The building society sector has survived demutualisation and clung on to sizeable shares of the mortgage and savings markets. But could there be more mergers in the pipeline? Michael Imeson reports.The day after Tony Blair was returned as UK prime minister for a third term last month, the outcome of a markedly different sort of election was announced. Philip Williamson, chief executive of the Nationwide Building Society, was voted chairman of the Building Societies Association (BSA) for 2005/6.
This year is the 10th anniversary of the jumbo pfandbrief. Famous for its security, its past is more chequered than you would imagine. Edward Russell-Walling talks to Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein, which has been a top three player since the market started.
The other axis on which the fortunes of the two rivals have recently pivoted has been the quiet world of Swiss private banking. In 2004, private banking and wealth management contributed 38% of UBS’s pre-tax profits, almost matching the 40% from the investment bank. At Credit Suisse, the proportion is even higher, with the private bank alone accounting for 42% of the group’s net income last year.
Greek hesitancy to invest in Turkey’s financial sector is set to change, according to senior Greek and Turkish bankers who attended an inaugural joint meeting in Athens in May under the umbrella of the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, the global association of financial institutions.
KoÇ Financial Services, a 50-50 joint venture between Koç Holding of Turkey and UniCredito of Italy, has acquired 57.4% of Yapi ve Kredi Bankasi for €1.160bn. The deal, May 9, comes as foreign banks rush headlong to acquire Turkish banking assets ahead of membership talks between Ankara and the EU in October.
The UK’s Barclays is investing close to £3bn in South Africa to get control of that country’s biggest retail bank, Absa – the biggest foreign purchase ever by the British group. The deal has been approved by regulators and has the support of sufficient shareholders to be successful, after almost a year of behind-the-scenes talks.
SocGen CEO Daniel Bouton talks to Karina Robinson about the sense and synergies of cross-border mergers.Once I got over the disappointment of having lunch in the utilitarian Société Générale tower in the conurbation of La Défense, rather than in a superb Parisian restaurant such as Pierre Gagnaire, it was awfully pleasing on the food front.