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Another Chinese Conglomerate Buys A European Private Bank

Almost five years after being snapped up by a Middle Eastern fund, the Luxembourg-headquartered private bank is now owned by the parent of Lenovo, the PC company.
Legend
Holdings, which owns PC maker Lenovo and which also owns a
number of financial businesses, has agreed to buy 90 per cent of
Banque Internationale à Luxembourg for €1.48 billion
($1.76 billion), marking another move by a Chinese conglomerate
to buy European wealth management operations.
The Hong Kong-listed investment group is committed to “preserving
and investing in the BIL brand, its employees and customer
offering”, according to a statement on BIL’s website. Under terms
of the transaction, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg will keep a
9.993 per cent shareholding in BIL.
Governance and management at the banking group will be unchanged.
Luc Frieden remains chairman and Hugues Delcourt stays as chief
executive, the statement continued.
The agreement means that BIL, which was bought by Qatar-based
private equity house Precision Capital
in late 2012 from Franco-Belgian bank Dexia, now joins the ranks of
European private banks in Chinese hands. Hong Kong-listed
Fosun
International, for example, has acquired such businesses,
buying European wealth management and private banking operations;
it agreed to buy Hauck & Aufhäuser, the venerable German private
banking and financial firm, for example. Another group reportedly
on the hunt for acquisitions is Hong Kong-based Mason Group
Holdings, a financial firm backed by Chinese property tycoon
Hui Wing Mau. It is said to be preparing to acquire wealth
management businesses to build an offshore organisation with at
least $3 billion.
While Chinese authorities have sought to curb certain capital
outflows in recent months, the acquisition of a foreign private
bank could be seen as a way for certain groups to ensure capital
can, in certain circumstances, still circulate.
BIL deal
The proposed transaction is expected to close in the first
quarter of 2018, subject to approval from the European Central
Bank, the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier and
other relevant regulatory authorities. The acquisition entity is
Beyond Leap Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Legend Holdings
incorporated in Hong Kong.
Legend Holdings, founded in 1984, focuses on sectors including
financial services, consumer services, agriculture and food, and
IT. As at 31 December 2016, the company had assets of €43.92
billion, annual revenues in excess of €40 billion and close to
70,000 employees worldwide. Lenovo Group, one of its portfolio
companies, was founded by Legend Holdings in 1984.
BIL said its fortunes have revived under the ownership of
Precision Capital; the firm has made a number of changes,
including recalibration of its global footprint. In May 2015 the
firm said it was closing its operations in Singapore for
strategic reasons as part of an overall review of its business.
The firm had begun operations in the Asian city in 1992. On the
flipside, in 2014 it opened its first office in the United Arab
Emirates.
In its statement, BIL said that since its acquisition in 2012,
operating revenue rose 20 per cent to €505 million in 2016, while
operating profit has rose 57 per cent to €124 million. Over the
same period, total assets have increased to €23 billion, total
loans to customers are up by 27% to €12.2 billion and assets
under management have grown by 30 per cent to €37.7 billion.
“Legend Holdings has accumulated extensive experience in the
financial services industry, and has achieved a solid performance
in the sector over the past years. BIL is a well-run and
respected universal banking group with strong roots in
Luxembourg’s history. We aim to preserve and enhance this status,
supporting the bank and its existing management team in growing
BIL from a national champion to a Luxembourg-based, international
banking brand,” Liu Chuanzhi, founder and chairman of Legend
Holdings, said.