Why the stakes are high in MUFG’s Asia plan
Euromoney, is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2024
Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement
BANKING

Why the stakes are high in MUFG’s Asia plan

With the acquisition of Indonesia’s Bank Danamon, MUFG has built a network of southeast Asia bank stakes to go with its presence in the US. Now comes the hard part: persuading them to work together. CFO Aki Tokunari explains MUFG’s international strategy.

MUFG-illo-780

MUFG chief executive Nobuyuki Hirano. Illustration: Pete Ellis



 

IN ADDITION        


When MUFG acquired a 19.9% stake in Bank Danamon in December, the first part of an intended three-phase deal to get to majority control, it marked the conclusion of a five-year effort to build stakes across southeast Asia by Japan’s biggest bank.

“Indonesia was the last, biggest missing piece for our Asian strategy,” Aki Tokunari, group chief financial officer and senior managing executive officer, tells Euromoney in MUFG’s Tokyo head office.

MUFG bought 20% of VietinBank in Vietnam in 2012, 76.8% of Bank of Ayudhya in Thailand in 2013 and 20% of Security Bank in the Philippines in 2016, to go alongside alliances with Co-operative Bank in Myanmar, Canadia Bank in Cambodia and CIMB in Malaysia. The Danamon acquisition cements a network that establishes southeast Asia as the second big growth region for MUFG after the US.

Japan, after all, is many things, but it is not a large growth region.

“We are facing many headwinds in Japan,” says Tokunari. “The ageing society, shrinking population and especially the negative interest rate policies are jeopardizing much profit of commercial banking businesses.




Gift this article