
Weekly Global News Wrap Up: Three-way UAE merger creates $114b banking giant; Standard Chartered slapped with $40m fine
And Kazakhstan is looking for a bank to take over its second largest lender.
From CNBC: Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, Union National Bank and Bank Al Hilal have announced a major three-way merger deal that will create the fifth largest lender in the MENA region with combined assets of $114b.
The new banking group is expected to have around 1 million customers, with a significant share of the UAE market: 15% share of total assets, 21% share of retail loans, and 16% of deposits.
The deal, confirmed at the close of trade on Tuesday, marks the second bank tie-up in Abu Dhabi in recent years and follows a wave of consolidation efforts in the sector.
From Reuters: The New York Department of Financial Services (DFS) on Tuesday fined Standard Chartered Plc $40m for attempting to rig transactions in foreign exchange markets between 2007 and 2013, the regulator said in a statement.
Separately, the bank said it had agreed a consent order regarding “past control failures and improper conduct” in its foreign exchange trading and sales business during the period.
From CNBC: The Kazakh authorities are urgently looking for a bank to take over no. 2 lender Tsesnabank as they believe it needs new financing to prevent a collapse, three sources familiar with the discussions told Reuters.
Officials from the government and central bank have approached at least three other Kazakh banks and hope to tie up a deal in February, the sources said. They are offering financial incentives for any bank prepared to take it over.
The authorities want to avoid liquidating the bank, which has over $1b in retail deposits and received a $1.8b state bailout in September, because of the impact on the wider economy, the sources said.