BANKING
UniCredit considers merger
Italian bank UniCredit SpA is considering a merger with France’s Societe Generale SA (SocGen), a move that would combine two of Europe’s largest financial institutions, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. UniCredit chief executive officer Jean Pierre Mustier, who is French and once worked for SocGen, has been developing the idea for several months, the newspaper said, citing people close to the situation. SocGen directors have also been studying the possibility of a tie-up, it said. Discussions over such a merger are at an early stage, and they might be challenged by Italy’s recent political turmoil, the report said. That is already pushed back the potential timetable for a deal from an original plan of 18 months, the newspaper reported. SocGen, France’s second-biggest bank, has considered combining the entities over the past decade and a half, it said. SocGen in an e-mail denied “any board discussion regarding a potential merger with UniCredit.”
BANKING
CBA agrees to record fine
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) has agreed to a record penalty of A$700 million (US$529.3 million) to settle explosive money laundering charges brought by Australia’s financial intelligence agency. The fine is almost double the amount CBA had set aside to finalize the matter and represents a record penalty for money laundering and terror finance breaches, the Australian government said yesterday. Australia’s biggest bank breached the law on 53,750 occasions, where suspicious transactions were repeatedly not reported and monitoring processes failed, according to an agreed statement of facts tendered in court by both parties. “The money laundered through the CBA accounts included the proceeds of drug and firearms importation and distribution syndicates — predominantly involving methamphetamine,” the court document said.
INTERNET
Facebook denies NYT report
Facebook Inc is disputing a New York Times (NYT) report about how it shares data with device makers from Apple Inc and Amazon.com Inc to Samsung Electronics Co. They are privy to Facebook users’ information, but it is nothing like the access that led to the Cambridge Analytica controversy, the social network platform said. The Times reported that Facebook had struck deals with device manufacturers that allowed them full access to information on users and their friends. However, the US company contends those pacts were intended to help device makers create their own versions of Facebook apps, and the data mostly remained on smartphones that accessed it. That kind of arrangement was necessary before smartphone operating systems relied on app stores, it added.
VIETNAM
Renewable share to triple
The country plans to more than triple the amount of electricity it produces from renewable sources and push for a 26 percent increase in household solar energy usage by 2030, Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc told Reuters in an interview. Speaking ahead of the country’s participation in the expanded G7 summit that is to be held in Canada from Friday to Saturday, Phuc also said he hopes the country can utilize its about 20 million tonnes of rare earth reserves, which he said are the world’s third-largest, in building new energy technologies. The country’s largest rare earth mine is in the northern Lai Chau Province, near the border with China.
Intel Corp chief executive officer Lip-Bu Tan (陳立武) is expected to meet with Taiwanese suppliers next month in conjunction with the opening of the Computex Taipei trade show, supply chain sources said on Monday. The visit, the first for Tan to Taiwan since assuming his new post last month, would be aimed at enhancing Intel’s ties with suppliers in Taiwan as he attempts to help turn around the struggling US chipmaker, the sources said. Tan is to hold a banquet to celebrate Intel’s 40-year presence in Taiwan before Computex opens on May 20 and invite dozens of Taiwanese suppliers to exchange views
Application-specific integrated circuit designer Faraday Technology Corp (智原) yesterday said that although revenue this quarter would decline 30 percent from last quarter, it retained its full-year forecast of revenue growth of 100 percent. The company attributed the quarterly drop to a slowdown in customers’ production of chips using Faraday’s advanced packaging technology. The company is still confident about its revenue growth this year, given its strong “design-win” — or the projects it won to help customers design their chips, Faraday president Steve Wang (王國雍) told an online earnings conference. “The design-win this year is better than we expected. We believe we will win
Quanta Computer Inc (廣達) chairman Barry Lam (林百里) is expected to share his views about the artificial intelligence (AI) industry’s prospects during his speech at the company’s 37th anniversary ceremony, as AI servers have become a new growth engine for the equipment manufacturing service provider. Lam’s speech is much anticipated, as Quanta has risen as one of the world’s major AI server suppliers. The company reported a 30 percent year-on-year growth in consolidated revenue to NT$1.41 trillion (US$43.35 billion) last year, thanks to fast-growing demand for servers, especially those with AI capabilities. The company told investors in November last year that
Power supply and electronic components maker Delta Electronics Inc (台達電) yesterday said it plans to ship its new 1 megawatt charging systems for electric trucks and buses in the first half of next year at the earliest. The new charging piles, which deliver up to 1 megawatt of charging power, are designed for heavy-duty electric vehicles, and support a maximum current of 1,500 amperes and output of 1,250 volts, Delta said in a news release. “If everything goes smoothly, we could begin shipping those new charging systems as early as in the first half of next year,” a company official said. The new