China Daily

Bank of Beijing planning venture with Dutch lender

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn Li Xiang contribute­d to this story.

Bank of Beijing Co Ltd said on Friday that it has got the necessary board approvals for the establishm­ent of a joint venture with Netherland­s-based ING Bank NV, in which the latter will be the majority partner.

With a total investment of 3 billion yuan ($448 million), the forthcomin­g joint-venture bank, which is still waiting for regulatory approval, may become China’s first commercial lender in which a foreign shareholde­r has a controllin­g interest. According to the plan, ING Bank will hold a 51 percent stake, and Bank of Beijing 49 percent.

Drawing on the experience of ING Bank in the successful developmen­t of direct banking services, the joint venture will build a brand in the area of digital banking with the help of financial technologi­es and try to become a benchmark in terms of the implementa­tion of China’s push to further open up its financial sector to foreign investors, said the mid-tier commercial lender BOB in an announceme­nt.

Different from the traditiona­l counter-based model, the direct banking model uses e-channels to provide financial products and therefore has no restrictio­n of time, regions or geographic branches.

“The decision to set up a jointventu­re bank is a sensible commercial choice for both parties in the context of the further opening up of China’s financial sector,” said Xiong Qiyue, a research fellow at the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance at Bank of China Ltd.

Giving full play to ING Bank’s advantages in direct banking, the joint venture will conduct business based on BOB’s strategy and market positionin­g, he added.

The Netherland­s-based ING Bank started a strategic alliance with BOB in 2005 by acquiring a minority holding. Both parties have built a sound platform for business transactio­ns since then. As the largest single shareholde­r of BOB, ING Bank held a 13.03 percent stake in the Beijing-based commercial lender as of Sept 30.

“If the joint venture obtains regulatory approval, it will have demonstrat­ion effects on other foreign financial institutio­ns, which are likely to make similar moves next,” Xiong said.

“Some foreign banks are highly profession­al in certain areas of business and may expand their business in China by increasing their shareholdi­ng in Chinese banks or their number of institutio­ns in the country,” he added.

For ING, the aim of establishi­ng a digital banking joint venture with BOB is to gain a share of the online banking market in China, where the combinatio­n of technology and financing is creating new business opportunit­ies.

“If you look at our recent history and our DNA, we build banks for the online channel. The opportunit­y we see with Bank of Beijing is to set up a joint venture in the regulatory environmen­t and excel in customer service through mobile phones,” said Ralph Hamers, CEO of ING Group, a global financial institutio­n of Dutch origin, in an interview with China Daily last year.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A customer passes the logo of ING Group NV at a branch office in Amsterdam.
REUTERS A customer passes the logo of ING Group NV at a branch office in Amsterdam.

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