Sept. 8 (Bloomberg) -- National Bank of Greece SA, the nationâs largest lender, dropped 6.4 percent in Athens trading as it announced plans to raise 2.8 billion euros ($3.6 billion) to strengthen capital and fund expansion.
The Athens-based lender will offer existing investors 121.4 million new shares at 5.2 euros apiece to raise 631 million euros, National Bank said yesterday in a statement. It will also issue convertible bonds to raise 1.18 billion euros and sell part of its Turkish unit.
âItâs a bold move that makes a lot of sense,â Alexander Kyrtsis, an analyst at UBS AG in London, said in a note to clients today. The amount that National Bank plans to raise is âsignificantly higherâ than market estimates of 1 billion euros to 1.5 billion euros, he said.
Greek banks face soaring loan losses and a potential contraction in lending as the government implements austerity measures following the countryâs 110 billion-euro bailout in May. National Bank is relying on markets outside Greece, including its Finansbank unit in Turkey, to boost profit.
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aLqsGyZ1Qtd8
Five banks, including Deutsche Bank, agreed to underwrite National Bank of Greece SAâs 2.8 billion-euro rights offering this week.
The Athens-based lender will offer existing investors 121.4 million new shares at 5.2 euros apiece to raise 631 million euros, National Bank said yesterday in a statement. It will also issue convertible bonds to raise 1.18 billion euros and sell part of its Turkish unit.
âItâs a bold move that makes a lot of sense,â Alexander Kyrtsis, an analyst at UBS AG in London, said in a note to clients today. The amount that National Bank plans to raise is âsignificantly higherâ than market estimates of 1 billion euros to 1.5 billion euros, he said.
Greek banks face soaring loan losses and a potential contraction in lending as the government implements austerity measures following the countryâs 110 billion-euro bailout in May. National Bank is relying on markets outside Greece, including its Finansbank unit in Turkey, to boost profit.
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aLqsGyZ1Qtd8
Five banks, including Deutsche Bank, agreed to underwrite National Bank of Greece SAâs 2.8 billion-euro rights offering this week.