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Tag: Mizuho Bank

  • First Abu Dhabi Bank, Mizuho Bank in race for SBI’s stake in Yes Bank

    First Abu Dhabi Bank, Mizuho Bank in race for SBI’s stake in Yes Bank

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    Within days of State Bank of India putting its 25 per cent stake in Yes Bank on the block, interest is visible from West Asia and Japan.

    According to four bankers aware of the matter, UAE’s largest bank, First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB), and Japan’s leading lender, Mizuho Bank, have shown interest acquiring SBI’s stake in Yes Bank.

    While NBD Emirates, also headquartered in the UAE has evinced interest in YES Bank, FAB and Mizuho are said to be leading the race.

    Discussions with RBI

    It is gathered that Mizuho Bank has appointed Bank of America to run the deal. FAB has had a few rounds of discussions with the Reserve Bank of India on the acquisition under various structures.

    The mandate to find a buyer for SBI’s shares has been given to Citibank and, according to sources, the investment bank is reaching out mainly to large foreign investors. “A key directive given to the investment banker is that the deal should fetch top dollar foreign direct investment into the banking space,” said a banker aware of the development.

    Also read: Kotak Mahindra Bank: Shedding the underperformer tag may be a tough task

    At present, no domestic investor or foreign private equity fund has been approached.

    Emails to SBI, Yes Bank, FAB and Mizuho Bank remained unanswered till press time.

    Contours of deal

    According to latest shareholding pattern of Yes Bank, SBI holds 25.02 per cent. Interested investors have been asked to consider three options vis-a-vis SBI’s stake — take the 26 per cent stake; go up to 49 per cent which would involve making an open offer after taking over SBI’s stake; and, last, if the investor is keen on a simple majority shareholding of 51 per cent, apply to the Reserve Bank of India.

    Also read: AU SFB to explore universal bank conversion

    The RBI’s 2016 master direction on ownership in private sector banks allows foreign investment from all sources, that is, FDI, foreign institutional investors, and non-resident Indians, up to 74 per cent of the paid-up capital.

    FAB and Mizuho Bank have branch operations in India. They operate in corporate finance and global transaction banking, catering to large overseas corporate customers. However, globally, FAB and Mizuho are known for their retail banking strengths and FAB specifically for its credit card products.

    YES Bank bailout

    To put things in perspective, in March 2020, SBI led the consortium of banks that bailed out Yes Bank when it was placed under moratorium. SBI picked up 48 per cent, while HDFC Ltd and ICICI Bank took 10 per cent each with Axis Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, IDFC First, Federal Bank and Bandhan Bank picking up smaller stakes. Collectively, the eight banks held about 75 per cent in Yes Bank.

    According to the latest stock exchange data, apart from SBI, Axis Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank together hold 7.7 per cent in Yes Bank.

    Yes, there’s much interest!
    • UAE’s First Abu Dhabi Bank and Japan’s Mizuho Bank said to have interest to acquire SBI’s 25% stake in Yes Bank
    • Citibank handling the mandate to find buyer for SBI’s stake
    • I-bank presently reaching out to large foreign investors for this purpose
    • Interested investors asked to consider three options:
    • Acquire 26 per cent stake in Yes Bank
    • Increase stake to 49 per cent stake through open offer
    • Seek RBI okay to acquire 51 per cent stake in Yes Bank

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  • NBD Emirates, Mizuho Bank eye KKR’s stake in Avendus Capital 

    NBD Emirates, Mizuho Bank eye KKR’s stake in Avendus Capital 

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    Japan’s Mizuho Bank and Dubai’s government-owned NBD Emirates are frontrunner to take over KKR’s stake in Avendus Capital. The two foreign investors are said to be at advanced stages of due diligence and are expected to submit their bids in the next 2 – 3 weeks.

    The deal is said to be valued at approximately $430–450 million (₹3,500–3,750 crore), which is slightly lower than KKR’s earlier anticipated valuations of $500 million. Nomura is said to have been engaged to handle the mandate.

    KKR holds about 63 per cent stake in Avendus Capital with the rest held by Gaja Capital and Yogesh Mahansaria, Founder and CEO of Alliance Tire Group. According to sources, both the interested buyers are keen to hold more stake in the company in addition to taking over KKR’s interest.

    To pick up 80%

    “Emirates and Mizuho have shown interest to pick up at least 80 per cent stake in Avendus Capital, though that would depend on whether the other shareholders are willing to exit in the current round of secondary transaction,” said a highly placed source aware of the development.

    Gaja Capital and Mahansaria came into play at Avendus’ cap table in 2017 round of fund infusion, when the company raised ₹980 crore. Best known for its investment banking capabilities, Avendus Capital is a 24-year-old homegrown boutique financial services firm with interest ranging from credit solutions including structured credit funds, wealth management, asset management and institutional equities. The firm was originally promoted by Kaushal Aggarwal, Ranu Vohra and Gaurav Deepak.

    In 2015, KKR picked up 58 per cent stake in Avendus for a valuation of about $200 million. Emails sent to NBD Emirates and Mizuho Bank remained unanswered till press time, while spokesperson for Avendus said “we do not comment on stories of this nature as per company policy”.

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  • Stock Futures Rise, Dollar Weakens in Thin Trading: Markets Wrap

    Stock Futures Rise, Dollar Weakens in Thin Trading: Markets Wrap

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    (Bloomberg) — US equity futures edged higher while the dollar extended losses as trading resumed after the Christmas holiday amid investor expectations for earlier and deep interest rate cuts next year.

    Most Read from Bloomberg

    Stocks in Asia were mixed in a thin trading session with markets including Hong Kong, New Zealand and Australia shut. Emerging Asian currencies rose, with South Korea’s won and Taiwan dollar leading gains against a weak dollar that fell to its lowest level in almost five months.

    Some on Wall Street are positioning for further stock gains ahead as the session kicked off the start of the “Santa Claus rally” — a seasonal trend where equities tend to climb into the first few days of the new year. The S&P 500 notched an eight-week winning run on Friday — the longest in more than five years on signs price pressures in the US were easing. Ten-year US Treasury yields slid two basis points to 3.88%.

    “As for emerging markets in Asia, ‘silent night’ says much, given that there isn’t particularly inspired trading, with Wall Street equivocating ahead of Christmas,” said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank. “It looks like a case of averting the China drag and hanging on to earlier Santa rallies being the best case for Boxing day – boxing in risks.”

    Stocks fell in mainland China, with the benchmark CSI 300 Index headed for its first drop in four sessions, as investor sentiment remains weak even after the authorities softened their stance following a move last week to tighten curbs on the videogame industry.

    Elsewhere, Singapore dollar was little changed after core inflation edged lower in November, giving the central bank room to extend its monetary-policy pause next month to support the economy.

    Japan’s auction of two-year sovereign debt saw tepid investor appetite, sending a gauge of demand to the weakest in a year, amid speculation the central bank will end negative interest rates in 2024. Its labor market remained relatively tight in November, keeping pressure on employers to boost wages in order to fill positions.

    The benchmark Topix index traded within tight ranges after Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda’s speech on Monday that suggested he’s in no hurry to end the ultra-easy monetary policy.

    “With the Nikkei 225 at high levels, year-end selling to lock in profits and losses is likely to weigh on the upside,” says Hideyuki Ishiguro, senior strategist at Nomura Asset Management.

    In the corporate world, Chinese gaming shares outperformed the benchmark after a number of companies announced plans to repurchase their shares following news of the latest government curbs on the sector. Cathie Wood last week made her first purchase of shares in LY Corp. in over a year, indicating a possible shift toward more positive sentiment on the operator of Yahoo! Japan and popular messaging app Line.

    Iron ore futures hit $140 a ton, highest in 18 months as traders keep a close eye on China’s steel outlook for the next year. Oil rose slightly after posting the largest weekly gain in more than two months, with shipping disruptions in the Red Sea in focus after a spate of Houthi attacks against vessels in the vital waterway.

    Geopolitical tensions still remain front of investors minds into the new year as tensions in the Middle East look set to increase. Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi said Israel will pay a price for killing a senior commander of its Revolutionary Guard in air strike in Damascus on Monday. The US accused Iran at the weekend of an attack on a tanker in the Indian Ocean.

    READ: Israel Sees Defense Spending Climbing $8 Billion as War Rages

    US Growth Resilience

    Global markets have been buoyed in recent months as traders bet major central banks including the Federal Reserve will aggressively cut interest rates next year as inflation falls. Bond yields have tumbled while the S&P 500 is nearing a fresh record.

    Data released last week showed signs of resilience in US growth while the Fed’s preferred underlying inflation metric barely rose in November. Additional reports Friday showed consumers were also gaining conviction that inflation in the world’s largest economy was on the right track despite a bumpy housing market recovery.

    That helped cement investor expectations for earlier and deeper interest rate cuts next year, despite pushback from several Fed policymakers. Swaps traders are betting interest rates will be eased by more than 150 basis points in 2024, double the Fed’s forecast.

    Read more: Fed’s Preferred Inflation Gauges Cool, Reinforcing Rate-Cut Tilt

    Key events this week:

    • BOJ releases summery of opinions from December meeting, Wednesday

    • China industrial profits, Wednesday

    • Norway retail sales, Wednesday

    • Japan industrial production, Thursday

    • South Korea industrial production, Thursday

    • Thailand trade, Thursday

    • Mexico unemployment, Thursday

    • Bank of Portugal releases quarterly report on banking system, Thursday

    • South Korea CPI, Friday

    • Spain CPI, Friday

    • UK nationwide house prices, Friday

    • Brazil unemployment, Friday

    • Chile unemployment, Friday

    • Colombia unemployment, Friday

    Some moves in major markets:

    Stocks

    • S&P 500 futures rose 0.1% as of 6:30 a.m. London time

    • The Shanghai Composite fell 0.7%

    • Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.3%

    • Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was little changed

    Currencies

    • The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.1%

    • The euro rose 0.2% to $1.1025

    • The Japanese yen was little changed at 142.25 per dollar

    • The offshore yuan was little changed at 7.1467 per dollar

    • The Australian dollar rose 0.3% to $0.6816

    • The British pound rose 0.1% to $1.2707

    Cryptocurrencies

    • Bitcoin fell 2% to $42,674.63

    • Ether fell 1.9% to $2,229.68

    Bonds

    • The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined two basis points to 3.88%

    • Japan’s 10-year yield advanced two basis points to 0.630%

    • Australia’s 10-year yield was unchanged at 4.01%

    Commodities

    • West Texas Intermediate crude rose 0.3% to $73.75 a barrel

    • Spot gold rose 0.5% to $2,064.35 an ounce

    This story was produced with the assistance of Bloomberg Automation.

    –With assistance from Akemi Terukina.

    Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

    ©2023 Bloomberg L.P.

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