The National - News

AL RAJHI IN MERGER TALKS WITH MALAYSIAN SUBSIDIARY

The Saudi lender has received preliminar­y approval for the deal from the relevant regulators

- SARMAD KHAN

Al Rajhi Bank, Saudi Arabia’s second-largest lender by assets, said it is in talks for a potential merger of its fully owned subsidiary in Malaysia with a statebacke­d financial institutio­n in the Asian country.

The possibilit­y of combining the balance sheets of Al Rajhi Banking & Investment Corporatio­n Malaysia and Malaysian Industrial Developmen­t Finance (MIDF) are at early stages, the Saudi lender said in a statement yesterday to the Saudi stock exchange, where its shares are traded.

Al Rajhi has received preliminar­y approvals from the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority and Malaysian regulator Bank Negara, it said. If an agreement is reached, it will still be subject to conditions.

“The merger is not expected to have a material impact on the bank’s financial statements,” Al Rajhi said. “There are no related parties involved in the proposed merger.” It did not give further details about the possible timeline of the deal, or how it will be structured.

The tie-up will expand the scope of business for MIDF, which is controlled by stateowned asset manager Permodalan Nasional. The merger would allow the Malaysian financial institutio­n to start taking deposits. A deal could create an entity with combined net assets of about 1.5 billion ringgits (Dh1.34bn) to 2.5bn ringgits, depending on the structure of the transactio­n, Bloomberg reported in December.

Al Rajhi, along with Sharia-compliant lender Kuwait Finance House and another Islamic lender from the GCC, were granted licences by Bank Negara in 2004, as part of Malaysia’s efforts to have 40 per cent of its banking assets comply with Sharia by 2020. The Saudi lender’s plans to look for consolidat­ion of its assets abroad come amid a wave of mergers and acquisitio­ns in the Arabian Gulf, particular­ly on the bank’s home turf. Lenders are looking to gain scale in a bid to better compete with larger financial institutio­ns.

There are 12 banks in Saudi Arabia for a country with about 30 million people. However, common government shareholdi­ng in some banks through the Public Investment Fund allows for easier deals. There are two ongoing M&A deals in the kingdom, the biggest banking market in the six-member economic bloc of the GCC.

National Commercial Bank, the top lender in the kingdom by assets, in December said it

The consolidat­ion plans comes amid a wave of mergers and acquisitio­ns in the Arabian Gulf

is in preliminar­y talks to consolidat­e with Riyad Bank, a move that could create a financial institutio­n worth $182bn (Dh668bn) in assets.

Saudi British Bank and Alawwal bank had announced merger in early 2018. Boards of the two lenders in October approved an agreement that will create a financial entity with $73bn in combined assets.

In the UAE, the second-biggest Arab economy, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, the second largest lender in the capital, is in talks for a possible three-way merger with Union National Bank and Sharia-compliant Al Hilal Bank.

This tie-up could create the Gulf’s fifth-largest banking entity with about $114bn in combined assets.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? The merger of Al Rajhi and Malaysian bank could create an entity with combined net assets of about 1.5 billion ringgits
Bloomberg The merger of Al Rajhi and Malaysian bank could create an entity with combined net assets of about 1.5 billion ringgits

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