January 21, 2009, 9.19 pm (Singapore time)
DBS's $4 bln rights issue oversubscribed
SINGAPORE - Singapore's DBS Group, Southeast Asia's biggest bank, said on Wednesday its S$4 billion (US$2.7 billion) rights issue to boost its capital had been oversubscribed.
The rights issue came as banks across Asia look to shore up their balance sheets in readiness for a tougher business environment amid the global economic downturn.
DBS said in a statement it had received more applications and acceptances than the total number of rights shares offered.
The capital raising is expected to strengthen DBS's core tier-1 capital adequacy ratio to 9.9 per cent from 7.8 per cent.
Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings had a 27.6 per cent stake in DBS, making it the biggest shareholder in the bank before the offering. DBS did not say much Temasek had taken up.
The bank offered investors one new share for every two existing shares at S$5.42 a piece in December, which was then a discount of about 45 per cent. DBS shares were 57 per cent above the rights issue price at the close of trading on Wednesday.
Another Temasek-controlled bank PT Bank Danamon Tbk, Indonesia's fifth-largest lender, has hired investment banks to help raise several hundred million dollars in a rights offering, two people familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.
'The primary investor concern about DBS at the moment is asset-quality deterioration,' Trevor Kalcic, an analyst at RBS said in a recent note.
'Clearly 2009 will herald a turn in the provisioning cycle. Bad debt charges peaked at 60 basis points following the 2001 recession and we forecast a peak of 70 bps for 2009.'
DBS said last month its fourth-quarter earnings could show a moderate decline from the third quarter, when it reported a 38 per cent fall in quarterly net profit to S$379 million and said it would cut 900 jobs, or 6 per cent of its staff.
This is the second time in less than a year the bank has raised cash. It raised S$1.5 billion last May through a sale of preference shares paying investors 5.75 per cent per annum. -- REUTERS