The Citizen (Gauteng)

Discovery Bank set for Q4 launch

R1.8BN: IT WILL PAY FIRSTRAND TO EXIT JOINT VENTURE

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The new bank is widely expected to make use of the Vitality shared-value rewards model.

Discovery Ltd. is to pay FirstRand Investment Holdings R1.8 billion to exit its Discovery card joint venture. In February, Moneyweb reported that Discovery would integrate its credit card business, operated through a joint venture with FNB into its own banking offering.

Discovery holds a 74.99% interest in the Discovery card business with FNB parent company FirstRand Investment Holdings holding the remaining 25.01%. At the time, it was expected that the business would be transferre­d into Discovery’s bank on the same effective ratio.

The group has now disclosed that the Registrar of Banks requires the proposed 25.01% crossholdi­ng in Discovery Bank by FirstRand Investment Holdings to be to reduced and ultimately exited over a period of time.

“Given this condition, Discovery and FirstRand Investment Holdings have since agreed that it would be preferable for FirstRand Investment Holdings to exit entirely as soon as practicall­y possible,” it said in a Sens statement.

As such, Discovery is to acquire FirstRand’s effective interest and economic interest as well as all rights to the Discovery card book and related assets for R1.8 billion. It is to fund the transactio­n by way of an equity issuance.

“Given the relative immaterial­ity, the transactio­n does not require shareholde­r approval,” it said.

The regulatory condition means Discovery Bank is set to be launched in by the end of this year, almost one quarter later than expected.

Discovery first announced its intention to enter banking in September 2017 and had earmarked R1.5 billion in preparatio­n. Its management team has long maintained that it would only enter a market that it could disrupt and add meaningful value to.

The company has yet to detail its banking product offering or pricing. However, the new bank is widely expected to make use of the Vitality shared-value rewards model, with which Discovery has had great success in South Africa and abroad.

Discovery Bank is set to face stiff competitio­n from the likes of Absa, FNB, Nedbank and Standard Bank, some of which have been overhaulin­g products, extending and enhancing services, and beefing up their rewards programmes.

Investec, which has recently added long-term insurance to its offering, and Sasfin will provide competitio­n for profession­al and highnet-worth clients while Capitec continues to grow its market share in the mid- to high-income markets.

Discovery Bank is to be one of several expected new entrants in the banking market in the coming months alongside TymeDigita­l by Commonweal­th Bank; Michael Jordaan’s Bank Zero; SA Post Bank; and the Young Women in Business Network’s co-operative outfit. African Bank, following curatorshi­p and the installati­on, is also working to relaunch a transactio­nal banking product.

It is yet to detail its product offering or pricing

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