Financial Results
Dutch Government Signals Move To Float ABN AMRO

More than seven years on from the financial crisis when the Dutch government nationalised it, plans to hold an IPO for ABN AMRO are about to bear fruit.
ABN AMRO, the
Netherlands-based group providing services including private
banking, is gearing up to float on the stock exchange in one of
the largest European IPOs since the financial crisis that saw it
bailed out by the Dutch state in October 2008.
The Netherlands government intends to sell shares in as soon as
the final quarter of this year. The government has said it may
sell as much as 30 per cent of ABN AMRO in 2015.
The bank and government have been thought to be considering a
share float for some time, conditional on the state of the market
and general readiness of the bank.
ABN AMRO’s private bank is a significant player and among moves
of recent years, bought the onshore German private banking
business - Bethmann - of Credit Suisse, completing the move in
2014 (to see an interview with ABN AMRO and Bethmann about this
transaction,
see here). Bank executives told WealthBriefing last
year that plans to float the whole Dutch group were on track.
Such a move, if or when it goes ahead, will see it gain a march
on the UK’s Royal Bank of Scotland, which was nationalised by the
UK government around the same time amid the financial
crisis.
“NL Financial Investments on behalf of the Dutch State, and ABN
AMRO Group, confirm their intention to proceed with the next step
towards an initial public offering and listing of ABN AMRO on
Euronext Amsterdam. The intended IPO will consist of a secondary
offering of depositary receipts representing shares in ABN AMRO,”
according to a statement on the bank’s website today.
“Barring unforeseen circumstances, the offering could be launched
as of Q4 2015,” the statement said.
“The group has made significant progress on improving its
profitability, with return on equity increasing to13 per cent in
the first half of 2015, assuming expected regulatory levies are
included equally across the four quarters. The targeted annual
dividend pay-out ratio is 50 per cent over the full year 2017,
underpinned by a favourable Dutch macro-economic environment, a
mix of capital generative and growth businesses, potential for
further efficiencies and a strong capitalisation and asset
quality,” the bank said.
In October 2008, the Dutch state nationalised Fortis Bank
Nederland (Holding) including the Fortis’ owned part of the
former ABN AMRO group.
The bank said the latest announcement is in line with the
previously announced objective of the Dutch state to return the
bank to the market “as soon as reasonably possible”, so long as
the financial sector is sufficiently stable; there is sufficient
interest in the market and the company is ready.
ABN AMRO Bank, Deutsche Bank, London Branch and Morgan Stanley &
Co. International are acting as joint global coordinators and,
together with Barclays Bank, Citigroup, Coöperatieve Centrale
Raiffeisen-Boerenleenbank, ING Bank, JP Morgan and Merrill Lynch,
as joint bookrunners for the Offering. Keefe, Bruyette & Woods
and RBC Europe are acting as co-lead managers.
Third-quarter results are issued on 13 November.