India’s largest lender, ICICI Bank declared on September 29 (2008), that its UK subsidiary does not have any direct or indirect exposure to the US sub-prime credit, and has a high rating to 98 per cent of its USD 3.5-billion non-India investment book. The bank came with a clarification, after its shares plummeted by 12.11 per cent to Rs 493.30 on worries, about the bank’s mark-to-market exposure through various credit instruments.
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“ICICI Bank UK PLC has zero exposure to US sub-prime credit, whether directly or through credit derivatives such as collateralised debt obligations (CDO), credit linked notes (CLNs) and credit default swaps (CDS),†an ICICI Bank statement clarified.
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The lender’s UK subsidiary - ICICI Bank UK PLC has only 18 per cent exposure to the United States in its non-India investment book. Also, about 89 per cent of its investments are rated ‘A’ and above by global rating agencies, the bank claimed.
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Further, ICICI Bank UK PLC holds cash equivalent instruments, inter-bank placements and certificates of deposit of USD 1.1-billion, where it has no exposure to US banks. ICICI Bank UK PLC has a capital adequacy ratio of 17.4 per cent as on June 30 (2008), and a total balance-sheet size of USD 8.5-billion. ICICI Bank has consolidated assets of about USD 113-billion.
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