Die staatliche Anteile der RBS werden nach und nach wieder privatisiert. Je mehr private Investoren wieder an der Aktie interessiert sind, desto mehr wird der Kurs steigen. Für 2010 sehe ich in der RBS extremes Potential. Es ist eine Aktie die 2009 noch nicht stakk gestiegen ist. Este Interessenten klopfen schon an. Für mich hat RBS Potential zw. 1,50 - 2,00 € bis ende 2010
SAO PAULO - Brazilian lender Itau Unibanco is considering buying stakes in one of the British banks rescued by the U.K. government during the global credit crisis of 2008, the Sunday Times said on Sunday.
Sao Paulo-based Itau Unibanco, the largest non-government lender in Brazil, may bid for stakes in Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group as the British government sells off its stakes, the paper said, citing Pedro Malan, Itau Unibanco's chairman of its international advisory board.
A spokesman for the bank said in a phone interview from Sao Paulo that the information in the report, on the whole, was not true. The spokesman declined to give any information about how or when Malan was approached.
Itau Unibanco, the byproduct of Brazil's largest financial industry combination, is also examining deals in a number of other countries, including the United States, Malan, a former Brazilian finance minister, told the newspaper.
"We're looking. Of course we're looking," he told the newspaper. "But we're not in a hurry. We think we have time."
Any investment plans in the U.K.'s financial industry will be "refined" throughout 2010, Malan told the Sunday Times, adding that, aside from the uncertainty in the global economy, this will be an election year in Brazil.
The British government said in early November that it was to pump over about $50 billion into RBS and Lloyds.
At the time, the government was sitting on a paper loss of over 10 billion pounds ($16.2 billion) on its 37 billion pound rescue deal in October 2008.
Currently, and including the November capitalisation, British taxpayers hold an 84 percent stake in RBS and own about 43 percent of Lloyds.
(Reporting by Guillermo Parra-Bernal; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)
Alles wird gut außer Tiernahrung |