UBS to acquire US$500m stake in Bank of China (AFP) Updated: 2005-09-27 15:52
UBS, Switzerland's largest bank, said it was acquiring a 500-million-dollar
stake in Bank of China (BOC), China's second-biggest bank, as part of a
strategic partnership between the two banks.
The two are forming a mutually beneficial strategic cooperation covering the
development of investment banking and securities products and services in China
and for Chinese clients.
The deal is subject to Chinese regulatory approval.
A spokesman said Tuesday UBS expected the deal to close by the end of 2005.
Following the deal, UBS's stake in BOC will be around 1.6 percent.
The announcement came ahead of BOC's planned initial public offering (IPO)
next year, for which UBS is lead manager.
Royal Bank of Scotland, Merrill Lynch and the Li Ka-shing Foundation agreed
earlier this year to acquire 10 percent in BOC for a combined 3.1 billion
dollars.
UBS said in June that it was in talks with BOC and that it might invest up to
500 million dollars.
The cooperation and investment will "cement the long-standing relationship
between Bank of China and UBS", the Swiss bank said in a statement.
They will be preferred partners in various investment banking and related
securities business areas in China and for Chinese clients, and in addition will
cooperate in operational matters relating to these business areas.
"We regard this agreement as a natural development of our long-term
relationship with Bank of China. The combination of Bank of China's brand,
distribution and customer base with UBS's products, services and experience will
be powerful," UBS said.
The investment is part of UBS's strategic approach of pursuing a number of
ventures in the China markets aiming to capture growth potential, it added.
Swiss rival Credit Suisse, meanwhile, was reported to be eyeing a
500-million-dollar stake in China Construction Bank.
UBS's announcement of the BOC investment followed reports in Hong Kong that
the Swiss bank was also poised to announce around a 1.7-billion-yuan
(210,061-million-dollar) investment in the Beijing Securities.
UBS declined to comment on those reports.
If confirmed, the investment in Beijing Securities would be the first foreign
investment in a Chinese mainland brokerage.
The cash would help bail out the Chinese firm, which had debts of 160 million
yuan last year, in return for a 20 percent stake in the business and a level of
management unheard of among foreign investors in China.
Any deal would be seen as a gauge of China's willingness to open up its
brokerages to foreign investment, the reports added.
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