Regulatory battle heats up over future of Japan's
regional banks
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[May 07, 2018]
By Junko Fujita and Sumio Ito
TOKYO (Reuters) - Two small Japanese banks
made a fresh appeal on Monday to be allowed to combine and pledged to
ease antitrust concerns, as a battle between two government agencies
that could shape the fate of the nation's 100-plus struggling regional
banks intensified.
Fukuoka Financial Group Inc <8354.T> has been wanting to buy Eighteenth
Bank Ltd <8396.T> in Nagasaki prefecture and merge it with one of its
three lenders, Shinwa Bank.
But the Fair Trade Commission (FTC), Japan's antitrust watchdog, has
objected to the takeover since 2016 on the grounds that the merged
entity would control about 70 percent of the lending market in Nagasaki,
which it says would limit customers' choices and could lead to higher
lending rates.
The FTC, which is still reviewing the case, is concerned the merger
could create banks that are too dominant, undermine competition and lead
to the closure of bank branches in remote areas.
Although Fukuoka Financial and Eighteenth Bank did not offer concrete
steps to reduce their share of the lending market in a joint statement
issued on Monday, they pledged the merged bank would not raise interest
rates unfairly and maintain branches in depopulated areas. "The merger
of these two banks is the best choice for the financial support of
economies in Nagasaki," according the statement, adding that
deteriorating bank earnings would hurt the local economy.
The country's financial regulator, the Financial Services Agency (FSA),
on the other hand, wants to promote mergers to help lenders survive as
the population shrinks.
Last month, a report from a panel of independent members commissioned by
the FSA directly challenged the FTC's notion that mergers would limit
customer's choices and lead to higher interest rates by saying an
exemption from antitrust law should be made to help the industry
survive.
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The report even suggested that Japan's antitrust policy may need to be reviewed
to adjust to the ongoing change in Japan's economy.
"The competition law is based on the assumption that the economy will grow but
Japan is losing population much faster than any other advanced countries," said
Naoki Ohgo, an adviser to the FSA. "I wonder whether it is reasonable to apply
traditional competition policy to the current situation."
ut a senior FTC official last month ruled out the need for applying different
rules for mergers for smaller banks. "We do not believe we need to use certain
rules for growing industries and other rules for declining industries," Akinori
Yamada, FTC's secretary general, told a media briefing.
"All we examine is the current market situation and how a planned merger will
affect the market," he added.
Fukuoka Financial and Eighteenth Bank have not specified a target date for the
merger but the pledges they made on Monday mean they are still aiming to merge.
The FTC could not be immediately contacted for a comment late on Monday.
The outcome will signal how Japan will handle future situations in the regional
banking industry, which controls almost half of the nation's 489 trillion yen
($4.5 trillion) in bank lending and is the lifeblood for small businesses.
($1 = 109.2100 yen)
(Additonal reporting by Takahiko Wada; Editing by Malcolm Foster and Muralikumar
Anantharaman)
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