
UPS Acquires Bank: the Niche Get
"Nicher"
| By Steve Marlin |
March 2001 |
Capping a 2-year push into e-commerce, United Parcel
Service - through its financial services subsidiary, UPS Capital - has
acquired First International Bank, which specializes in
Government-backed industrial loans. The deal, valued at $78 million, gives UPS
entree into the business-to-business e-commerce sector, in which First
International has carved out a niche.
Capping a two-year push into e-commerce, United Parcel Service-through its
financial services subsidiary, UPS Capital-has acquired First
International Bank, which specializes in government-backed industrial
loans. The deal, valued at $78 million, gives UPS entree into the
business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce sector, in which First International has
carved out a niche.
First International offers loans of up to $10 million to small and
medium-sized manufacturers, distributors and wholesalers (annual sales of $1
million to $50 million) in the United States and emerging markets abroad.
About two-thirds of its $1.2 billion loan portfolio is guaranteed by U.S. or
other government agencies, such as the Small Business Administration and the
Export-Import Bank. What attracted UPS, however, were First International's
ties to nascent B2B e-markets such as e-Steel and Online Asset Exchange, for
which it provides trade credit (see story, page 16).
"Our strategy has been to identify industrial e-business
marketplaces-approaching them for alliance and integrating our credit
offerings into those marketplaces," said Brett Silvers, chairman and CEO
of Hartford, Conn.-- based First International. That strategy stands in
contrast to that of larger banks, which have designated themselves "go-to
portals," he said.
First International, which will retain its identity, stands to benefit from
UPS' access to logistics information, which will help First International make
credit decisions faster. "By controlling the flow of product, [UPS]
brings the information one step closer to the financial decision making
process," said Silvers.
LIPS decided two years ago to offer complementary financial services like
equipment financing, logistics financing and global trade finance First
International adds deal-making savvy and technological expertise to this mix,
said Bob Bernabuci, president and CEO of Atlanta-based UPS Capital.
"First International has done a good job of understanding how the
Internet and e-commerce apply within trading networks."n
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