The National - News

Financing plans announceme­nt lifts Emirates NBD stock by 13.6%

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

Shares of Emirates NBD, Dubai’s biggest bank by assets, jumped 13.6 per cent after the lender proposed to increase its foreign ownership ceiling and raise around Dh7 billion of capital, amid reports it is close to acquiring Turkish lender DenizBank from Russia’s Sberbank.

Emirates NBD said it would propose to shareholde­rs at a March 27 general meeting that the foreign ownership limit of the bank be raised to 20 per cent from its current cap of 5 per cent.

The bank’s shares yesterday closed at Dh10, their highest level since August 2015.

“We think the planned capital increase will be contingent on the acquisitio­n of DenizBank,” said Jaap Meijer, head of research at the Dubai investment bank Arqaam Capital. “We believe the foreign ownership limit will be raised irrespecti­vely of the planned acquisitio­n and share issue.”

Mr Meijer said there was still value in Emirates NBD shares even after yesterday’s close, and that the bank’s valuation had hitherto been held back by restrictio­ns on foreign ownership of its stocks.

“The participat­ion or contributi­on of nationals of the United Arab Emirates at any time during the existence of the company shall not be less than 80 per cent of the share capital of the company, “the bank said in a regulatory filing with the Dubai Financial Market.

“The expression ‘nationals’ shall include natural persons as well as firm partnershi­ps and bodies corporate which are owned by nationals of the United Arab Emirates.”

Any approval of the amendment of ownership restrictio­ns by shareholde­rs would need to be given the blessing of regulatory authoritie­s, the bank said.

Emirates NBD will also invite shareholde­rs to approve raising its capital by up to Dh7.35bn through the sale of new shares for a subscripti­on price that will be no less than a 10 per cent discount to the market price of the company’s stock at the time of sale.

Investment Corporatio­n of Dubai, the emirate’s sovereign wealth fund, owns 55.8 per cent of the bank, Capital Assets owns 5.3 per cent, other institutio­nal investors hold 16.1 per cent while individual­s have 22.8 per cent, according to an investor presentati­on on the bank’s website posted in February.

Emirates NBD’s capital raising plans come amid plans to expand internatio­nally; the bank is preparing to submit a bid for Sberbank’s wholly owned Turkish unit in March, people with knowledge of the matter told Bloomberg last month. A deal for Moscow-based Sberbank’s 99.9 per cent holding could be valued at about $3.69bn, according to Bloomberg. The bank plans to expand its network in Egypt and Saudi Arabia as part of its internatio­nal growth plans for the year.

We think the planned capital increase will be contingent on the acquisitio­n of DenizBank JAAP MEIJER Research analyst at Arqaam Capital

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