ABN Amro eyes record-breaking return to Dutch bourse


THE HAGUE: Dutch bank ABN Amro, nationalised after a 2008 bailout, bounces back onto the stock market on Friday in what is being billed as one of the biggest IPOs by a European lender since the financial crisis.

ABN Amro said it would offer 20% of its capital to investors in a first tranche, hoping to raise 3.38 billion euros (US$3.62 billion).

The Dutch government, which led the 2008 bailout, is hoping to recoup some of the 22 billion euros spent propping up the bank in the tumult of the financial meltdown.

The offering, open from Tuesday through Thursday, was going so well that the banks coordinating the initial public offering exercised their right to sell another 3% share, Bloomberg financial news agency reported.

Initially, the price per share had been fixed at between 16 to 20 euros. But on Wednesday that was narrowed down to between 17.50 to 18 euros a share, Bloomberg said. That figure reflects the reality more closely, analysts said.

“Everyone thought that the first range was too wide,” Joost Vespers, analyst at Dutch bank Theodoor Gilissen, told AFP.

“I think this is going to be the biggest entry onto the stock market ever in the Netherlands,” he added.

To avoid all the shares being snapped up by major investment funds and other institutional investors, ABN Amro held back 10% for individual buyers in the Netherlands.

Although the government has said the bailout cost around 22 billion euros, its main audit body estimated the true price tag at about 32 billion euros, Dutch media has reported.

The bank’s shares will be floated once more on the Dutch bourse, the AEX, from 0800 GMT.

“I don’t think there will be any great movement up or down,” said Vespers. “ABN Amro is seen as a little boring, with no great possibility for long-term growth.”

The Netherlands’ third-largest bank behind ING and Rabobank, ABN Amro traces its roots back to the 19th century. It was listed on the Amsterdam stock exchange before being bought in 2007 by a consortium consisting of Spanish lender Santander, the Royal Bank of Scotland and the Belgian-Dutch outfit Fortis.

The 71-billion-euro deal, one of the largest in banking history, proved calamitous for the three buyers, however.

Royal Bank of Scotland is now 73% owned by the British government after a 45.5-billion-pound (US$71 billion) rescue in 2008.

Fortis was also dismantled during 2008 to avoid bankruptcy. Its Dutch activities, including its share in ABN Amro, were bailed out by the Dutch government, which then merged it back into ABN Amro Bank, and it has held the reins ever since.

Today, ABN Amro is largely a commercial bank focusing significantly on the highly competitive mortgage market.

Last week, it trumpeted continuing good results, enjoying net profit of some 509 million euros for the third quarter, a 33% year-on-year increase. - AFP

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