OJK pushes BTPN, Sumitomo to merge
The Financial Services Authority (OJK) is expecting that Bank Tabungan
Pensiunan Nasional (BTPN) and Bank Sumitomo Mitsui Indonesia, two
subsidiaries of Japan’s Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC), will
merge to strengthen their presence in the country.
OJK commissioner on banking supervision Nelson Tampubolon said on
Thursday that the regulator would ask BTPN and Bank Sumitomo Mitsui
Indonesia to include the consolidation arrangement in their 2015 banking
business plan (RBB).
The request, Nelson said, was a follow-up from an earlier consolidation commitment by SMBC.
“It [SMBC] has given us a letter of commitment to carry out the
consolidation in the future, but it has not firmly defined a time
frame,” he said in a text message.
Neither BTPN nor Sumitomo Mitsui Indonesia put the consolidation plan in their RBBs for 2014.
Currently, SMBC holds a 40 percent stake in BTPN, a medium-sized lender
that focuses on disbursing loans to pensioners and micro-customers. SMBC
initially acquired a 24.3 percent share in the bank from TPG Nusantara
S.รก.r.l., BTPN’s other shareholder, in May 2013.
SMBC, one of Japan’s largest banks, then increased its stake in BTPN by
acquiring another 15.7 percent of TPG’s shares in March. Following the
acquisition, TPG had a 25.9 percent share, while the public controls the
remaining 34.1 percent.
According to BTPN’s first quarter financial results, it had Rp 67.35
trillion (US$5.82 billion) in consolidated assets as of March. Its
outstanding loans amounted to Rp 41.1 trillion and its third-party funds
reached Rp 46.62 trillion.
SMBC now has a 98.5 percent stake in Sumitomo Mitsui Indonesia. The
remaining shares are held by private lender Bank Central Asia (BCA) and
state-owned lender Bank Negara Indonesia (BNI), with 1 percent and 0.5
percent, respectively.
Unlike BTPN, Sumitomo Mitsui Indonesia currently channels most of its
loans to corporate customers. It also provides trade financing for
export and import activities, and offers cash management services.
The bank’s December 2013 financial statement shows that it had Rp 46.83
trillion in assets, Rp 34.35 trillion in outstanding loans and Rp 18.53
trillion in third-party funds.
Separately, BTPN compliance director and corporate secretary Anika
Faisal confirmed that the lender’s management and shareholders would
discuss the merger.
“There are many things to consider, including the minor shareholders. We
will definitely consult with the regulator as well,” she said.
While awaiting further decisions from its shareholders, BTPN is also
looking forward to the OJK’s statement regarding the lender’s plan to
convert its newly acquired subsidiary into a sharia lender.
As previously reported, it acquired a majority stake in Bank Sahabat
Purba Danarta earlier this year from the Purba Danarta Foundation and PT
Triputra Persada Rahmat, which is controlled by tycoon Theodore Permadi
Rachmat.
BTPN plans on turning Sahabat into BTPN Syariah and merging it with its
sharia business unit after the latter is spun off. It will move
Sahabat’s headquarters to Jakarta from the current location in Semarang,
Central Java, to better coordinate its future sharia business.
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