Japan's biggest bank Mitsubishi UFJ on Thursday bought a 20 percent stake worth $743 million in state-owned VietinBank, the largest-ever merger or acquisition deal in Vietnam's banking sector. The deal aims to boost "support for Japanese companies operating in Vietnam", Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ president Nobuyuki Hirano said Thursday, and to tap Southeast Asian markets after seeing its profits tumble this year.
The Japanese bank last month reported profit in the six months to September dived 58 percent year-on-year to $3.6 billion, due partly to declines in stock holdings. VietinBank, or Vietnam Joint Stock Commercial Bank for Industry and Trade, said the State Bank of Vietnam will still own the majority of its shares but described the deal as "the largest ever M&A (mergers and acquisitions) transaction" in the country's banking sector.
It is also "the most important investment by a foreign partner in the banking sector in Vietnam", Le Tham Duong, a professor at the Banking University in Ho Chi Minh-City, told AFP on Thursday. Japanese investment in Vietnam has increased in recent years, with another Japanese bank, Mizuho Financial Group Inc, buying a 15 percent stake in Vietcombank, Vietnam's largest listed bank by market value, for nearly $570 million in September 2011.