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by kind permission of the Royal Gazette at http://www.accessbda.bm
The Minister of Finance
Eugene Cox said he hopes to have a decision on whether to relax
the 60/40 ownership regulations before the end of December.
The Minister is believed
to have been working on the project which could see both Bank
of Butterfield and Bank of Bermuda get exemptions and be able
to raise more money from outside Bermuda.
Asked when a decision
would be made, Mr. Cox said: "I made a comment on this just
last week, but I hope to have a decision before the end of the
month."
Mr. Cox was originally
due to make his decision on the possible relaxation of the 60/40
ownership rule by the end of October.
Last week Peter Sousa,
the Assistant Financial Secretary at the Ministry of Finance,
said there was not much new and the issue was under active review
by the Minister.
The Minister has
promised a decision on whether the strict Bermuda ownership rules,
which restrict ownership to 40 percent foreign investment, will
be relaxed. Bank of Bermuda and Bank of Butterfield have both
put in applications for exemption from the rules, which will allow
them to get foreign investment.
For the past two
years the Bank of Bermuda has been seeking an exemption from the
rule that means that 60 percent of the bank has to be owned by
Bermudians or Bermudian businesses.
Henry Smith, the
bank's president and chief executive officer, said the bank wanted
to raise more capital and to do this it had to get investment
from abroad.
The Bank of Bermuda
wants to list on the Nasdaq, and there is doubt whether the Nasdaq
would allow the bank to float stock with the ownership rule in
place.
The bank has said
all along that its stock price is undervalued and that taking
the bank onto the Nasdaq would be good for shareholder value.
Since speculation
on the possibility of an exemption in June, the price of both
bank's shares have soared to all-time highs of $40.50 at the Bank
of Bermuda and $20.50 for Bank of Butterfield.
Bank of Bermuda shares
had previously stayed at $28.00 for months, but have jumped by
$12.50 or 45 percent. The stock price has dipped slightly in the
past month. Shares closed yesterday at $39.50.
Bank of Butterfield
shares had been around $16.00, but have gained $4.50 or 28 percent
since the summer. The price has also dipped in the past month,
closing yesterday at $19.25.
Earlier this month
the Bank of Bermuda said the delay has put it "in a difficult
position" in trying to respond to queries from its shareholders,
staff and other interested parties.
Andrew Brimmer, Government's
economic policy advisor, said earlier this summer that Mr. Cox
was "hoping to make a final decision by the end of October"
or sooner.
The Bank of Bermuda's
initial effort for an exemption failed in July, 1998 when the
Progressive Labour Party, then in Opposition, blocked a private
member's bill tabled in the House of Assembly for the exemption,
because it dealt with only one bank and not all three.
Last September, the
Bank of Bermuda applied to the Ministry of Finance for the exemption
and the Bank of Butterfield followed this summer.
The Bank of Butterfield
earlier this month took out a legal filing in connection with
the exemption.
Last month a spokesperson
for the Bank of Bermuda said: "We continue to have every
confidence that the Ministry (of Finance) understands the critical
importance of an overseas listing to the Bank's future and is
aware that a considerable amount of time has passed since we submitted
our application.
"In the meantime,
we hope to work with the Ministry in order to move this forward
on a prompt basis."