13.4 billion euros ($18.5 billion) in Barclays through subscription of shares. And that, in turn, will provide additional capital for Barclays in its ongoing bid for Amsterdam-based ABN Amro. After enlisting the two Asian supporters, Barclays made a simultaneous announcement revising its bid for ABN Amro, increasing the offer from an earlier 64 billion euros ($88.4 billion) up to 67.5 billion euros ($93.3 billion). With the share issue to CDB and Temasek Holdings, Barclays also recast its bid for ABN Amro from an all-share offer to a cash-and-share deal, with cash making up 37 percent of the total. Sun Mingchun, vice-president and chief economist of Lehman Brothers Asia, saw it as "a very active move" by a Chinese financial firm in seeking overseas expansion. "Unlike the embryonic State Investment Company's $3 billion subscription in Blackstone's shares in May, which is merely a financial investment aimed to balance the massive foreign exchange reserves, CDB's investment is an active move targeted at improving the bank's management and seeking overseas expansion," Sun said. |
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