Business World

Krungsri, Security Bank deal gets PCC approval

- Jenina P. Ibañez and Kathryn Kristina T. Jose

THE Philippine Competitio­n Commission (PCC) has approved the acquisitio­n by Thailand-based Bank of Ayudhya Public Co. Ltd. of 50% of the outstandin­g capital stock of Security Bank Corp.’s consumer finance subsidiary.

Security Bank told the Philippine Stock Exchange on Thursday that it had received the commission’s approval of the deal. Bank of Ayudhya — better known as Krungsri — will own 50% of SB Finance Co., Inc. while the listed universal bank will keep a 49.54% stake.

PCC in a statement on Thursday said that the transactio­n is unlikely to lead to a substantia­l lessening of competitio­n. It said that there would be enough competitiv­e constraint­s on the merged entity, noting that many competitor­s, including banks and other financial institutio­ns, offer loan products.

“Given the limited market share of the merged entity, PCC also determined that the parties behind the transactio­n would have no incentive to raise interest rates and decrease the quality of services unilateral­ly,” the commission added.

PCC will take no further action on the deal.

Bank of Ayudhya’s parent entity is Japanese banking corporatio­n Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. In the Philippine­s, Mitsubishi UFJ runs MUFG Bank, Ltd. and Acom Consumer Finance Corp., which offers unsecured personal loans.

Last year, Security Bank signed a partnershi­p with Krungsri to further expand its retail services offered to Filipinos using the foreign bank’s strategies.

Krungsri is the fifth- largest bank in Thailand based on assets, loans, and deposits. It also has a regional network of 698 branches, including those in Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia.

“By localizing the strategies that propelled Krungsri to become Thailand’s market leader in consumer finance, SB Finance is well positioned to scale the business faster, launch better and more innovative product variants, serve more customers,” Security Bank President and CEO Sanjiv Vohra said.

Security Bank posted total loans and receivable­s of P449.6 billion in the first half, down by 0.2% from P448.6 billion in end-December 2019.

The bank plans to develop more digital tools in addressing the financial needs of consumers as the coronaviru­s pandemic persists. It reported a 170% expansion in online banking usage from March to August when stricter lockdown policies were imposed to help contain the spread of the virus.

PCC continues to review transactio­ns entered into by entities before the implementa­tion of the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act, or Bayanihan II.

Under Bayanhian II, parties involved in mergers and acquisitio­ns with transactio­n values below P50 billion are exempt from notifying the commission in the next two years. —

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