BEIJING, May 30 (Xinhua) -- Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), China's biggest lender in terms of assets, could raise about 12 billion U.S. dollars in an initial public offering ahead of its listing in Hong Kong later this year, a news report said on Tuesday.
A Xinhua-run newspaper quoted insiders as reporting
that ICBC would allocate 25 percent of the new shares for a number of elite and
well-known Hong Kong institutions.
ICBC Chairman Jiang Jianqing said one week ago that
he expected the bank, by stock market value, to become one of the world's top 10
banks, with 2006 business profits exceeding 100 billion yuan (12.5 billion
dollars).
ICBC was transformed into a joint-stock company in
October. Months later, a foreign trio of Goldman Sachs, American Express and
Allianz Group paid a combined 3.78 billion U.S. dollars for a 8.89 percent stake
in the bank, the largest-ever amount of foreign investment in China's banking
industry.
Chinese banks have piled up a mountain of problem
debts over the past decades due to reckless lending to state-owned enterprises,
sapping their competitiveness, analysts acknowledge.
They have been working to shed hefty bad debts, push
forward joint-stock reform, attract foreign investors, try to secure stockmarket
listings and take other measures to help streamline operations in advance of the
full opening of China's financial markets to foreign rivals by the end of this
year.
Bank of China has kicked off an IPO in Hong Kong, the
world's biggest in six years, by raising an equivalent of 9.7 billion U.S.
dollars. It will begin public trading next Thursday. Enditem