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Recent
events have not dampened Pakistan's continued banking and financial sector
expansion. The latest development follows a spate of purchases by overseas
banks looking to expand in Pakistan.
In the latest deal, Saudi Pak Commercial Bank (SPCB) is due to be bought in
a $200m deal. Standard Chartered in 2006 became the first international bank
to enter the country since the sector went through the 1997 reforms, paying
$487m for Union Bank.
In December 2006 a subsidiary of Singapore's state-owned Temasek Holdings
said it would buy a controlling stake in Pakistan Industrial Credit and
Investment Corporation Bank.
Today, of those banks, only one - National Bank of Pakistan - remains in the
public sector. The other two, Habib Bank and United Bank, have been
privatised.
Then, in March last year, ABN Amro - the Dutch bank that has since been
bought by a consortium of Royal Bank of Scotland, Santander and Fortis -
followed suit, buying the privately owned Prime Bank for $225m in a move
that has made ABN a household name in urban Pakistan. |