Bank plans to raise $1.75 billion; in talks with five European institutions: Ravneet Gill.
Market
News : YES Bank is likely to skip issuing shares to family
offices in favour of institutional investors in the current round of
its preferential issue, where the bank plans to raise $1.75 billion,
its managing director and chief executive officer, Ravneet Gill, has
said.
This
means Erwin
Singh Braich, GMR Group, and Aditya Birla Family Office, which
had all put in bids, may not get a piece in the bank's stake sale.
Denying
reports of a forced merger being thrust upon the bank, he said he was
confident of raising the target funds soon.
“Large
European financial institutions regulated by the Financial Conduct
Authority have shown an interest in the bank,” Gill told Business
Standard in an interview. "Since the talks are at an advanced
stage, the bank will reveal the names of these investors once it
enters into a binding agreement with them," he added.
It
is understood that YES
Bank has received an interest from four to five financial
institutions, and one of them could take as much as 10 per cent in
the bank. Others are expected to pick up a 4-5 per cent stake each.
Gill
said that since these investors are well-governed and established
names, they should pass the ‘fit and proper’ test of the Reserve
Bank of India.
"When
these bids become binding and once we disclose the names, then nobody
would have any concerns with regard to the quality of investors or
their ability to put in the money. So, it will effectively put a lid
on the issue once and for all," Gill said.
Braich
had bid for $1.2 billion in the proposed $2-billion stake sale, while
the Citax group evinced interest to the tune of $500 million.
Other
family offices were to put in about $100 million, according to a YES
Bank release.
Gill
said, “As far as Indian investors and family offices are concerned,
we have told them that for this capital raise, we have to go for the
institutional route.”
He
also feels that the $500 million committed by London-based Citax
Holdings and Citax Investment Group should also pass the regulatory
muster. “We will not trip on regulatory issues,” he said.
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