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Bank
sticks to preference of making acquisitions in emerging markets but is able
to fund deal from own resources HSBC demonstrated its ability to weather the
banking crisis when it announced a $607m (£351m) deal in Indonesia yesterday
which allows Britain's largest bank to double its presence in the world's
fourth-most populous nation.
The arrangement to buy an 88.9% stake in Bank Ekonomi follows frenzied
speculation that HSBC would buy a troubled investment bank or bail out one
of Britain's banks. Instead, it defied the rumors and stuck to its
preference of making acquisitions in emerging markets. It is able to fund
the deal from its own resources.
The transaction is the latest illustration of the banks' divergent
approaches to dealing with a crisis that has forced Lloyds TSB, HBOS and
Royal Bank of Scotland to raise capital from the government. Barclays,
however, has bought the Wall Street businesses of collapsed Lehman Brothers
in a signal it is determined to expand in the face of market adversity. Alex
Potter, banking analyst at Collins Stewart, believes three strategic strands
are developing.
The first is the move by strong banks such as HSBC and French bank BNP
Paribas to conduct deals in the mayhem. BNP Paribas is now the largest
retail bank in Europe after buying assets from the distressed Dutch-Belgian
combine Fortis. The second are those banks hunkering down for the financial
crisis by taking government support and the third are the "select few that
fall between the two - which externally look weak but have internal
confidence", said Potter. Barclays, which has avoided the government-backed
bail-out of the banking sector by promising to raise funds in the private
sector, falls into this category.
Sandy Flockhart, chief executive of HSBC in Asia, stressed HSBC was not
moving to buy distressed assets. "This is not a bust bank or a bank with
problems behind it. It's a conservative, well-managed bank and in view of
that it should be easier to take it through to the next stage," said
Flockhart. Prudential, the insurance company, is considering the potential
takeover of parts of the Asian empire of AIG, the insurer part-nationalized
by the US authorities.
Like Barclays, Prudential is looking for potential investors in the Middle
East to back its expansion plans and might also call on existing
shareholders to support a cash call in the event that it proceeds with the
takeover. Prudential's trading statement today will be scrutinized for any
details of the need to raise fresh funds to finance an offer at a time when
the City is becoming more concerned about the financial strength of the
insurance sector. |