SINGAPORE (AFP) — Singapore's state-linked investment firm Temasek Holdings, which has taken a 4.4-billion-US-dollar stake in troubled Merrill Lynch, said Wednesday it sees strong growth potential in the firm.
The US investment and brokerage firm, which has seen its finances ravaged by a persistent US housing slump, said on Monday Temasek had committed to a 4.4-billion-dollar stake which it may raise by another 600 million dollars.
The US bank's new chief executive officer, John Thain, said the cash injections would help Merrill shore up its stressed balance sheet.
"Merrill is a leading global financial institution, with strong franchises in wealth management, global markets and investment banking. We believe it has an excellent platform with strong growth potential under John's leadership," said Manish Kejriwal, Temasek's senior managing director of investments.
"This capital raising will enable Merrill's management to focus on the execution of its business strategy and deliver shareholder value.
"Our participation in this capital raising exercise is a vote of confidence for the management team, and the underlying strengths of Merrill Lynch's franchise," Kejriwal said in a statement.
Merrill also announced that Davis Selected Advisors, a US investment firm, was purchasing a 1.2-billion-dollar stake in the bank.
Merrill ousted its former CEO Stan O'Neal in late October after revealing nearly eight billion dollars in writeoffs, mainly related to ailing mortgage investments.
Temasek controls some of Asia's best-known companies including Singapore Airlines, Neptune Orient Lines and Singapore Telecommunications.
It is one of two investment vehicles of the Singapore government. The other is the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC), which announced earlier in December that it would inject 11 billion Swiss francs (9.74 billion US dollars) into UBS, Switzerland's largest bank, which also announced multi-billion-dollar writedowns.
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