Investors yesterday sold off financial shares such as Taiwan Business Bank (台灣企銀) on news that the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) had asked financial holding companies to submit a copy of their merger and acquisition proposals for pre-approval before they participate in any open bids.
This news came as a shock to most interested parties, since divulging their M&A proposals before a deal is reached was to them unheard of, and could prove detrimental to the completion of a deal.
Taiwan Business Bank, for which the government is planning to sell state holdings to interested parties for the purpose of industrial consolidation, saw its shares drop 1.6 percent to close at NT$12.3 on the Taiwan Stock Exchange.
The FSC yesterday denied news reports that it had demanded a preview of the financial holding companies' acquisition plans.
Citing a letter sent to the island's financial holding companies, a Chinese-language newspaper reported yesterday that the commission required financial holding companies to lodge an application specifying details such as the estimated holdings ratio, reasons and sources of funds for acquisitions, and the impact on the financial holding companies' capital adequacy ratio, for the regulator's preview.
"It is purely a misunderstanding. We did send a notice to the nation's financial holding companies, but did not demand that they submit an acquisition program for our preview," Financial Supervisory Commission's spokesman Lin Chung-cheng (林忠正) told reporters yesterday.
According to Article 36 of the Financial Holding Company Act (金控法), financial holding companies are required to apply for the authority's approval before actual transactions happen.
Therefore, they are used to making inquiries or having communication with the commission in advance in order to prevent possible errors that could invalidate the deal. The stakes are too high to allow any failure or aftermath in significant acquisition cases, Lin said.
"But this is their call ? financial holdings are not legally obligated to do so," he said.
The administrative order, however, reportedly caused concern for the financial institution over the possible leak of commercial confidentiality during the preview procedures.
Anna Bhobho, a 31-year-old housewife from rural Zimbabwe, was once a silent observer in her home, excluded from financial and family decisionmaking in the deeply patriarchal society. Today, she is a driver of change in her village, thanks to an electric tricycle she owns. In many parts of rural sub-Saharan Africa, women have long been excluded from mainstream economic activities such as operating public transportation. However, three-wheelers powered by green energy are reversing that trend, offering financial opportunities and a newfound sense of importance. “My husband now looks up to me to take care of a large chunk of expenses,
SECTOR LEADER: TSMC can increase capacity by as much as 20 percent or more in the advanced node part of the foundry market by 2030, an analyst said Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) is expected to lead its peers in the advanced 2-nanometer process technology, despite competition from Samsung Electronics Co and Intel Corp, TrendForce Corp analyst Joanne Chiao (喬安) said. TSMC’s sophisticated products and its large production scale are expected to allow the company to continue dominating the global 2-nanometer process market this year, Chiao said. The world’s largest contract chipmaker is scheduled to begin mass production of chips made on the 2-nanometer process in its Hsinchu fab in the second half of this year. It would also hold a ceremony on Monday next week to
TECH CLUSTER: The US company’s new office is in the Shalun Smart Green Energy Science City, a new AI industry base and cybersecurity hub in southern Taiwan US chip designer Advanced Micro Devices Inc (AMD) yesterday launched an office in Tainan’s Gueiren District (歸仁), marking a significant milestone in the development of southern Taiwan’s artificial intelligence (AI) industry, the Tainan City Government said in a statement. AMD Taiwan general manager Vincent Chern (陳民皓) presided over the opening ceremony for the company’s new office at the Shalun Smart Green Energy Science City (沙崙智慧綠能科學城), a new AI industry base and cybersecurity hub in southern Taiwan. Facilities in the new office include an information processing center, and a research and development (R&D) center, the Tainan Economic Development Bureau said. The Ministry
ADVERSARIES: The new list includes 11 entities in China and one in Taiwan, which is a local branch of Chinese cloud computing firm Inspur Group The US added dozens of entities to a trade blacklist on Tuesday, the US Department of Commerce said, in part to disrupt Beijing’s artificial intelligence (AI) and advanced computing capabilities. The action affects 80 entities from countries including China, the United Arab Emirates and Iran, with the commerce department citing their “activities contrary to US national security and foreign policy.” Those added to the “entity list” are restricted from obtaining US items and technologies without government authorization. “We will not allow adversaries to exploit American technology to bolster their own militaries and threaten American lives,” US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said. The entities