China AgBank says IPO possible by 2010 -newspaper
SHANGHAI, Jan 26 (Reuters) - Agricultural Bank of China [ABC.UL], one of the country's "Big Four" state-run lenders, may offer shares to the public by 2010, an official Chinese newspaper quoted its top manager as saying.
Xiang Junbo, president of Agricultural Bank (AgBank), told staff at a recent internal meeting that he planned to build the institution into "a bank in which the public can own shares" by 2010, the Shanghai Securities News reported on Saturday.
AgBank, the only one of the four lenders that has not yet received a government bailout, has repeatedly stated its interest in going public, but had not given a specific timeframe.
Many analysts had believed Agbank might list on a domestic stock market as soon as this year, after it completes internal restructuring. Xiang's latest remarks may indicate the bank needs more time to deal with bad debt and strengthen its management.
AgBank is saddled with hundreds of billions of yuan of non-performing loans, a legacy of weak risk controls and politically directed lending to farmers and rural businesses.
In recent years it has focused more on profitable urban areas but agreement on its restructuring has been delayed by the government's desire for it to continue playing a big role in supporting rural development.
AgBank's bailout could cost over $100 billion, with about $40 billion of that to come from China Investment Corp, the country's new sovereign wealth fund, analysts say.
Xiang, a former deputy governor of China's central bank, was quoted as saying he aimed to transform AgBank into "a globally famous bank" by 2012, and into a China-focused bank with global operations by 2017.
Beijing-based Agbank made after-tax profits of 40.5 billion yuan ($5.6 billion) in 2007, after deducting capital costs and certain provisions, Xinhua News Agency reported on Friday. Continued...







