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发表于 2009-7-6 09:25:30
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Dove Tales
Newbridge and Ping An had contemplated an SDB deal for up to three years. All along, Ping An was cautious.
"Unless there is financial investment value, we will not acquire Shenzhen Development Bank," said Ping An Chairman Ma Mingzhe in a Caijing interview June 14. "But of course, strategy is more important than finance."
Ping An has wanted a nationwide bank since snapping up regional Fujian Asia Bank in 2003. A year later, it bid for Guangdong Development Bank but dropped out amid fierce competition.
The market first learned about Ping An's interest in SDB in 2006, when the bank's stock was trading at 16 yuan per share, and SDB needed extra capital to pay for the share-reform required by the securities regulator. Ping An nailed a deal to buy shares of SDB and signed a contract to buy a stake from Newbridge as soon as the lock-up period expired. But Newbridge ditched the plan and footed the bill for SDB share reform by itself.
After failing to acquire the SDB stake, it turned to buy Shenzhen Commercial Bank and merged the two banks under its umbrella to form the Ping An Bank. But the banking arm never grew to Ma's expectations.
"For now, insurance is still our core business, as it represents 80 percent of the group's business," Ma said. "Banking and asset management account for 10 percent.
"We hope to spend about five years encouraging non-insurance businesses to grow faster," he said. "Our goal is to see the insurance and non-insurance businesses contribute 50-50 to the group's profits."
SDB was Ping An's last chance at a big bank. Other nationwide commercial banks either have a stable shareholder structure, or previously invited enough strategic investors. So talks with Newbridge resumed this past spring.
"The negotiations were very professional, very tough," said Hu. The bottom line for Newbridge was 22 yuan per share. Finally, both sides agreed that one Ping An H share could be exchanged 1.74 shares of SDB.
In fact, the price of SDB's new private placement -- 18.26 yuan per share -- was agreed upon just one hour before the June 12 board meeting. This was an average of SDB's market price over the previous 20 trading days, above an industry norm that usually offers a 10 percent discount.
Despite the higher price, Ping An wasn't upset. It helped that the buyer was Ping An's subsidiary Ping An Life, not the parent group, which was troubled by heavy write-downs resulting from a recent investment loss in the European financial group Fortis.
Ping An General Manager Louis Cheung said money is not a problem since the group "has disposable cash of around 24 billion yuan, and can meet the solvency standards for our subsidiaries. Even if Newbridge chooses cash, it would be no more than 11.45 billion yuan." |
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