Global crisis derails Taiwan bank consolidation

Sun Oct 19, 2008 11:51pm EDT
 
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By Faith Hung - Analysis

TAIPEI (Reuters) - A wave of big financial mergers sparked by the global financial crisis is leaving Taiwan behind as key players wait for markets to calm rather than forcing lenders into shotgun weddings while company valuations and finances are unclear.

The decision to put consolidation on hold lies largely with the government and big influential families, which collectively control 80 percent of Taiwan's banks.

But analysts say that decision could cost Taiwan in the longer run, putting off badly need reform and consolidation that the industry needs to become a regional financial hub. Taiwan's banking sector is Asia's fourth largest.

"Banks in South Korea and elsewhere in Asia went through a dramatic consolidation during the 1997 Asia crisis, but Taiwan banks did not. This time, it won't happen either," said Simon Ozeng, an executive vice president of state-controlled Mega Financial (2886.TW), Taiwan's No.4 financial holding firm.

"Even with the current shock wave, no mergers between larger Taiwan lenders are in sight, though a few weak banks are under mounting pressure to put themselves up for sale," he said.

The global financial crisis has caused a spate of bank collapses, mergers and partial nationalizations in the United States and Europe in recent weeks as bankers and government policymakers try to stem damage from toxic debt, rising bad loans and slowing economic growth.

But the Taiwan government's reluctance to seize the moment and push for consolidation may come from a desire to please everyone, as families which control banks as well as minority shareholders might see forced takeovers as bad deals at their expense, industry watchers said.

"The financial meltdown is offering a great opportunity for the island's financial regulator to enforce mergers, just like governments in other countries have done," said analyst James Wu of BNP Paribas.

But he added that despite deteriorating capital bases at some banks and insurers, the government is not pushing for mergers in the overcrowded banking sector.

The delay is likely to hurt the true consolidation Taiwan needs to transform itself into a regional banking center, as part of that plan involves creating a handful of large banks capable of competing regionally with big Asia players.

"If you cannot consolidate the banking sector, how could you become a financial hub to compete with Hong Kong or Singapore?" said BNP's Wu.

MERGERS DERAILED

The financial chaos has not only discouraged new mergers, but also threatens to delay or derail ongoing ones as volatile stock prices create disagreement over valuations and concerns linger over assets whose prices have plunged.

Taiwan's stock market has fallen around 30 percent since the beginning of September alone, including a 40 percent drop in the banking and insurance sub-index .TFNI that has pushed it to a seven-year low.

At the same time, Taiwan financial holding companies have declared some $1.2 billion in exposure to bankrupt Lehman Brothers (LEHMQ.PK) alone, and most have seen the value of their sizable stock holdings plummet with the market's fall.  Continued...