Showing posts with label China Strategic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China Strategic. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

New sale looms for AIG Taiwan unit as bid collapses

TAIPEI - AIG is sure of at least one bidder for its Taiwan Nan Shan Life unit should it put it back on the market, with Chinatrust Financial reaffirming its interest on Tuesday after the original buyers pulled out.

China Strategic and Hong Kong fund Primus Financial, the original buyer group, formally ended their US$2.2 billion bid on Monday after Taiwan's regulators had blocked it at the end of August.

AIG is widely expected to put Nan Shan, Taiwan's No.3 insurer by market share with T$1.5 trillion ($47 billion) in assets, back on sale as it seeks to repay US government funds following its bailout during the global financial crisis.

"We want to, and need to know what AIG's next move will be," Chinatrust President Daniel Wu told Reuters. "We would bid for Nan Shan by ourselves ... via either selling shares or bonds."

AIG's Taipei-based media relations company said on Tuesday that the insurer was "evaluating its options with respect to its ownership of Nan Shan".

China Strategic's chief executive, Raymond Or, told Reuters that it was too early to say whether it would consider bidding again, but said he would have to assess whether a fresh bid would have any chance of success.

"If there is no chance, then there is no point in spending time and money," Or said. "Currently I would think it is better for China Strategic to move on."

Primus Financial declined to comment.

Shares of China Strategic dropped over 8 percent in morning trading and trimmed their losses to end 4.8 percent down at HK$0.295 while the Hang Seng Index was nearly flat.

Last month Taiwan regulators blocked the bid from China Strategic, a battery maker, and Primus, saying the two did not have experience in the insurance industry and lacked the ability to raise capital for future operations.

The buyers did not take the option of appealing the ruling, which lawyers said would have been unlikely to succeed.

Failed sale

The sale was the second failed attempt in Asia by AIG to sell assets to repay billions of US taxpayer dollars used to bail out the company. In May, the $35.5 billion sale of its American International Assurance (AIA) unit to Britain's Prudential Plc fell through.

The US insurer now plans to list AIA in Hong Kong on Oct. 29 in a $15 billion float, the biggest ever in Hong Kong and also the biggest ever insurance float.

It was not likely to take that option for Nan Shan, analysts said.

"It would be in AIG's best interest to launch another bid," said an analyst at an European-based securities house. "An IPO of Nan Shan would simply take too much time and get too complicated."

In addition to Chinatrust, Fubon Financial Holding has expressed interest in buying Nan Shan.

Cathay Financial may also be interested, analysts have said.

A source with direct knowledge of the sale process told Reuters earlier this month that regulators were unlikely to take issue with bids from Fubon or Cathay, either alone or with partners such as private equity companies.

But they would be wary of a Chinatrust bid, because the firm, Taiwan's biggest credit card issuer, is heavily leveraged.

All three were losing bidders in the original sale of Nan Shan last October.

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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

China Strategic ends AIG Taiwan unit buy, shares slump

TAIPEI - Shares in China Strategic Holdings Ltd fell more than 6 percent on Tuesday after the battery maker said it had formally ended a US$2.2 billion bid to buy insurer American International Group Inc's Taiwan unit after regulators rejected the deal.

Hong Kong-listed China Strategic said in a statement late on Monday that it and partner Primus Financial Holdings had agreed with AIG to terminate the deal to buy Nan Shan Life effective Monday.

Last month, Taiwan's regulators blocked the bid for Nan Shan from China Strategic and Hong Kong investment fund Primus, saying the two did not have experience in the insurance industry and lacked the ability to raise capital for future operations.

The buyers had the option of appealing, but China Strategic said earlier this month that AIG was leaning towards a new sale.

AIG's Taipei-based media relations company said on Tuesday that the insurer was "evaluating its options with respect to its ownership of Nan Shan".

Primus Financial declined to comment.

China Strategic shares were 6.5 percent lower at HK$0.29 while the Hang Seng Index was up 0.3 percent.

It was the second failed attempt in Asia by AIG to sell assets to repay billions of US taxpayer dollars used to bail out the company. In May, the $35.5 billion sale of its American International Assurance unit to Britain's Prudential Plc fell through.

AIG plans to list AIA in Hong Kong on Oct. 29 in a $15 billion float, the biggest ever in Hong Kong and also the biggest ever insurance float.

Analysts say AIG is likely to put Nan Shan back on the market, although an IPO is an outside possibility.

Taiwan banks Fubon Financial Holding Co Ltd and Chinatrust Financial Holding Co Ltd have expressed interest in buying Nan Shan, while analysts have said Cathay Financial Holding Co Ltd may also be interested.

A source with direct knowledge of the sale process told Reuters earlier this month that regulators were unlikely to take issue with bids from Fubon or Cathay, either alone or with partners such as private equity companies, but they would be wary of a Chinatrust bid, because the firm, Taiwan's biggest credit card issuer, is heavily leveraged.

All three were losing bidders in the original sale of Nan Shan last October.

Nan Shan is Taiwan's No.3 life insurer by market share. Its policyholders make up almost a sixth of the island's population.

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