--Banorte $3 billion share offer sparks M&A speculation
--Bank says proceeds will pay for recent buys, improve
capital
--Two decades of acquisitions have made Banorte Mexico's
third-biggest bank
By Amy Guthrie
MEXICO CITY--Grupo Financiero Banorte SAB (GFNORTE.MX, GBOOY)
said Wednesday it plans to raise as much as $3 billion via a share
offering to finance recently announced acquisitions and strengthen
its capital position, leading some to speculate that leftover
proceeds could also line a war chest for more purchases.
Mexico's third-largest bank hopes to sell ordinary shares via a
primary offering on the Mexican Stock Exchange in early July,
coupled with international placements, offering an amount roughly
equal to 20% of its market capitalization. Banorte's series O
shares fell 4.3% on the Mexican Stock Exchange to 78.07 pesos
($6.05) on concerns that existing investors' stakes will be
diluted.
The proposed amount it seeks to raise would cover both of the
acquisitions it has announced this year, with about $1.3 billion to
spare.
"Maybe they're going to want to buy something big in the coming
days," said Jorge Lagunas, a portfolio manager who oversees $200
million at Mexican brokerage Interacciones.
Similarly, Mexican brokerage Ve por Mas said in a note that the
dilution of the pending share offering would be "more than
compensated" by the growth that could be generated with resources
from the placement, for instance if Banorte uses the cash to
finance a significant acquisition.
Ideally, some analysts said they'd like to see Banorte apply
leftover capital from the pending share offering to boost lending
and strengthen the bank's capital position, which Alejandro Garcia,
an analyst with Fitch Ratings based in Monterrey, Mexico, described
as Banorte's "weakest link."
Banorte officials didn't respond to requests for comment.
Banorte titled one of the documents it filed related to the
offering with Mexican securities regulator CNBV "reconquista,"
Spanish for "reconquest." Mexico's top banks have been in control
of foreign institutions since the late-1990s, and Banorte prides
itself on being the largest domestic bank controlled by Mexican
investors.
Two decades ago, Banorte was a small regional bank, but has
grown via acquisitions in recent years. The financial group has
more than tripled its assets under management over the past five
years, to roughly $140 billion.
Banorte executives say they are trying to pace themselves, and
not over-extend on acquisitions. But opportunities keep knocking as
struggling European firms seek ways to squeeze cash out of their
Latin American businesses.
Earlier this year, Banorte laid down $800 million to cover its
half of a purchase, along with Mexico's Social Security Institute,
of Spanish group Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA's (BBVA.MC,
BBVA) Mexican pension-fund business. That acquisition pushed the
bank's capital ratio--a comparison between a bank's capital and
assets--to 13.3%, a level that made both Banorte officials and
credit agencies uncomfortable. The average capital ratio for
Mexican banks as of end-March was 16.6%, while Banorte's was
15.7%.
Banorte began exploring the possibility of a primary share
offering among various ways of raising capital.
In February, the bank contracted an $800 million, short-term
syndicated loan to help fund the BBVA acquisition. That gave the
bank a year of breathing room.
In an April interview, Banorte Chief Executive Alejandro
Valenzuela said it might be time for the bank to "take a breather"
on acquisitions to digest recent purchases and put the house in
order. "Sometimes you have to let opportunities pass," he said, no
matter how tantalizing, if the moment isn't appropriate.
But on Tuesday, Banorte announced plans to buy out minority
stakes in Mexican pension and insurance joint ventures from Italian
partner Assicurazioni Generali SpA (G.MI) for $857.5 million (643.5
million euros). That purchase made the share offering idea more
probable, since analysts say Banorte has little wiggle room to
raise debt. Banorte had already filed a confidential request in May
with the CNBV to sell shares.
Several market participants said they expect healthy appetite
among Mexican and international investors for the offering.
"Markets are caught in a storm, and international investors are
seeking refuge in companies with good returns. Banorte is one of
them," said Rafael Escobar, an equity analyst with Mexican
brokerage Vector.
Mexico is in fashion with global investors, since the economy is
pegged to expand 3.1% this year and President Enrique Pena Nieto's
structural reform agenda is seen bolstering economic growth over
the medium term.
The Mexican bourse has welcomed a flurry of activity this year,
including equity offerings by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim's
retail firm Grupo Sanborns SAB (GSANBOR.MX) and local PepsiCo Inc.
(PEP) bottler Organizacion Cultiba SAB (CULTIBA.MX).
Yet avenues for investing in economic growth via Mexico's
financial sector are limited, since the two largest banks are units
of BBVA and Citigroup Inc. (C). Together BBVA's Bancomer unit and
Citi's Banamex control 39% of Mexican bank deposits.
That scarcity contributed to outsized demand for the September
initial public offering of Grupo Financiero Santander Mexico SAB
(BSMX, SANMEX.MX), the Mexican unit of Spain's Banco Santander SA
(SAN, SAN.MC), which raised EUR3.18 billion. Santander Mexico's
underwriters said they received nearly five times more bids than
shares available.
Write to Amy Guthrie at amy.guthrie@dowjones.com