Vietnam’s SeABank halts plan to sell shares to Norway investment fund

Vietnamese lender SeABank, listed on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange as SSB, has decided not to proceed with a planned sale of shares to the Norwegian Investment Fund (Norfund), the bank announced Friday.

Vietnamese lender SeABank, listed on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange as SSB, has decided not to proceed with a planned sale of shares to the Norwegian Investment Fund (Norfund), the bank announced Friday.

According to July documents, the bank originally plans to sell 94.6 million shares, equivalent to 4.63% of SeABank’s total floating shares, to the Norwegian fund, for VND1,216.7 billion ($50.5 million). The expected offering price would not be lower than the book value of VND12,861 ($0.54) per share and not exceed 120% of the average price of SSB shares over the last 30 sessions, at VND37,032 ($1.56) per share, the bank had said then.

SeABank did not explain the decision, which was taken even as SSB share value was falling. Since the peak of VND30,400 ($1.25) per share reached on August 7 after the share sales announcement, the stock fell to VND23,800 last Friday.

A SeABank branch. Photo courtesy of Vietnam News Agency.

Currently, SeABank does not have a foreign strategic shareholder. In 2018, the bank’s foreign strategic shareholder, French-based Societe Generale Group, divested its entire stake. The group had started to invest in the bank in 2008, acquiring a 15% stake. In the following years, Societe Generale continued to buy more shares to increase its ownership in the bank to a maximum of 20%.

After Societe Generale’s divestment, SeABank locked its foreign room at 0% and then raised it to 5% in August 2021.

In the first half of 2023, the bank reported total revenues of nearly VND12.11 trillion ($511.26 million), up 18% year-on-year, and pre-tax profit of VND2.02 trillion ($85.12 million), down 28%.

As of June 30, the bank's assets value stood at over VND245.21 trillion ($10.35 billion), up 5.96% compared to the beginning of the year, with outstanding loans to customers at VND161.89 trillion ($6.84 billion), up 5.15%.