The Phnom Penh Post

Sathapana Bank secures $50M to scale up

- Kali Kotoski and Hor Kimsay

SATHAPANA Bank Plc has received a hefty $50 million bilateral loan from the Bangkok branch of Mizuho Bank, a subsidiary of one of Japan’s largest financial institutio­ns, in a move that banking insiders say will help the newly consolidat­ed bank expand its lending portfolio as it digs deeper into commercial operations.

The loan agreement, billed as the first major offshore commercial loan made by a Japanese megabank into the Kingdom, was signed last week, Sathapana said in a press release. Mizuho Bank is providing the $50 million under a threeyear loan term, it said, without disclosing the interest rate.

Sathapana Bank is a newcomer to Cambodia’s crowded commercial bank field. The bank was formed by the merger in April 2016 of microfinan­ce institutio­n (MFI) Sathapana Ltd and Japanese-owned Maruhan Japan Bank. The marriage created a commercial bank with a combined registered paid-up capital of $120 million and total assets of $772 million, according to its financials at the time. The combined loan portfolio amounted to $533 million, while total deposits were $367 million.

The transition from MFI to commercial bank can be an expensive and timeconsum­ing process, say those who have completed the process.

In Channy, president and CEO of Acleda Bank, which completed its own transition in 2003, said Sathapana would need to take on larger borrowers and scale up operations to generate a return on investment. He said fledgling commercial banks typically face insufficie­nt levels of funds when restructur­ing away from the MFI format and could not rely on existing shareholde­rs for expansion.

“When Acleda first transforme­d itself from an MFI to a commercial bank, we also had to take loans from other institutio­ns beside our shareholde­rs,” he said.

“We always chose the best option that provided good long-term loan conditions with low interest rates.”

Just a month after completing its merger last year, Sathapana Bank announced that it had secured a $35 million syndicated loan from seven foreign banks and facilitate­d by Taiwan’s First Commercial Bank.

David Marshall, a partner at local investment firm Mekong Strategic Partners, said Sathapana Bank likely received a favourable rate on its $50 million credit line from Mizuho Bank given its strong standing in the Japanese market.

“[I] suspect that Mizuho is providing a very good rate relative to depositors and perhaps is secured with outside assets in Japan,” he said.

“Strategica­lly it makes sense if there is lower cost of funding after withhold- ing taxes and the interest rate of 12.5 percent on the reserve requiremen­ts.”

He pointed out that despite Sathapana Bank being owned by Maruhan Group, a large Japanese entertainm­ent company, its parent company could be constraine­d to lend directly due to country-specific lending limits or bankspecif­ic risk exposure.

Marshall added that the large loan facility from Mizuho Bank, which earlier this month received its own Cambodian commercial banking licence, was a positive sign for the future of the Kingdom’s financial industry.

“Because [Mizuho] is a large Japanese multinatio­nal bank lending into the Cambodian banking sector, it is likely to provide an upside by improving the image of Cambodia and bolstering confidence in the financial sector,” he said.

Sathapana Bank representa­tives were not available for comment yesterday.

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