FirstRand Business News

Old Mutual May Raise Stake in Nigeria’s Oceanic Bank

Old MutualOld Mutual Plc said its South African private equity unit is considering increasing its 1.7% stake in Oceanic Bank Plc, one of 10 Nigerian banks bailed out by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) last year.

Old Mutual’s buyout division “has been in discussions with various regulatory bodies, including the Central Bank of Nigeria, as well as potential strategic partners, about various initiatives in relation to its investment, including potentially increasing it,” Matthew Gregorowski, spokesman for London-based Old Mutual.

Oceanic Bank of NigeriaOceanic’s CEO, Cecilia Ibru, was among eight CEOs fired by the CBN in August last year after it had to inject N620 billion ($4.1 billion) of capital into 10 of its 24 banks to cover bad debts. Nigeria is now wooing buyers to take stakes in the 10 troubled lenders.

“Discussions are confidential so we’re not at liberty to provide any further detail,” Gregorowski said. The buyout unit is part of Old Mutual Investment Group South Africa. “There is no guarantee that anything will come of these discussions.” Read the rest of this entry »

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Nigeria’s Distressed Banks: South Africa’s FirstRand & Standard Bank Show Interest in Buying

FirstRandFirstRand Ltd. and Standard Bank Group Ltd., South Africa’s two biggest banking groups, have both registered with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to investigate buying distressed lenders in the West African country.

Standard BankThe timetable for buying any of the 10 Nigerian institutions that failed an audit last year will be determined by the CBN, FirstRand CEO Sizwe Nxasana said today. The Johannesburg-based bank said it may prefer to buy one of Nigeria’s “healthier” banks.

“There are opportunities across the board,” Nxasana, 52, said. “We are still looking at all the options.”

AbsaFirstRand first mooted its African expansion plans last June while Standard Bank is also looking to add to its assets in Nigeria. Additionally, ChairmanKing.com reported in September that Barclays/Absa was applying to open an office in Nigeria.

While the country’s banking crisis last August saw the central bank inject N620 billion ($4.1 billion) into 10 banks to cover bad debts, the economy’s growth potential means Nigerian institutions offer “nice opportunities,” investor Mark Mobius said last week. Read the rest of this entry »

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Standard Bank Looking at Nigeria for Possible Takeover Targets

Standard BankStandard Bank Group Ltd., Africa’s largest lender, says it’s looking at Nigeria for possible acquisition opportunities as a banking crisis in the West African country slashes valuations.

“The current situation in Nigeria does present opportunities, and we are watching developments with interest,” said Erik Larsen, spokesman for Johannesburg-based Standard Bank, in an e-mailed response to questions today. “Nigeria is a key strategic market for Standard Bank.”

Stanbic IBTCStandard Bank already operates in Nigeria through its controlling stake in Stanbic IBTC.

Nigeria’s banking crisis began in August when the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) sacked eight chief executive officers and injected N620 billion ($4.1 billion) into those and two other distressed lenders to boost their capital and liquidity. Read the rest of this entry »

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What’s Next for Nigeria’s Banks?

The Central Bank of Nigeria has an important role to play in efficiently regulating Nigeria's banking sector.

The Central Bank of Nigeria has an important role to play in efficiently regulating Nigeria's banking sector.

Since the audit results of the remaining 14 Nigerian banks was announced earlier in the month, there has been much speculation about foreign take-overs of the troubled institutions, as well as mergers within the sector. Going forward, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will also have to actively manage the financial health of the banks and make sure they don’t find themselves in such a situation again.

After the audit findings on the first 10 of Nigeria’s 24 banks were revealed in the middle of August, the market has been holding its breath for the results of the 14 remaining banks.

On 2 October, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced that four more banks – Bank PHB, Equitorial Trust Bank (ETB), Spring Bank, and Wema Bank – were undercapitalized, in a poor liquidity position, and in what the CBN called a “grave situation”. A fifth bank – Unity Bank – was adjudged to have insufficient capital but a healthy liquidity position.

The CBN said it will inject N200 billion (US$1.3 billion) into the four distressed banks to stabilize them. This is in addition to the N420 billion ($2.8 billion) released to the five banks – Oceanic Bank, Intercontinental Bank, AfriBank, Finbank and Union Bank – found to be in trouble after the first round of audits. The managing directors and executive directors of Spring Bank, Equitorial Trust Bank (ETB), and Bank PHB have also been removed. Read the rest of this entry »

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Why the Nigerian Banks Stay Optimistic

Naira

Analysts at Renaissance Capital call it the numbers game in Africa’s biggest market with a population of 150 million and note that Nigerians are still spending. One barometer, the sales of first-class and business-class air tickets on flights between Lagos and Europe, indicates the elite is awash with cash. More contentiously, Renaissance predicts that Nigeria’s gross domestic product will hit $308 billion in 2011; the IMF’s projection for South Africa is $262 billion.

Oil, gas, and Africa’s biggest market keep the investors interested despite the increasingly desperate politics in Abuja ahead of the 2011 elections.

After six weeks of billion dollar bailouts, high-level sackings, and the arraigning in court of five top executives, Nigeria’s financial sector is still robust enough to prompt paeans of praise from banks such as Goldman Sachs, Renaissance Capital and Standard Chartered. Not far behind in their pursuit of Nigerian business are South African banks such as Standard, Absa (now controlled by Britain’s Barclays Bank) and FirstRand – all of which are looking at buying stakes in troubled Nigerian banks, such as Intercontinental, Union, and Oceanic. Read the rest of this entry »

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Absa/Barclays Applies to Open Office in Nigeria; FirstRand and Standard Bank Keen to Enter Nigerian Banking Market

AbsaAbsa’s Deputy CEO Louis von Zeuner said that Absa was applying for a representative office licence in Nigeria. Mr. Zeuner said this at an exhibition for the financial services group’s clients yesterday.

According to Absa’s Deputy CEO, international opportunities have opened up after UK-based Barclays bought a 51% stake in Absa. Barclays has been driving business to Absa and vice versa.

Competitor banking group FirstRand said on Tuesday that it was keen to enter the Nigerian banking market and that FirstRand had received conditional approval for an office in Nigeria. FirstRand’s CEO-designate Sizwe Nxasana said that the bank would wait for a second phase of consolidation among Nigerian banks before entering the market. Read the rest of this entry »

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Sizwe Nxasana, FirstRand’s CEO is the First Black South African to Head One of South Africa’s “Big Four” Commercial Banking Groups

Sizwe Nxasana

Sizwe Nxasana

There is a Rolls-Royce, a Maserati, an Aston Martin and a couple of Porsches, but it is the Bugatti Veyron that occupies pride of place in the collection of fast cars owned by Sizwe Nxasana, the chief executive of FirstRand, the South African financial services group.

However, the vehicles are models that line a shelf in the Johannesburg office of the first black South African to head one of the country’s big four commercial banking groups. The 52-year-old Mr Nxasana is a very different kind of businessman to the politically well-connected black entrepreneurs well known for their lifestyles and powerful motors.

While state-sponsored black empowerment and asset transfer policies have created an elite of “black tycoons”, Mr Nxasana came through the apartheid system as one of the country’s first black chartered accountants and has prospered in the largely white corporate world. His management record – at Telkom, the partly state-owned telecommunications concern, and since 2006, as head of FirstRand’s banking business – has won him plaudits.

FirstRandAlthough his ascent owes little to affirmative action, he is a firm believer in black empowerment policies – under which some ZAR500 billion (USD65 billion, EUR46 billion, GBP40 billion) of corporate assets have been transferred to black owners since 1994. He believes the real significance of his appointment is “a demonstration that the country is making progress in the area of transformation. [It is important] that my appointment acts as a catalyst for other corporates to do the same or even for other black people to have confidence in themselves that it is possible you can be appointed to a position like this”. Read the rest of this entry »

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Absa & Interntaional Finance Corporation (IFC) in $150 Million Infrastructure Funding Deal

AbsaSouth African banking group Absa said on Thursday it has entered into a $150 million funding deal with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) to invest in sub-Saharan African infrastructure projects.

Absa, said it would also use the funds from the World Bank’s private sector finance arm to explore other opportunities in the region.

“Absa through Absa Capital shall focus particularly on infrastructure development in the telecommunications; oil and gas; and power and energy sectors,” Absa CEO Maria Ramos said in a press briefing. Absa Capital is Absa’s investment banking arm. Read the rest of this entry »

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FirstRand Bank and China Construction Bank (CCB) form Partnership to Win African Investments

FirstRand BankFirstRand Bank, South Africa’s No. 2 banking group, has partnered with China Construction Bank (CCB) to help both companies win investment, corporate and project finance deals in Africa.

They said they would focus on providing joint advisory and structuring services to CCB’s Chinese clients looking to expand in Africa, African corporate clients, and projects that may be of interest to CCB’s Chinese customers and FirstRand’s South African clients looking to do business in China. Read the rest of this entry »

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South African Banking Stocks Are “Cheap” Versus Peers, Investec Says

Investec Asset ManagementSouth African banking stocks are trading near their biggest discount to global emerging-market peers in 10 months and investors should buy them, says John Biccard, a Fund Manager at Investec Asset Management. “We think South African banks are safer than most of their peer group as they have not been invested in so-called toxic assets,” John Biccard, who has bought stocks of Standard Bank Group Ltd. and Absa Group Ltd. in the last three months, said in an interview today. “The gap between the local banks and the emerging-market banks isn’t justified.”

Investec Asset Management is a unit of Investec, owner of the fifth-largest bank in South Africa by assets. Read the rest of this entry »

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