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 | | Posted by admin on Thursday, April 13, 2006 - 08:40 AM |
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 |  | STANDARD Bank has agreed with Nigeria’s Oceanic Bank to put on hold a proposed merger deal, the banks said today. Reuters
Under the transaction, Oceanic would
have acquired Standard’s Stanbic Bank Nigeria and Standard Bank would
have taken a sizeable minority stake in Oceanic Bank.
Talks have ended for now because Stanbic Nigeria has
recapitalised under government guidelines and Oceanic was busy
integrating its takeover of Nigeria’s International Trust Bank, a
Standard Bank official said.
Nigeria last year moved to reform its fragile and crowded
banking industry by raising the minimum capital requirement for all
banks to $188,4m by the end of last year, prompting a flurry of merger
and consolidation activity.
In December, when it appeared that a deal with Oceanic
would not be completed by the end of the year, Standard said it would
capitalise Stanbic Bank Nigeria with an additional $180m.
"We’re under less pressure to do a deal and they’re busy
with integration," Kevin Wingfield, director of acquisitions for
Stanbic Africa, told Reuters.
"We’re not in talks at the moment but it doesn’t mean to
say that in time, once they’ve got the integration completed and
depending on where we are at that point, we may sit down around a table
and resume discussions about a potential merger."
In November, Standard agreed to pay $200-$300m for a
minority stake in Oceanic, sources close to the deal in Nigeria said at
the time.
By the end of last year, 25 banking groups had emerged from the forced consolidation of the Nigerian banking system.
Nineteen new groups, including Oceanic, emerged from
mergers between 72 formerly separate entities, while six banks decided
to go it alone, including Stanbic.
Standard has failed twice to expand in Nigeria,
sub-saharan Africa’s second largest economy, since the central bank’s
July 2004 direction to banks to recapitalise, but Wingfield said the
bank would keep looking for opportunities.
"At the end of the day, we’d like to play in the retail
market in Nigeria and it is unlikely that we’d do it through organic
growth, so we will make an acquistion, so the question is, is it
Oceanic or is it something else," he said.
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