Royal Bank of Scotland is considering investing in a second Chinese institution as the banking group seeks to build up its investment banking operations in the country.
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RBS is discussing taking a 19.9 per cent stake in Suzhou Trust, which is based in China¡¯s Jiangsu province, and has asked regulators for approval, a person familiar with the matter said. However, any agreement could take up to a year to finalise.
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The talks come more than two years after RBS led a consortium that acquired a 10 per cent stake in Bank of China, one of the country¡¯s largest lenders, for $3.1bn. Though the investment at the time faced heavy criticism from investors, the value of RBS¡¯s stake has soared with Bank of China¡¯s shares following its stock market flotation.
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RBS has used its co-operation with Bank of China to launch a credit-card joint venture, and the two lenders are also working together to provide high-end private banking services to wealthy mainland investors.
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However, the investment in Suzhou Trust is thought to be motivated by RBS¡¯s desire to expand its investment banking operations in mainland China. Suzhou mainly provides funding for government infrastructure projects. Suzhou was previously reported to have held talks with Morgan Stanley, the US investment banking group.
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News of the move comes shortly after a Royal Bank of Scotland-led consortium took control of ABN Amro, the Dutch banking group, with a €71bn ($102bn) break-up bid. The move will see RBS take control of ABN Amro¡¯s wholesale banking division as well as its operations in Asia.
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Sir Fred Goodwin, RBS¡¯s chief executive, earlier this month unveiled lower-than-expected write-downs on private equity loans and assets hit by the meltdown in the US subprime mortgage market.