Thu Nov 19, 2015 4:18am EST Related: FINANCIALS
Reuters
Nov 19 Greece 's Alpha Bank on Thursday
priced its share offering to fill a capital shortfall revealed in a European
Central Bank health check, becoming the second Greek lender to raise funds from
private investors without resorting to state aid.
Alpha priced the new shares at 0.04 euros each
or 2.0 euros after a one-for-50 reverse share split, translating to a 35
percent discount to Wednesday's closing price.
Alpha and peer Eurobank both plugged their capital
gaps without tapping aid from the country's bank rescue fund HFSF, which will
see its stakes in both banks significantly diluted as a result.
Their offerings of new common shares were
without pre-emptive rights to shareholders, including the Hellenic Financial
Stability Fund which owned 66.2 percent of Alpha and 35.4 percent of Eurobank.
Eurobank priced its share offering at 0.01 euro
per share on Wednesday.
Alpha executives told Reuters on Wednesday the
bookbuilding fetched orders of about 2.5 billion euros for the new shares.
Alpha generated equity capital of 1.01 billion
euros from a debt exchange offer to bondholders to swap junior and senior debt
for new shares which. This along with 83 million euros of other capital actions
approved by the ECB cut its 2.74 billion euro shortfall to 1.55 billion euros.
Citigroup Global Markets and JP Morgan are the
global coordinators for the share offering and joint bookrunners with Barclays
Bank.
(1 US dollar = 0.9364 euro) (Reporting by
George Georgiopoulos, editing by Silvia Aloisi and Jason Neely)
Read more at
Reutershttp://www.reuters.com/article/2015/11/19/greece-alphabank-offering-idUSL8N13E18320151119#2jMBVSSCJumsUGzU.99
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