http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/business/fate-of-10-billion-bank-deals-turns-on-indonesias-dbs-call/

Fate of $10 Billion Bank Deals Turns on Indonesia’s DBS Call 
By Joyce Koh on 10:48 am May 7, 2013.
Category Business, Economy
Tags: Bank Danamon, Indonesia banking industry, Singapore DBS Group Holdings 
Choi Chang-Sik, the head of Hana Financial Group’s Indonesian banking unit, 
says a takeover in Southeast Asia’s most populous country would be worth paying 
top dollar for.

South Korea’s third-largest lender could become one of Indonesia’s 20 biggest 
banks through a purchase, he estimated, up from 69th now. “If we pay a big 
price to acquire a good bank, I think it pays off,” Choi said in an April 12 
interview in Jakarta, adding that the sentiment reflects his personal opinion.

Right now, though, there’s one big hurdle to Choi’s thinking. Indonesian 
ownership rules introduced last year stipulate that foreign lenders may be 
limited to minority investments in a market where loans are the most profitable 
among the 20 biggest economies.

That’s why foreign lenders like Hana are closely watching an Indonesia central 
bank ruling on DBS Group Holdings’s proposed $6.8 billion takeover of Bank 
Danamon Indonesia. Should the central bank restrict Singapore-based DBS to 
buying a 40 percent stake rather than the full takeover it is seeking, other 
overseas banks may cool on acquisitions in Indonesia, said Mark Young, the head 
of Fitch Ratings’ financial institutions group in the Asia-Pacific region.

“It would make banks sit back and think more carefully about it,” said Young.

A decision could come within days, Bank Indonesia Governor Darmin Nasution told 
reporters in Jakarta on Monday.

Door left open

At stake is an estimated $10 billion of deals targeting Indonesia, according to 
three investment bankers who asked for anonymity because they’re not authorized 
to discuss the matter publicly. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Japan’s largest 
bank by market value, and China Construction Bank, the country’s second 
biggest, are among lenders that have studied acquisitions there.

Bankers will be studying the DBS ruling because while Indonesia’s central bank 
limited initial purchases to 40 percent, it left the door open for buyers who 
meet criteria for capital strength to increase their investments over time. The 
new regulations came after DBS’s April 2012 announcement of the Danamon 
takeover, the biggest-ever bank deal in Indonesia.

‘No shortage’

The central bank may approve the DBS deal in full to avoid hurting Indonesia’s 
banking industry by choking off foreign investment, according to Jonathan 
Foster, Singapore-based director of special situations at Religare Capital 
Markets.

“There’s no shortage of people who want to come in, and there’s potentially no 
shortage of targets,” said Clifford Rees, PricewaterhouseCoopers’ head of 
financial services in Indonesia. Rees said he gets calls every week from 
potential buyers based in Japan, China, South Korea and Europe seeking deals in 
the nation of 254 million people.

On March 6, the central bank issued a circular signaling a five-year waiting 
period before banks can raise their stakes in rivals above 40 percent, assuming 
they meet corporate-governance standards; foreign acquirers must also commit to 
supporting Indonesia’s economy by lending to productive sectors, among other 
criteria, it said.

Indonesian lenders are the second-most profitable among the 20 biggest 
economies in the world, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The average 
return on equity is 22.6 percent for the country’s five banks with a market 
value of more than $5 billion, the latest available data show. Those lenders 
boasted an average net interest margin of 7.3 percent, the best among the 20 
largest economies, the data show.

Sumitomo Mitsui

Potential acquirers are also drawn to an economy estimated by the International 
Monetary Fund to expand 6.3 percent this year, the fastest pace in Southeast 
Asia. A swelling middle class and a lower penetration of bank loans than in 
neighboring countries like Malaysia adds to the attraction. At about 30 
percent, Indonesia has the lowest loan to gross domestic product ratio among 
major Asian markets, according to a World Bank presentation in February last 
year.

Indonesia’s attractiveness means some foreign lenders are unfazed by the new 
ownership limit. Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, Japan’s second-largest 
publicly traded bank, is nearing a deal to buy a stake in Bank Tabungan 
Pensiunan Nasional being sold by TPG Capital, people familiar with the matter 
said last week.

Financial crisis

Japanese banks, whose loan margins are the thinnest in Asia, may be more 
willing than lenders from other countries to settle for minority stakes in 
Indonesia, said Henri Guedeney, partner at Chicago-based management consulting 
firm A.T. Kearney.

“Some of the Japanese and Korean players are not necessarily looking at 
full-fledged ownership, but a strategic stake to capture the growth or 
establish joint ventures,” Guedeney said. “It’s all part of learning the 
market.”

Until 2012, Indonesia was among few developing countries in Asia that allowed 
majority acquisitions of local banks, with a 99 percent ceiling. China, India, 
Thailand and Vietnam restrict overseas lenders to minority stakes.

Indonesia’s open investment climate was the legacy of the Asian financial 
crisis when the nation’s economy shrank 13 percent in 1998, and more than 80 
banks failed or were nationalized or recapitalized. Temasek Holdings Pte., 
Singapore’s state investment company, Fort Worth, Texas-based TPG and Farallon 
Capital Management LLC of San Francisco were among foreign buyers who profited 
by purchasing local banks that then multiplied in value.

“In 1998, we simply just sold these banks at a low price,” Raden Pardede, who 
was vice president director of the agency responsible for selling 
government-held assets, said in an interview. “The window of opportunity is not 
always open.”

Capital ratio

Under the new rules, a foreign acquirer must have at least a 6 percent Tier 1 
capital ratio to qualify for a majority bank purchase. DBS, Southeast Asia’s 
largest lender, ended 2012 with a ratio of 14 percent, according to data 
compiled by Bloomberg.

“As a strong financial institution coming from a strong economy with strong 
regulators behind it, DBS makes a good candidate in terms of an acquisition,” 
said Fitch’s Young. A decision limiting DBS to 40 percent “would clearly mean 
that it may be difficult to acquire majority ownership of an important bank in 
Indonesia.”

‘Punitive’ deals

DBS is “very reluctant” to buy minority stakes, Chief Executive Officer Piyush 
Gupta said on May 2, after the bank reported earnings for the three months to 
March 31. Basel III rules that require banks to deduct minority investments of 
10 percent or more from their capital make such deals “quite punitive,” DBS 
finance chief Chng Sok Hui said. By contrast, majority acquisitions don’t 
trigger capital deductions.

Buying just a 40 percent stake in Danamon could reduce DBS’s Tier 1 ratio by 70 
basis points, and the deal may take longer to add to earnings than an all-out 
acquisition, Krishna Guha, an analyst at Jefferies Group LLC, wrote in an April 
23 research note.

Small Indonesian lenders, meanwhile, are likely to seek partners as the country 
introduces stricter capital regulations, according to Rees of PwC. New rules 
that take effect this year bar banks with less than 1 trillion rupiah in 
capital from offering electronic banking or conducting foreign-exchange 
transactions.

“There are banks out there readying themselves for sale,” Rees said, adding 
that there are 10 deals or so of about $100 million each in the works. “All 
they have to do is wait until the moment is right.”

Bloomberg


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke