Listing in London, Bank of Cyprus CEO expects modest profitability

22 Jan, 2017

The Bank of Cyprus expects modest profitability in the coming quarters and will not pay a dividend this year, its chief executive said on Thursday, speaking as its shares were listed on the London Stock Exchange. Cyprus's biggest commercial lender, pushed to the brink at the peak of the euro zone debt crisis three years ago, is continuing its recovery after a "bail-in" of unsecured deposits and a recapitalisation.
One of the investors in the recapitalisation was billionaire Wilbur Ross, US President-elect Donald Trump's pick for Secretary of Commerce.
Funds managed by WL Ross & Co said on Thursday his confirmation would not impact his funds' shareholdings in the bank. Run by high-profile veterans of the European banking crisis, with former Royal Bank of Scotland executive John Hourican its CEO and ex-Deutsche Bank CEO Josef Ackermann as chairman, the bank has delisted from the Athens bourse and joined the London market.
The listing in London was a vote of confidence in the City despite the looming exit of Britain from the European Union, CEO Hourican said. "Our board's view is that the City of London remains the right place for us to put our bank's stock, a de facto vote of confidence. The City will prevail," he said.
It will remain listed on the local Cyprus Stock Exchange but hopes the London exposure will help to attract more long-term investors. Bank of Cyprus was forced to convert a portion of unsecured deposits into equity to recapitalise at the peak of an economic crisis which shook Cyprus in early 2013.
The east Mediterranean island, one of the euro zone's smallest, emerged from a bailout programme in early 2016. "It is another step in the normalisation of what has been a pretty amazing story of a country and a bank that ended up on the bad side of worse and I am very pleased with the progress we're making," said Irishman Hourican, appointed in late 2013 when the impact of the bail-in was still raw. said.

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