Standard Chartered PLC is seeking to sell at least US$4.4 billion of assets in Asia, people with knowledge of the matter said, as the lender pares its balance sheet after booking record impairments.
The London-based bank is speaking with potential buyers for about US$1.4 billion of stressed loans extended to Indian companies including GMR Infrastructure Ltd, according to the people, who asked not to be identified, as the information is private.
Standard Chartered has also started a sale of about US$3 billion of assets in the rest of Asia, one of the people said.
Chief executive officer Bill Winters has pledged to review all of Standard Chartered’s business lines and customer relationships, ranking their risk and returns, with the aim of restructuring or jettisoning about US$100 billion of assets. In February, the bank posted its first annual loss since 1989 as revenue fell and loan impairments nearly doubled to the highest in its history.
“This is a positive move to show investors that the bank and Bill Winters are doing something to improve their operations and capital position,” Ronald Wan, chief executive at Partners Capital International in Hong Kong, said by telephone yesterday. “Investors have been concerned about StanChart’s asset quality in India and they are now showing efforts to resolve the problem loans there.”
Special-situations funds including Hong Kong’s SSG Capital Management have expressed interest in the stressed Indian loans being sold by Standard Chartered, which include borrowings in both rupees and US dollars, the people said.
KKR & Co was previously in talks with Standard Chartered about buying some of the Indian assets and might consider returning to the process, one of the people said.
The assets being sold in the rest of Asia include loans, as well as proprietary bond and equity investments in China, Indonesia and Malaysia, one person said.
The bank is also seeking to sell part of its portfolio in Africa and the Middle East, according to the people.
“We said in November [last year] when we announced our strategic review that we would be aligning our risk profile to the new strategy and confirmed then that the group had identified a number of exposures for liquidation that exceeded the new risk tolerance levels,” Standard Chartered said in an e-mailed statement.
“We are making good progress on executing our strategy, and we will provide an update to our investors in due course,” it added.
KKR and SSG Capital declined to comment by e-mail, while a spokesman for GMR said the company is “unaware of any such developments.”
The stressed Indian portfolio Standard Chartered is selling includes loans to more than 10 companies, primarily from the infrastructure and power industries, that the bank has already made provisions for, one of the people said.
The lender might sell just part of the portfolio, depending on demand from buyers, according to one person.
“Standard Chartered has been doing group-based lending to infrastructure companies, which are in the high-end risk category,” Mukul Kochhar, head of institutional sales at Investec PLC’s India unit, said by telephone yesterday. “The bank is now doing a rethink of its strategy and, like others, is cleaning up its books.”
Standard Chartered already sold off about US$1 billion of low-yielding assets in India last year as part of its balance sheet management, one of the people said.
It recently decided not to proceed with a planned sale of at least US$1.5 billion in non-stressed loans made to middle-market Indian companies, after testing buyer interest in the portfolio earlier this year, the person said.
Winters has asked investors to bear with him as he takes “painful” steps to reverse his predecessor Peter Sands’s revenue-focused expansion across emerging markets, which left the bank saddled with bad loans when the commodity market crashed and growth stalled from China to India.
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