Central Huijin raising first round bond capital mostly through state owned banks
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According to the AFP, “Agricultural Bank of China on Tuesday confirmed plans to raise a world-record 23.2 billion dollars in a dual initial public offering in Hong Kong and Shanghai. The last of China’s “big four” state banks to list said it would raise the money if the monster IPO is fully subscribed when it begins on Wednesday.
Major institutional investors including sovereign wealth funds have already expressed strong interest in the IPO, which is on course to surpass the previous record of 22 billion dollars set in 2006 by Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC). AgBank said Tuesday that it planned to raise 13.1 billion US dollars from its Hong Kong IPO, with a price range of 2.88-3.48 Hong Kong dollars (37-44 US cents) a share. Xiang Junbo, chairman of AgBank, said government efforts to boost growth in China’s depressed central and western regions would help the rural lender.
“The county area business will be one of our key profit drivers,” he told a press conference in Hong Kong on Tuesday. “(AgBank) is well positioned to capitalise on China’s next wave of growth.”
The bank, which has been criticised for the amount of bad loans on its books, has worked in recent years to chop that figure, Xiang said.
Agbank’s prospectus said its bad debt ratio dropped from 4.32 percent in 2008 to 2.91 percent in 2009.
“The bank has made substantial improvement in the last few years,” Xiang said, referring to its credit review procedures.
The newly released prospectus said AgBank booked a profit of 65 billion yuan (9.56 billion US dollars) in 2009, up from 51.45 billion yuan in 2008. It is forecasting a 2010 profit of 82.9 billion yuan. Xiang also said a stronger yuan — demanded by the United States and other trading nations which claim they have been hurt by an unfairly cheap Chinese currency — could be “positive” for AgBank.”
Read more: AFP
According to the AFP, “Agricultural Bank of China’s initial public offering, set to be the world’s largest, has drawn 11 heavyweight investors who have stumped up 5.45 billion US dollars for the sale, a report said Thursday.
Shares in the company’s Hong Kong listing will be set between 2.88 and 3.48 Hong Kong dollars (37 and 44 US cents) ahead of their trading debut next month, Dow Jones Newswires said, citing a company prospectus.
A price range has not been revealed for the Shanghai portion of the listing.
The details came as AgBank — the last of China’s big four lenders to list its shares — kicked off an investor roadshow to drum up support for a sale that could draw almost 25 billion US dollars.
That would surpass the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China’s 22-billion-dollar IPO in 2006, which is currently the world’s biggest.
Gulf state investment funds Qatar Investment Authority and the Kuwait Investment Authority, US food giant Archer Daniels Midland, Australia’s media-to-heavy-equipment firm Seven Group Holdings, British Bank Standard Chartered and Dutch financial-services firm Rabobank are among the cornerstone investors, Dow Jones said.
The sale’s other major investors are: Singapore state investment company Temasek Holdings, United Overseas Bank, Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing’s Cheung Kong (Holdings), tourism monopoly China Travel Services Group and state-run consumer group China Resources (Holdings).”
Source: AFP
According to Reuters, “The Qatar Investment Authority, the Gulf country’s sovereign wealth fund, agreed to invest $2.8 billion in Agricultural Bank of China Ltd.’s initial public offering to tap growth in the world’s third-biggest economy.
The $58 billion fund signed an agreement with Agricultural Bank on June 17, two people with knowledge of the matter said, declining to be identified because the deal is private. The bank has allocated more than $5 billion for corporate investors such as QIA in the Hong Kong part of its IPO, the people said.
Agricultural Bank, China’s largest lender by number of customers, is seeking to raise as much as $15 billion in the Hong Kong part of what may be the world’s largest IPO, according to an e-mail sent to investors last week. The Beijing-based lender may sell as much as $28 billion of stock in Hong Kong and Shanghai combined, exceeding the $22 billion sale by Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. in 2006.”
Read more: Reuters
According to Marketwatch, “China’s national pension fund has taken a 15 billion yuan ($2.2. billion) stake in the upcoming initial public offering of Agricultural Bank of China, according to a Reuters report Friday, which cited an official with the National Social Security Fund. AgBank, which is known as one of China’s big four state-owned banks, is seeking to raise around $30 billion in the IPO, in a debut planned for Hong Kong and Shanghai by July.”
Source: Marketwatch