Temasek Holdings (Private) Limited, headquartered in Singapore,
will invest US$1 billion at the initial public offering (IPO)
during the China Construction Bank's planned international IPO, a
bank spokesman announced Monday.
China Construction Bank (CCB) and Asia Financial Holdings Pte.
Ltd. (AFH), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Temasek, signed a
definitive agreement in connection with the strategic investment in
CCB on July 1, the spokesman revealed.
Pursuant to the agreement, Temasek will invest in CCB through
AFH.
AFH will also purchase certain existing shares from the Central
Huijin Investment Company, Ltd., an investment arm of the Chinese
government in state banks, the spokesman said.
Subject to mutual agreement, AFH will assist CCB in improving
corporate governance, including the right to nominate suitable
candidates for election to CCB's board of directors. Other areas of
collaboration and technical support are still under
discussions.
CCB's successful establishment of the strategic partnership with
Temasek follows the signing of a strategic investment agreement
with the Bank of America on June 17.
This demonstrates that CCB has taken another "important" step
forward in deepening reform and improving corporate governance, and
also signifies that CCB's strategic investor negotiation process is
basically complete, the spokesman said.
Just two weeks ago, the Bank of America said it will invest 2.5
billion dollars in CCB, -- and earmark an additional 500 million
dollars when CCB goes public later this year as scheduled -- for a
roughly 9 percent stake in the country's leading property
lender.
This was the largest sum of foreign investment poured into a
Chinese company by a single foreign company, an insider said.
The Bank of America also received an option to increase its
stake in the coming few years to 19.9 percent at the price of the
shares in CCB's IPO, approaching to the ceiling set by China's
banking regulator for investment by a single foreign bank.
Billions of dollars are affordable for the Chinese government
and even a domestic enterprise. "If we are pursuing the money, it
is not necessary at all to invite a foreign investor," Qin
Chijiang, a financial professor of the Central University of
Finance and Banking said in an interview with Xinhua.
"Instead, what a foreign partner could bring is more
sophisticated management. It as a shareholder will prod CCB to
exercise scientific decisions and promote transparency," Qin
added.
Their agreement is a "good thing" as it shows that renovation of
state banks was fruitful and attracted foreign investors, he
said.
China is in the midst of overhauling its state banks, including
CCB, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, the Agricultural
Bank of China and the Bank of China, ahead of the World Trade
Organization-mandated opening of the financial market to foreign
rivals by the end of 2006.
At the end of 2003, CCB received 22.5 billion dollars in foreign
exchange reserves from the central government-sponsored investment
company Central Huijin, to help boost the bank's capital base.
CCB Chairman Guo Shuqing revealed earlier that his bank is
trying to sell shares to the public this year, but the IPO also
depends on market factors.
CCB's net assets soared to 194.7 billion yuan (23.5 billion
dollars) by the end of last year. Its major business indices, such
as return on assets and bad debt ratio, all met regulatory
requirements.
Established in 1974, Temasek manages a diversified global
portfolio of 54 billion dollars. Its investments are in a range of
industries such as telecommunications and media, financial
services, property, transportation and logistics.
CCB was advised in Monday's transaction by China International
Capital Corporation and Morgan Stanley.
(Xinhua News Agency July 5, 2005)