United Overseas Bank

United Overseas Bank Limited (commonly known as UOB; simplified Chinese: 大华银行有限公司; traditional Chinese: 大華銀行有限公司; pinyin: Dàhuá Yínháng Yǒuxìan Gōngsī;) is a Singaporean multinational banking organisation headquartered in Singapore, with branches mostly found in most Southeast Asian countries. Founded in 1935 as United Chinese Bank (UCB) by Sarawak businessman Wee Kheng Chiang, the bank was set up together with a group of Chinese-born businessmen. The bank is the third largest bank in Southeast Asia by total assets.[5]

United Overseas Bank Limited
Public
Traded asSGX: U11
ISINSG1M31001969 
IndustryInvestment banking, Financial services
Founded6 August 1935 (1935-08-06)
FounderWee Kheng Chiang
HeadquartersUOB Plaza,
80 Raffles Place
,
Singapore 048624
Number of locations
500 offices across 19 countries[1]
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Wee Cho Yaw (Chairman Emeritus and Adviser)
Hsieh Fu Hua (Chairman)
Wee Ee Cheong (Deputy chairman and CEO)
RevenueS$8.061 billion (2016)[2]
S$3.096 billion (2016)[2]
Total assetsUS$235.4 billion (2016)[3]
Number of employees
24,853[2]
RatingAA- (2016) by S&P[4]
Websitewww.uobgroup.com

UOB provides commercial and corporate banking services, personal financial services, private banking and asset management services, as well as corporate finance, venture capital, investment, and Insurance services. It has 68 branches in Singapore and a network of more than 500 offices in 19 countries and territories in Asia Pacific, Western Europe and North America [6]

History

On 6 August 1935, businessman Wee Kheng Chiang, together with six other friends, established the bank after raising S$1 million. The bank was named United Chinese Bank (UCB) to emphasise its links to the Chinese population in Singapore. In October 1935, UCB opened for business in the three-story Bonham Building.[7] In 1965, the bank was renamed to United Overseas Bank and opened its first overseas branch in Hong Kong.[8]

In 1970, UOB was listed on the Joint Stock Exchange of Singapore and Malaysia, at that time the stock exchange have an office in both Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. After it was publicly listed, the bank went through a series of targeted acquisitions. The bank first acquired the controlling stake of Chung Khiaw Bank in 1971, which expanded its domestic presence and also gave the bank offices in Malaysia and Hong Kong. A new logo for both United Overseas Bank and Chung Khiaw Bank was launched in January 1972.[9]

In 1973, UOB then acquired Lee Wah Bank, which provided services in Malaysia and Singapore. In that same year, the bank built a new 30-storey office tower in place of the Bonham Building, which was named the UOB Building (now known as UOB Plaza 2).[10] The company continued with acquisitions, with Far Eastern Bank in 1984, Westmont Bank (now known as UOB Philippines) and Radanasin Bank (now known as United Overseas Bank (Thai) Public Company Limited) in 1999. The bank then merged with the Overseas Union Bank Limited (OUB) in a deal estimated to be worth S$10 billion in 2001.

United Overseas Bank History Plaque

In 2002, UOB started expanding into the Chinese market by opening a new full-service branch office in Shanghai and upgrading of its Beijing office to a full-service branch.[11]

On 18 January 2019, UOB was listed in the Bloomberg Gender-Equality Index (GEI) for the first time in recognition of gender equality.[12]

Shareholders

The ten largest shareholders as of 1 March 2017[2] are:

Name of Shareholders No. of Shareholdings %*
1. Citibank Nominees Singapore Pte Ltd 300,184,672 18.35
2. DBS Nominees (Private) Limited 278,681,033 17.04
3. DBSN Services Pte. Ltd. 141,007,324 8.62
4. United Overseas Bank Nominees (Private) Limited 134,666,910 8.23
5. Wee Investments Pte Ltd 128,119,445 7.83
6. Wah Hin & Co Pte Ltd 83,858,671 5.13
7. HSBC Singapore (Nominees) Pte Ltd 82,830,186 5.06
8. Tai Tak Estates Sendirian Berhad 68,168,000 4.17
9. UOB Kay Hian Private Limited 41,198,717 2.52
10 C Y Wee & Co Pte Ltd 36,319,299 2.22

* Percentage is calculated based on the total number of issued ordinary shares, excluding treasury shares.

International operations

United Overseas Bank's main branch, located at the scenic UOB Plaza

UOB has branches and offices located across Asia Pacific, North America and Western Europe, with most of their operations located mainly in Southeast Asian countries such as Brunei, Malaysia, Indonesia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam.

Asia Pacific

Australia

Headquartered in the UOB Building in Sydney, UOB Australia opened its first branch in MLC Centre as a merchant bank in 1986 to emphasize on trade and financing between Australia and Asia.[13] The bank now has offices in Melbourne and Brisbane, in addition to the branch in Sydney and currently offers merchant bank services comprising current accounts, deposits, lending, asset finance, trade finance, structured finance, cash management, and cross-border payments.[14]

Brunei

UOB's operations in Brunei started in 1974, under Overseas Union Bank (OUB). When UOB acquired the Overseas Union Bank in January 2002, the operations of the branches in Brunei was handed over to UOB. On 1 October 2005, the bank relocated its branch office in Bandar Seri Begawan.[15]

In 2015, UOB sold its retail banking business to Baiduri Bank Berhad for S$65.044 million. The bank currently provides a full range of commercial and corporate banking services through the branch located in the country. It also operates UOB Asset Management in Brunei, which offers investment management expertise to individuals, institutions and corporations.[16]

Mainland China

One of UOB's branches in Hong Kong

Operations in mainland China first started in 1984, with a representative office in Beijing. Incorporated on 18 December 2007 as UOB (China) and headquartered in Shanghai, UOB has 17 branches and sub-branches strategically located in major cities such as Shenyang, Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Xiamen, Hangzhou, Chengdu, Guangzhou, Suzhou and Chongqing offering retail and wholesale banking services.[17]

Hong Kong

UOB opened its first overseas branch in British Hong Kong in 1965, with the branch mainly focusing on trade financing and corporate banking.[18] The bank currently has 3 branches, with a main branch offering full personal and corporate banking services.

In the past 2 of the Hong Kong branches were under the subsidiary Chung Khiaw Bank.

India

In December 2009, UOB opened its first branch in Mumbai, offering retail and wholesale banking services, including lending, treasury and trade finance products, to corporates, financial institutions and consumers.[19]

Indonesia

UOB Indonesia was founded on 31 August 1956 as PT Bank Buana Indonesia. Headquartered in Jakarta, the bank offers commercial banking and treasury services, such as deposits taking, loans to small and medium enterprises, and foreign exchange transactions. The company also offers various fee-based services, such as purchase and sale of travellers cheques and banknotes.[20] It has a network of 41 branches, 172 sub-branches and 173 ATMs located across 30 cities in Indonesia.[21]

Japan

Founded in December 1972, UOB Japan offers wholesale services which include corporate banking, debt securities investments, treasury, trade finance, current accounts and banknotes trading through its only branch in Tokyo. Operations of OUB in Tokyo was also integrated in 2002 when UOB acquired the bank in 2002.[22]

Malaysia

UOB Bank Sandakan Branch in Malaysia

Incorporated in 1993, UOB Malaysia was integrated with Lee Wah Bank in 1994 to operate as a single entity. Lee Wah Bank was founded in 1920 in Singapore, with its first Malaysian branch opened in 1956. In 1973, Lee Wah Bank became a wholly owned subsidiary of UOB and was merged with UOB Malaysia in 1994. In 1997, UOB Malaysia merged with Chung Khiaw Bank (Malaysia) before merging with OUB Malaysia in 2002 to centralise its operations in Malaysia.[23]

The bank offers an extensive range of commercial and personal financial services: deposits, unit trusts, UOB Bancassurance, privilege banking, e-banking, commercial lending, investment banking, treasury services, trade services, home loans, debit and credit cards, wealth management, structured investment, general insurance and life insurance.[24]

Myanmar

UOB opened its Yangon branch in Myanmar on 4 May 2015.[25]

Philippines

In November 1999, UOB bought a 60% stake in a local bank, Westmont Bank and the bank was renamed UOB Philippines. In July 2002, UOB increased it stake to 100%, resulting in UOB Philippines becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of the banking group.[26] In 2006, UOB Philippines's 66 bank branches were sold to Banco De Oro Universal Bank and the bank ceased to be a commercial bank, with its license converted into a thrift bank license.

In August 2015, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the central bank of the Philippines, approved the bank's application for a commercial bank license[27], and in the following year UOB Philippines opened its first commercial branch in Manila, being the 6th foreign bank in the Philippines to receive the license.[28]

South Korea

In 1983, UOB opened its first representative office in Seoul[29] and in 1998, the bank has a total of S$81 million assets in South Korea.[30] The bank currently operates a branch in Seoul.

Thailand

UOB Thailand branch headquarters located at the Robot Building in Bangkok.

UOB merged Radanasin Bank with Bank of Asia in 2005 with 154 branches across Thailand

Vietnam

UOB obtained the FOSB licence to grow in Vietnam in July 2017

North America

USA

Canada

Western Europe

United Kingdom

Subsidiaries and joint ventures

All subsidiaries are headquartered in UOB Plaza, Singapore

Subsidiaries
  • Far Eastern Bank Limited
  • UOB Bullion and Futures Limited
  • UOBBF Clearing Limited
  • United Overseas Insurance Limited
  • UOB Asia Investment Partners Pte. Ltd.
  • UOB Asset Management Ltd
  • UOB-SM Asset Management Pte. Ltd.
  • UOB Venture Management Private Limited
Joint ventures
  • United Orient Capital Pte. Ltd
Associates
  • UOB-Kay Hian Holdings Limited

Mobile banking

On 19 December 2011, United Overseas Bank launched its free mobile UOB Mobile application. Mobile Cash, a key feature of this application, allows all UOB customers to send cash to any registered recipient who can withdraw the money from more than 600 UOB ATMs in Singapore. Initially only available on the Apple Appstore, the application soon became available to users of Android and Blackberry smartphones.[31]

Digital banking

On 14 February 2019, UOB announced that it will launch TMRW (the first mobile-only bank) with Thailand the first country to get this service. More ASEAN countries will get this service in the coming months, in a push to cater to millennials who mainly use mobile phones for banking. UOB aims to attract three to five million users for this service in the next five years.[32]

gollark: 2026.
gollark: It has metatypes to arbitrary depth, see.
gollark: We added generics. Then generic generics. Then higher-kinded types. Then higher-typed kinds.
gollark: You sound just like those who deny the amazing benefits of Macron 2.
gollark: It is; the `;` macro, ever since Macron 4 even, tells the Macron compiler to generate an anonymous trait with the previous expression as its only associated function/value.

See also

References

  1. "Our Corporate File". United Overseas Bank Limited. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  2. "UOB Annual Report 2016" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 January 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2017.
  3. "The World's Biggest Public Companies".
  4. "DBS, OCBC, UOB get AA- credit rating from S&P". The Straits Times. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
  5. "ForbesG2000". Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  6. "UOB Bank Singapore Branches". BanksinSG.COM. 30 October 2019. Retrieved 17 April 2020.
  7. "United Overseas Bank Archived 2010-10-12 at the Wayback Machine Heritage Trails Singapore. Retrieved August 31, 2012.
  8. Lim, Richard, "A Few Good Men," Straits Times, 12 August 2002. Retrieved 15 November 2015
  9. "大華銀行崇僑銀行舉行酒會慶祝聯用新標誌". Nanyang Siang Pau (in Chinese). Singapore. 3 January 1972. Retrieved 11 October 2017 via Singapore National Library.
  10. "It's Always the Next Deal," South China Morning Post, 13 May 2002. Retrieved 15 November 2015
  11. Montlake, Simon, "Singapore Bankers Take the Plunge," Banker, August 2002, p. 45. Retrieved 15 November 2015
  12. Seow, Joanna (19 January 2019). "Four local firms lauded for furthering women's equality". The Straits Times. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  13. "UOB chairman opens Sydney merchant bank today". The Business Times, 29 July 1986, Page 6. 1986. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  14. "Company Overview of UOB Australia Limited". Bloomberg.
  15. "Brunei Office Re-locates To Serve You Better" (PDF). UOB Group. October 2005. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  16. "Singapore: UOB sells Brunei retail banking business to Baiduri Bank for $46.6m". Deal Street Asia. October 2015.
  17. "About UOB China". UOB.
  18. Lee, 2003, p. 162; Tai, 2010, pp. 471–472; Steady growth hallmark of the UOB story. (20 October 2003). The Business Times, p. 3. Retrieved from NewspaperSG.
  19. "UOB's new country head for India to prioritise local corporates' expansion in SEAsia" (PDF). Asian Banking and Finance. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  20. "Company Overview of PT. Bank UOB Indonesia, Tbk". Bloomberg. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  21. "Bank Uob Indonesia Pt Company Profile". EMIS. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  22. "About UOB Tokyo". UOB Group. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  23. "United Overseas Bank (M) Berhad (UOB)". Lawyerment. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  24. "United Overseas Bank (Malaysia) Bhd.: Private Company Information – Bloomberg". Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  25. "UOB Myanmar | Yangon". www.uobgroup.com. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  26. "UOB Philippines : About Us". UOB Philippines. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  27. "UOB to operate as commercial bank in Philippines". Philstar.com. 20 September 2015. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  28. "Singapore's UOB opens Manila branch". Philstar.com. 21 January 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
  29. "UOB office in Seoul". BUSINESS TIMES (Archived on NewspaperSG). 6 August 1983. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  30. "Annual Report 1997, UOB" (PDF). UOB Group. 1998. Retrieved 15 April 2020.
  31. "UOB launches mobile banking app". Financial News Publishing Limited. 19 December 2011. Archived from the original on 1 February 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
  32. "UOB to launch its digital bank first in Thailand". The Straits Times. 14 February 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.