| GE to buy stake in Shenzhen Development BankBy Rachel Layne (Bloomberg News)
 Updated: 2005-09-30 08:38
 General Electric Co agreed to buy a 7 per cent stake in China's Shenzhen 
Development Bank Co valued at about US$100 million, as its consumer finance unit 
expands in emerging markets, people familiar with the situation said. 
 Newbridge Capital LLC, which bought 18 per cent of Shenzhen in December, 
manages the bank. The purchase would increase the foreign ownership stake to the 
25 per cent limit imposed by the Chinese Government. 
 GE Consumer Finance expects about three quarters of its profit to come from 
outside the US this year, David Nissen, head of the business, told investors in 
July. Earnings at the business are expected by GE to climb 20 per cent in 2005, 
faster than the Fairfield Connecticut-based conglomerate as a whole. 
 Newbridge spokesman Owen Blicksilver and GE spokesman Russell Wilkerson 
declined to comment. 
 The GE purchase was reported earlier on Wednesday by the Wall Street Journal, 
which cited unnamed people. 
 Frank Newman, chairman of Newbridge, became the first foreigner to lead a 
commercial bank in May. The investment firm bought its Shenzhen stake from four 
government-controlled shareholders for US$149 million in December, after more 
than two years of talks. 
 San Francisco-based Newbridge's stake is the biggest of any single 
shareholder, giving the firm the right to appoint the chairman and top managers 
of the bank, based in the city of Shenzhen across the border from Hong Kong. 
 General Electric, the world's biggest issuer of private-label credit cards, 
buys stakes in or purchases banks or finance companies, helped by the lower 
borrowing costs because of GE's AAA credit rating, the highest available. 
 (China Daily 09/30/2005 page10)
 
 
 
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