Showing posts with label chartered capital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chartered capital. Show all posts

Friday, January 28, 2011

VietinBank sells 10% stake to IFC

HCMC – Vietnam Bank for Industry and Trade, or VietinBank, on Sunday evening inked a cooperation deal with International Finance Corporation (IFC) including the sale of a 10% stake to the foreign institution at the value of US$190 million.

Pham Huy Hung, chairman of VietinBank, confirmed the information above with the Daily via the phone on Sunday.

In addition, the deal also includes a loan worth US$110 million from IFC to VietinBank with a term of ten years and interest rate equivalent to the Libor rate plus 1.5 percentage points a year, said Hung. After the stake transfer, the chartered capital of VietinBank will increase to VND21 trillion, or some US$1.05 billion, he added.

As of late June, the bank got approval from the State Securities Commission to issue 392 million shares, including 76.9 million shares to pay dividend existing shareholders and 315.1 million shares sold to shareholders.

Hung also told the Daily that by the end of this year, VietinBank will also sell another 15% stake to Canada-based Bank of Nova Scotia, bringing its chartered capital to about VND26 trillion.

VietinBank is the second State-owned bank of Vietnam going public after Vietcombank. It completed the initial public offering in July last year and then listed on the Hochiminh Stock Exchange under the code of CTG. The bank shares were traded at VND18,700 each last Friday, compared to VND40,100 each on the first trading day on July 16 last year.

In the first half of this year, VietinBank obtained nearly VND2.2 trillion in pre-tax profits.

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VietinBank sells 10% stake to IFC

HCMC – Vietnam Bank for Industry and Trade, or VietinBank, on Sunday evening inked a cooperation deal with International Finance Corporation (IFC) including the sale of a 10% stake to the foreign institution at the value of US$190 million.

Pham Huy Hung, chairman of VietinBank, confirmed the information above with the Daily via the phone on Sunday.

In addition, the deal also includes a loan worth US$110 million from IFC to VietinBank with a term of ten years and interest rate equivalent to the Libor rate plus 1.5 percentage points a year, said Hung. After the stake transfer, the chartered capital of VietinBank will increase to VND21 trillion, or some US$1.05 billion, he added.

As of late June, the bank got approval from the State Securities Commission to issue 392 million shares, including 76.9 million shares to pay dividend existing shareholders and 315.1 million shares sold to shareholders.

Hung also told the Daily that by the end of this year, VietinBank will also sell another 15% stake to Canada-based Bank of Nova Scotia, bringing its chartered capital to about VND26 trillion.

VietinBank is the second State-owned bank of Vietnam going public after Vietcombank. It completed the initial public offering in July last year and then listed on the Hochiminh Stock Exchange under the code of CTG. The bank shares were traded at VND18,700 each last Friday, compared to VND40,100 each on the first trading day on July 16 last year.

In the first half of this year, VietinBank obtained nearly VND2.2 trillion in pre-tax profits.

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Thursday, November 25, 2010

Small banks have trouble with recapitalization

An unidentified bank employee unstraps a stack of Vietnamese banknotes. Several small commercial banks find it hard to meet the chartered capital requirement of at least VND3 trillion by the year-end as their State-owned shareholders may not inject more capital into them as earlier planned - Photo: Le Toan
HCMC – Several small-scale commercial banks are now facing a huge test as how to increase their chartered capital to at least VND3 trillion by the end of this year since State-owned shareholders will unlikely pump more capital into these banks.

Many small banks have relied on State-owned shareholders, and they have built their recapitalization plans on pledges by these shareholders to inject more funds to maintain their stakes. However, a recent decision by the Government to restrict State-owned corporations from investing outside their core business operations and to withdraw their capital from non-core businesses has put many small banks under tenterhooks.

The State Bank of Vietnam has so far approved recapitalization plans by about 16 out of 21 banks with chartered capital less than the required VND3 trillion. However, many of these banks will have to redo their plans.

Nam Viet Commercial Bank (Navibank), for example, must be thinking laboriously now to seek new funds as Vietnam Textile and Garment Group (Vinatex) finds it difficult to contribute more capital as pledged. Vinatex, which holds an 11% stake in Navibank, has not earned the Government’s blessing to continue investing in the bank.

Vu Duc Giang, CEO of Vinatex, told the Daily on Monday that the Government had not permitted the company to contribute more funds into this bank. Furthermore, “in the future, if the Government asks Vinatex to withdraw capital from Navibank, the corporation must do it,” he said on the phone.

It is reported that Navibank has got approval from the central bank to increase capital from VND1 trillion to VND3.5 trillion. To realize the scheme, the bank will issue 98.9 million shares to existing shareholders in the first phase, then sell 148.35 million shares to existing shareholders in the second phase.

However, this capital raising plan will not work if the big shareholder Vinatex does not participate.

Another case is Vietcombank, which is 90% owned by the State. This bank has also invested in other banks such as Gia Dinh Bank and Orient Commercial Bank, and now is rethinking its strategy.

Nguyen Hoa Binh, chairman of Vietcombank, told the Daily that the bank would not invest more capital to maintain its ownership of 19% in Gia Dinh Bank when the bank issues shares to increase capital from VND1 trillion to VND3 trillion.

Binh said for the long term, the bank would not invest more or even divest capital from other commercial banks due to consideration of business efficiency.

It is unlikely that Vietcombank will pump more capital into financial investments as the Government has just injected more funds into the bank to increase its chartered capital by 33% in order that the bank meets the newly required capital adequacy ratio (CAR) of 9% as stated in Circular 13.

Ho Huu Hanh, director of the central bank’s HCMC Branch, said that almost all banks in the city had submitted their fund raising plans to the branch, but the success of those plans would not be ensured following the Government’s decision asking State-owned corporations to narrow down their outside investments.

If banks cannot realize their recapitalization plans by the end of this year, they must merger with each other or get disbanded in the future.

In its decision, the Government has dictated that State-owned corporations obtain approval from the Prime Minister before making decisions whether to continue pumping capital or not. The Prime Minister has assigned the Ministry of Finance to evaluate the effectiveness of State investments at commercial banks.

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Monday, November 8, 2010

An Giang Plan Protection to list on bourse next year

HCMC – An Giang Plant Protection Joint Stock Company, one of the country’s leading producers of agricultural drugs, is on process to trade shares on the Hochiminh Stock Exchange, said the company’s chairman and CEO.

Huynh Van Thon said that the firm was finalizing procedures to trade shares on the southern bourse and expected to officially get listed next February.

The company has chartered capital of VND310 billion, with a 30% stake held by the State Capital Investment Corporation (SCIC). The company has plans to double its chartered capital this year.

At this time, the company’s share on the OTC market is traded about VND70,000-80,000.

Last year, the firm obtained a pre-tax profit of VND390 billion. It’s annual target set pre-tax profits at VND290 billion for this year, but the company’s CEO said the figure would reach VND320 billion.

At this time, the company is pursuing two projects, one being to purchase rice from farmers and the other aimed at leasing 10,000 hectares of land in Cambodia for biotechnology research. These two projects are part of its long-term strategy of providing a plant protection package solution for farmers from soil, seed, to collecting and processing rice.

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