The ECB also found a capital shortfall of 51.8 million euros at smaller lender Investbank. Finance Minister Vladislav Goranov has said boosting capital at the two lenders will allow Bulgaria to enter the so-called ERM-2, a "waiting room" for the euro zone, which he expects to happen by the end of April.
Fibank, whose shares traded at 2.94 levs on the Sofia bourse on Friday, said the issue price may change prior to the offering, which would affect the number of shares sold and the threshold at which it would be considered successful. The bank will prepare a prospectus for the capital increase which has to be approved by the country's financial regulator. It did not provide a timeline.
Fibank, which has already secured 130 million euros ($144 million) in additional capital, said it had also privately placed a 30 million euro bond and offloaded bad loans with a nominal value of about 538 million levs ($304.8 million). It said its overall capital adequacy ratio stood at 17.65% at the end of September, while its CET1 capital ratio was 14.79%, above regulatory requirements.
Bulgarian businessmen Tseko Minev and Ivaylo Mutafchiev each own 42.5% of the lender, which had total assets of 9.6 billion levs at the end of September. The remaining 15% has been floated on the Bulgarian Stock Exchange. Investbank has said it also plans an initial public offering (IPO) on the Sofia bourse but has not given any details.