China's Bank of Communications, the country's fifth largest lender, was
preparing for public listing after receiving approval from China's State
Council, the China Central Television (CCTV) said.
The State Council, or Cabinet, had approved a plan for the bank to list the
entirety of its assets, CCTV said.
The report did not specify the location or timetable of the pending listing.
The Shanghai-based bank's planned IPO is expected to strengthen its
already-strong competitive edge in China's rapidly developing bank sector.
Bank of Communications is already a foreign-investor favorite.
The bank signed a deal to sell 19.9 percent of its equity to HSBC Holdings
unit Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp. for US$1.747 billion.
As part of its capital strengthening, Bank of Communications also received
cash injections worth 18 billion yuan (US$2.17 billion) from its major
shareholder, China's Ministry of Finance and other stakeholders.
Separately, CCTV reported China Construction Bank would launch its
shareholding company next month.
China Construction Bank, one of China's big four State banks, has signaled
plans to split into a "good bank" that will actually sell equity, and a "bad
bank" that will retain some of the worst loans.
The CCTV report follows Bank of China, another of the country's big four
State banks, officially launching its new shareholding company Thursday.
The renamed Bank of China Ltd. is now on track to take on yet-unspecified
foreign strategic investors and a public listing by the second half of next
year, the bank's new president Li Lihui told reporters.
Last year China dipped into its huge foreign-exchange reserves and injected
US$45 billion into the Bank of China and China Construction Bank, to accelerate
ongoing shareholding restructuring and raise capital-adequacy levels.