TOKYO - Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. said Thursday
it has acquired a small stake in struggling UFJ Holdings Inc.,
giving it more leverage for pursuing its unsolicited bid for the
smaller bank which has already accepted a merger offer from a rival
Japanese bank.SAVE MONEY ON TRAVEL DEALS
UFJ and another bank, Mitsubishi Tokyo Financial Group Inc.,
already have an agreement announced in August to merge their
operations by October 2005. UFJ is Japan's fourth biggest bank, and
is smaller than its two suitors.
But Sumitomo Mitsui has also been eager to acquire UFJ, and
has continued to lobby for its own offer despite having been spurned
earlier.
Sumitomo Mitsui said Thursday it has acquired 300 shares in
UFJ, and that will enable it to make counter proposals as a
shareholder at UFJ's shareholders meeting expected next June, when
UFJ and Mitsubishi Tokyo plan to seek shareholder approval for their
merger proposal.
Sumitomo Mitsui spokesman Takashi Morita refused to give
other details about the purchase of UFJ shares. UFJ and Mitsubishi
Tokyo said they had no comment on Sumitomo Mitsui's stock purchase.
Sumitomo Mitsui officials have repeatedly said their bid is
a more attractive offer for UFJ shareholders.
In its merger proposal to UFJ, Sumitomo Mitsui has offered a
one-for-one stock exchange, which puts a big premium on UFJ shares.
It extended a deadline for a reply from late last month to June next
year.
Separately, financial authorities announced Thursday they
had filed a criminal complaint against UFJ's banking unit and three
top executives for allegedly obstructing regulatory inspections.
Financial Services Agency official Ko Sato said the complaint had
been sent to the Tokyo District Prosecutors' Office.
The filing was an embarrassing blow to UFJ, which recently
had been ordered to improve its operations after the bank admitted
its staff had tried to conceal documents showing that borrowers were
in worse shape than the bank's reports to the government had let on.
UFJ, which is losing money and is struggling with a list of
troubled borrowers, has been seeking a merger to stay in business as
a bank.
Last month, UFJ accepted a 700 billion yen ($6.3 billion)
cash infusion from Mitsubishi Tokyo that includes a condition making
it harder for an outside suitor to step in, although it doesn't rule
it out entirely if a rival is able to convince UFJ shareholders.
The unfolding battle over UFJ is unprecedented here because
Japan's banking has long been orchestrated by the government during
the decades of the nation's modernization after its defeat in World
War II.
Mergers among banks surfaced only recently amid a long
slowdown in the world's second largest economy that burdened many
Japanese banks with bad debts.
UFJ, Sumitomo Mitsui and Mitsubishi Tokyo are among Japan's
"Big Four" financial groups. All four were formed in
recent years by mergers of smaller banks.
(TOPS with two grafs to correct that UFJ is smaller sted
larger than Sumitomo)