Syrian investors last month showed an insatiable appetite for buying into the capital of Bank Audi Syria (BAS). During a 10-day subscription period open exclusively to Syrian nationals, demand for the 25% publicly offered equity participation exceeded supply almost tenfold.
What the bank called an initial public offering to raise approximately $11.7 million (SYP 625 million) towards its start-up capital of $46.7 million (SYP 2.5 billion) was oversubscribed by more than $103 million, representing coverage of 988%.
The offering was the second tranche of inviting Syrian investors into the equity of BAS, which under the country’s law has to be to 51% in the hands of Syrian shareholders. Prior to the offering, Syrian founding investors into the new bank already held a 26% stake in BAS, which obtained a banking license from the country’s council of ministers in early June and intends to commence operations later this summer.
Non-Syrian shareholding in BAS comes to 47 % from Audi-Saradar Group member companies Bank Audi, Audi-Saradar Investment Bank (ASIB) and Lebanon Invest. The remaining 2% are held by Saudi investor Sheikh Abdallah Abdel Aziz Al Rajhi.
Executives at Audi Saradar Group commented elatedly on having achieved the hitherto largest oversubscription of any investment in Syria to date and Marwan Ghandour, chairman of ASIB, called it an “eye-opening experience” for ASIB to manage the public offering. “I hope that we will continue to provide additional investment banking products as the market potential is clearly impressive,” he said.
Finance experts in Beirut evaluated the huge interest of the Syrian private sector in the Lebanese-Syrian banking venture as proof that investors in the neighboring country sense a lack of attractive investment opportunities in their economy and have no qualms about dealing with Lebanese business and banking partners. “It shows that there is a lot of liquidity in Syria and that money has no borders, no feelings,” said Jean Riachi, chairman of Financial Funds Advisors (FFA).
Meanwhile in another development in capital formation of a new Syrian-Lebanese joint venture bank, Bank Byblos and the OPEC Fund for International Development signed an agreement under which the fund assumed a $3 million equity stake in Byblos Bank Syria (BBS).
