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China, Singapore join Barclays' takeover bid for ABN Amro
2007-07-23
The mammoth European battle for ABN Amro stretched to Asia on Monday, as Britain's Barclays won financial firepower from China and Singapore to strengthen its takeover bid for the Dutch bank. Barclays, the third-biggest British bank, said it had sweetened its offer by including a cash element as part of a revised informal bid worth about 67.5 billion euros (93.3 billion dollars) for ABN Amro. Its previous proposal had been an all-shares bid worth about 65 billion euros. The deal marked China's biggest-ever overseas investment, according to Barclays, and came as Beijing seeks to ramp up returns from its estimated 1.22 trillion dollars in foreign exchange reserves. Barclays is hoping the two Asian giants -- China and Singapore -- will help it outgun a rival bid from a three-member European consortium led by the Royal Bank of Scotland. The consortium, which also comprises the Dutch-Belgian group Fortis and Banco Santander of Spain, has formally offered 71.1 billion euros for ABN Amro. Either takeover would represent the world's largest acquisition in the banking sector. On Monday, ABN Amro said it "welcomed" news of a revised bid from Barclays. Barclays said it had agreed to sell new shares worth up to 9.8 billion euros to China Development Bank, which would make the Asian group the bank's biggest shareholder. Singapore's state-linked investment firm Temasek Holdings, meanwhile, will take a stake of up to 3.6 billion euros. Barclays chief executive John Varley said he was unfazed at the prospect of the Chinese government becoming the bank's dominant investor. "I am comfortable ... it's by far the biggest external investment ever made by China, and it's very good for Barclays," he said in a conference call with reporters. He added that the deal would give the British bank "unprecedented" access to the Chinese market. "I think it will be regarded as a very significant event," Varley said. In London, Barclays shares finished at 735 pence, up 3.01 percent. Also on the FTSE 100 index of leading companies, RBS gained 0.90 percent to end at 615.50 pence. ABN Amro won 0.74 percent to close at 36.90 euros in Amsterdam. Barclays said Monday that the Asian deal enabled the bank to increase its offer for ABN Amro to 67.5 billion euros, including a cash element worth 24.8 billion euros. "ABN Amro confirms that it has received a proposal for a revised offer from Barclays and notes that the consortium of Fortis, RBS (Royal Bank of Scotland) and Santander has formally launched its offer for ABN Amro," the Dutch group said Monday. It added: "ABN Amro welcomes the opportunity for shareholders to consider two competing proposals on a level playing field." Crucially, the statement did not mention whether Barclays has retained the backing of ABN Amro management, which had recommended Barclays' previous takeover proposal. In April, ABN Amro chairman Rijkman Groenink said Barclays was his company's "ideal partner." Meanwhile, the RBS consortium has offered 38.40 euros per ABN Amro share, while its bid is 93 percent in cash. The offer period began on Monday. Barclays said Monday that its revised offer was worth 35.73 euros per ABN Amro ordinary share based on Barclays' closing share price last Friday. "On this basis, the total consideration is currently valued at 67.5 billion euros, with approximately 37 percent in cash," the statement said. "The merged group is expected to generate significant and sustained future incremental earnings growth for all shareholders," it added. Barclays wants to merge ABN Amro's operations with its own to create a vast global group and the second-biggest bank in Europe after HSBC. The RBS-led grouping wants to break up ABN Amro and share its assets among the consortium. Santander would take over ABN's Italian and Brazilian operations, while Fortis would assume its retail banking division based in the Benelux countries. One other major difference between the two European bids concerns ABN's US unit LaSalle. Barclays' was boosted earlier this month after ABN won Dutch court approval for the sale of LaSalle to Bank of America, a key component of the Barclays takeover. RBS would take the cash from the sale of LaSalle in the event of successful takeover by the consortium, as well as the group's institutional banking business.
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