Bloomberg
Citigroup Inc’s retail operations in Australia are drawing interest from a host of local lenders, according to people familiar with the matter.
National Australia Bank and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., the country’s third- and fourth-largest lenders by value, are in talks with Citigroup over the assets, the people said, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private. ING Bank Australia Ltd is another potential contender for the unit, the people said, while Macquarie Group Ltd, Bank of Queensland and Suncorp Group Ltd. have also shown interest.
Discussions are ongoing, and non-binding bids are due later this month, according to the people, with the winner likely to be finalised as soon as July. Representatives for all the lenders declined to comment.
Citigroup is seeking to sell its entire Australian retail operation in one piece, the people said. It had A$3.6 billion ($2.8 billion) of credit card assets and A$11.6 billion of loans and finance leases to Australians as of March, according to data from the Australian Prudential Regulatory Authority, which oversees deposit-taking
institutions in the country.
Most Valuable
The US lender said last month that it would exit retail banking in 13 markets across the Asia-Pacific region, Europe and the Middle East as new Chief Executive Jane Fraser undertakes a wider strategy refresh. Citigroup could fetch as much as $6 billion from the sale, Bloomberg News has reported. The Australian assets are among the most valuable of those operations, the people said.
Australia’s antitrust regulator has already warned publicly that it would carefully scrutinise any attempt by one of the country’s so-called big four banks to buy Citigroup’s operations. The US lender is the market’s fifth-biggest credit card player, with ANZ third and
National Australia Bank fourth.
Partnerships
National Australia Bank Chief Executive Officer Ross McEwan didn’t rule out interest in the assets when asked at a parliamentary hearing last month.
“Our strategy today is to grow through our own activities, but, you know, every business, be it a bank or anybody else, would look at areas that might add to the customer services and make it more
efficient,†he said at the time.
Of the other parties that have expressed an interest in all or part of Citigroup’s assets, Bank of Queensland and Suncorp both currently have
so-called “white label†partnerships with Citigroup, which provides the backing of its balance sheet to the firms’
own-branded credit cards.