Hankou Bank, which was launched yesterday after the restructuring of city lender Wuhan Commercial Bank, said it plans to introduce foreign strategic investors and go public.
The bank aims to attract one to two foreign lenders as strategic investors to get more capital and improve its equity structure, it said. Sources from the bank said it is in talks with several foreign banking groups.
Hankou Bank plans to achieve a stock listing within the next three to five years, sources told China Daily, without elaborating.
The erstwhile Wuhan Commercial Bank, which had 88 branches in this capital city of Hubei province, had total assets of almost 37 billion yuan and a registered capital of 568.4 million yuan by the end of last year. Its capital adequacy ratio stood at 12.17 percent at that time.
Hankou Bank said it will expand its businesses into other regions in a drive to become a national lender.
The bank has obtained the go-ahead from the China Banking Regulatory Commission to open a branch in Ezhou, a smaller city in Hubei, in the second half of this year. It also aims to set up outlets in other provinces next year.
Many other city commercial banks, such as those in Beijing, Nanjing, Ningbo, Tianjin, Dalian, Chengdu and Chongqing, have been renamed and are expanding their businesses into other regions as part of China's banking reforms. Three lenders in Beijing, Nanjing and Ningbo have gone public.
The launch of Hankou Bank is also part of efforts of Wuhan, the biggest city in Central China, to become a regional financial center.
According to a plan unveiled by the Wuhan government in March, assets of rural credit cooperatives in Wuhan and eight other cities in Hubei will be integrated to form a new bank, named Wuhan Rural Commercial Bank.
Local authorities will also encourage private investors to run small and medium-sized shareholding banks.
There are five foreign banking groups and 19 domestic lenders with branches in Wuhan.
(China Daily June 26, 2008)