Strategy
DBS Pumps Up China Capital Ratio With $365M Injection

DBS joins a long line of lenders who are bidding to bolster their balance sheets ahead of new Chinese capital ratio requirements.
DBS Bank, Southeast Asia’s largest
lender, plans to inject RMB 2.3 billion ($365 million) into its
China franchise to bring its captial ratio near to a high 60 per
cent.
It joins a long line of lenders either
based in China, or with Chinese businesses, who are bidding to
bolster their
balance sheets, ahead of possible fresh rules on capital ratios
set by the country's watchdog.
DBS China also plans to continue
investing to expand its rapidly growing franchise in the country,
said the firm
in a statement. The investments will be in network expansion,
headcount growth,
infrastructure upgrades, consumer and corporate internet banking
platform
enhancements and other technology developments.
DBS was the first Singapore bank to be
locally incorporated in China five years ago, it said in a
statement.
“Last year was a good year for
the bank overall and for DBS China in particular. Our 2011 net
profit doubled
from a year ago, crossing the RMB 500 million mark for the first
time,” said
DBS China chief Melvin Teo.
“Today, Mainland China is the third
largest revenue contributor to DBS Group, after Singapore and
Hong Kong,” he
added.
In January this year,
DBS China opened
its first inland China branch in Western China’s biggest city
Chongqing.
Chongqing is home to 33 million people and is one of the largest
cities in the
world. It is also China’s fastest growing city with 16.4 per cent
GDP growth in
2011.
“In 2011, our net profit exceeded SGD 3
billion, a historic first for the banking sector in Singapore.
Greater China
accounted for around 30 per cent of our total revenues and this
year, we expect
this proportion to further increase,” said DBS Group chairman
Peter Seah.
The move signals a commitment to the growth nation, where stricter new rules on banking could soon be enforced.
In August last year, the China Banking Regulatory
Commission issued new capital adequacy rules for banks, requiring
them to
maintain a capital ratio of at least 11.5 per cent, or 10.5 per
cent for smaller lenders.
Soon after, local media reports said the
regulator subsequently postponed the new rules to ensure
adequate lending to support economic growth. However the capital
ratios are believed to be enforced soon.
Yesterday, China Merchants Bank got the
green light for a rights issue that could see it raise $5.5
billion through an
A or H share placement. In March, Bank of Communications said it
will raise RMB56.6 billion through a private A-share placemen,
while China Mingsheng Bank raised $1.44 billion from an H-share
placement. Bank of Beijing also recently raised RMB11.8 billion
through a private A-share placement, according to reports.
China hasn’t announced a lending target for 2012, but
Barclays reportedly estimates that Chinese banks will issue about
RMB8 trillion of new
loans this year.