Just in: MoneyGram strikes a major deal with Bank of China:

by Zagros on January 20, 2010

Tuesday, January 19 2010 10:37 PM, EST   MoneyGram strikes a major deal with Bank of China: MoneyGram struck a major deal in China, marking another step in the St. Louis Park company’s journey from the brink of collapse two years ago. [Star Tribune, Minneapolis]  Knight Ridder/Tribune    ”Business News ”
Jan. 20 –When it comes to doing business in  China , there are some deals worth waiting for.

Sixteen years after tiptoeing into the country,  MoneyGram International Inc.  finally landed a major deal with a bank in  China . Over the next two years, the  St. Louis Park -based company will roll out money-transfer services to more than 10,000  Bank of China  locations.

The deal triples  MoneyGram’s  presence in  China  — the world’s second-largest economy and a country where  MoneyGram  has long played a distant second fiddle to  Western Union Co.

The agreement also marks another step in  MoneyGram’s  resurgence. Just two years ago, the company was on the verge of bankruptcy after investments in mortgage-backed securities resulted in more than  $1.6 billion  in losses. What’s more, a series of large, one-time expenses — including severance for departing executives and an  $18 million  payout to settle federal charges that it allowed its money transfer system to be used by fraudulent telemarketers — further clouded the company’s performance last year, causing many investors to give up on the stock.

While  MoneyGram’s  shares remain stuck at just 10 percent of their 2007 high, the company has not lost a step on the international stage. In May,  MoneyGram  signed a deal with  India’s  Punjab National Bank , which has 37 million customers. And last week  MoneyGram  entered  Hungary  with 11 locations at currency exchange shops across that country.  MoneyGram  continues to post double-digit gains in money transfer volume in much of the world, including  Asia  and  Eastern Europe .

Looking to  China

For money transfer companies, geographic expansion has been about the only way to grow revenues amid a deep U.S. recession. Global remittances fell to  $317 billion  in 2009, down from  $338 billion  in 2008.  The World Bank , which tracks money flows, warned of a “shallow recovery” for remittances in 2010 and 2011, especially if U.S. job growth continues to lag.

China  remains the big prize, however. In 2007, the country was the world’s second-largest recipient of money transfers, with  $25.7 billion  wired to Chinese residents from other countries, according to the  World Bank .

MoneyGram  entered  China  in 1994, but the firm’s expansion has been slow, with just 3,800 agent locations. Meanwhile,  Western Union  has 25,000 locations in  China  and relationships with three of the nation’s largest banks.

“How can you run a truly global money transfer remittance business without having a significant presence in  China ?” asked  Pamela Patsley , chairman and CEO of  MoneyGram , in an interview Tuesday. Patsley said the firm plans to start adding agents in  Bank of China  branches this quarter, though the rollout likely won’t be completed until the end of 2011.

Because the company has put its accounting woes largely behind it, she said, “people are now able to focus more on a forward growth mode, as opposed to a preserve-and-maintain mode.”

Wait and see

Still, the news of  MoneyGram’s  expansion in  China  was greeted with caution by investors. The stock rose a mere  4 cents  to close at  $3.18  a share on Tuesday.

Several analysts who follow the company said they would hold out on changing their forecasts until they see evidence that  MoneyGram  can win business in the country.

Though  China  appears to be a lucrative market, the country imposes restrictions on residents’ wiring money outside the country and even to people within the nation. As a result,  MoneyGram’s  China  success will be heavily dependent on inflows from wealthier countries where Chinese live, said  Brett Horn , an analyst with  Morningstar .

“While  China  is a big market that has performed extremely well, it’s not all that relevant how  China  is doing,” Horn said. “It’s more important how the wealthy countries, like the U.S., are performing.”

Chris Serres  –612-673-4308

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Copyright (c) 2010, Star Tribune, Minneapolis

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