I like place

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

CITIC bidding for stake in US investment bank




Oct. 17 - Leading financial firm
China CITIC Group (CITIC) is bidding for a stake in Bear Stearns, one of Wall
Street's top investment banks, top officials said Tuesday in Beijing.

Jiang Dingzhi, vice-chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission,
and Chang Zhenming, president of CITIC Group, said the group is keen on a stake
in the US bank.

Neither Jiang, speaking on the sidelines of the Communist Party of
China's (CPC) 17th National Congress on efforts by Chinese financial companies
to expand abroad, nor Chang would reveal any more details such as the size of
the stake or the price.

Bear Stearns ranked 7th among Wall Street investment banks by revenue
before it suffered the hardest from the US subprime credit crisis, which has
caused its market value to drop as much as 25 percent this year to $17.4
billion.

Warren Buffett, the billionaire chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc, is
also interested in buying a stake in Bear Stearns, the New York Times reported
on September 26. Other potential investors are Bank of America Corp, Wachovia
Corp and China Construction Bank.

"At the moment, Bear Stearns is a bargain," Arthur Lau of JF Asset
Management in Hong Kong told Bloomberg. For China, it's important to have a
platform to learn more about investment banking, he said.

Wu Yonggang, an analyst with Shanghai-based Guotai Junan Securities, said
buying a stake in Bear Stearns will help CITIC connect the booming domestic
capital market with the United States.

CITIC owns 26 percent of CITIC Securities, the Chinese brokerage whose
market value has more than quadrupled this year to $50 billion, making it Asia's
largest securities firm. The company also controls 62 percent of China CITIC
Bank Corp, which raised $5.95 billion in a Hong Kong initial share sale in May.

"By expanding overseas, CITIC will gain valuable experience in a leading
investment bank," Wu said.

"But Chinese companies are not familiar with the overseas market or
international merger and acquisition issues, and that could be a disadvantage, "
he warned.

China Minsheng Banking Corp, the mainland's first privately owned bank,
said earlier this month said it may buy a stake in UCBH Holdings Inc, the
biggest bank serving the Chinese community in the United States.

No comments: