Republic Bank Ltd yesterday said that a $1 billion note that it issued on June 6 would strengthen its capital base and allow the bank to achieve its growth strategy.
Responding to questions from Guardian Media by email, a Republic Bank spokesperson said the proceeds of the note are being used for general corporate purposes.
The bank published a newspaper advertisement on Thursday, advising that it had issued the $1 billion ten-year, unsecured, subordinated, fixed-rate note.
The note will pay investors 5.50 per cent, over its ten-year term, with $1 billion being returned to investors by way of a bullet payment at maturity.
The fixed-rate investment was offered to local institutions, according to the bank’s spokesperson.
Republic Bank said the timing of the issue is aimed to coincide with the execution/roll-out of the bank’s growth strategy over the medium-term horizon.
Republic said the ten-year tenor of the note is “aligned to the Bank’s growth strategy.”
Asked why the note was unsecured and subordinated, the bank said: “This will allow the note to qualify as Tier 2 capital for inclusion in the bank’s Capital Adequacy Ratio, thus strengthening the capital base of the Bank to facilitate the aspirational growth under our five-year strategic plan.
Republic Bank Ltd is the T&T-registered subsidiary of Republic Financial Holdings Ltd (RFHL), the holding company for the group which operates in 14 countries across the Caribbean region and in Ghana.
In the first six months of its 2024 financial year, RFHL declared $1.13 billion in net profit after taxation. That was a 30.7 per cent increase compared to the $865 million the financial holdings group earned for the first six months of its 2023 financial year.