SocGen could be next banking break-up

Mon Jan 28, 2008 6:35pm EST
 
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By Mathieu Robbins

LONDON (Reuters) - French bank Societe Generale (SOGN.PA), looking increasingly cheap as its shares extended their decline on Monday, could become a break-up target like Dutch bank ABN AMRO if no single buyer wants all its assets.

The bank's big size and diverse mix of businesses may make it too large and unwieldy a target for any single bidder, especially in the current difficult financing environment where banks may struggle with large acquisitions, analysts said.

Dutch ABN AMRO agreed last year to be broken up, with Bank of America taking its U.S. operations, Royal Bank of Scotland its investment bank, Santander its Italian and Brazilian units and Fortis its domestic operations.

"A break-up scenario a la ABN AMRO is looking increasingly possible for SocGen," said Keefe Bruyette & Woods analysts Jean-Pierre Lambert and John Holmes in a report on Monday.

Like ABN AMRO, SocGen has a diverse mix of assets including a mature domestic retail bank, higher-growth emerging market operations such as branches in Bulgaria and the Czech Republic, an asset management unit and a corporate and investment bank.

The bank has been rocked to its foundations by the loss of around 4.9 billion euros (3.6 billion pounds), which the bank has said resulted from unauthorized trades by trader Jerome Kerviel.

Recent woes in the credit market have forced many banks across Europe and the U.S. to cut staff and take significant writedowns. This makes Societe Generale's 35 billion-euro market value a stretch for most in this environment and has prompted some touted suitors for the whole bank to rule themselves out.

Italy's Unicredit, for example, said on Friday it does not plan any acquisitions in the short term. The Italian bank had held talks with SocGen last year and has a track record of aggressive growth through large acquisitions.

Another potential bidder, BNP Paribas, could certainly profit from the growth buying Societe Generale would give it in France, but according to a source familiar with its management's thinking, is not enthused by the thought of having to integrate its rival's investment bank in the event of a full takeover.

FRENCH ESTABLISHMENT RALLIES ROUND

And as SocGen's management continues to face questions about its credibility, doubts are increasingly being cast on the bank's long-term independence.

"I don't think SG can, in the current context, keep its independence," said Francois Chaulet, a fund manager at Montsegur Finance.

But French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde said on Monday that Societe Generale was under no pressure to merge with another bank as its shares plunged.

Lagarde's statement was the latest sign that France's establishment is rallying round to SocGen's defense in an attempt to stave off talk that a foreign rival might launch a takeover bid for the company as its market value sinks.

Societe Generale's shares fell another 5.4 percent to 69.88 euros. They traded as high as 162 euros in April before the global credit crisis kicked in.  Continued...

 

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