Forbes Asia — October 2017

(Marcin) #1
ADAM DEAN FOR FORBES

W


hen a husband-and-wife team took over KBZ
Bank in remote northern Myanmar in 1996 ,
it had all the trappings of a mom-and-pop
operation. She was a local schoolteacher. He
also had been a teacher, then he switched to
tutoring before going into trading and mining. Today two of their
daughters help run things, and it’s still entirely owned by the family.
But looks can be deceiving. Aung Ko Win and wife Nan Than
Htwe have built KBZ into by far the biggest bank and one of the
largest companies in the country. KBZ Group boasts two airlines,
Air KBZ and Myanmar Airways International, and holds stakes in
the agriculture, real estate and tourism industries. The two sent the
daughters overseas for management degrees and this year brought
in a professional chief executive. They may raise money in a stock
market listing to invest in new businesses at home and abroad.
Myanmar aspires to be Asia’s next tiger economy, and to get
there it’s counting on companies such as KBZ to upgrade its skills
and become internationally competitive. “We don’t want to be the
best bank in Myanmar,” says second daughter Marlene Nang Kham
Noung. “We want to be among the best in the world.”
KBZ claims 4 0% of the country’s bank deposits, and its deposits
have exploded since the country opened up, growing at an average

annual rate of 43 % since 2012. Last year it became the first Myan-
mar bank to open offices in Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore,
neighboring markets that are not only important for doing cross-
border business but also for collecting remittances from millions of
overseas workers. In March, KBZ announced a landmark deal with
Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. to expedite fund transfers in the
U.S. A deal like that would have been unimaginable a few years ago,
when strict U.S. sanctions against Myanmar were still in effect.
A majority-owned unit also controls roughly a third of the
country’s insurance market, and the annual growth in the premiums
it collects tops 4 0%. It’s the local front-runner in other financial
services, too, such as credit cards. Across the empire, analysts praise
KBZ’s planning, management and smart investments. “They are
definitely one of the most important companies in Myanmar,” says
a consultant in Yangon. “They are ahead of the curve on everything:
human resources, recruiting, transparency and business practices.
Others talk, but KBZ is really working to be the best.”
The bank employs almost 2 0,000 people and notes that it’s the
country’s biggest taxpayer: It paid nearly $25 million last year.
Even so, the bank represents less than a fourth of KBZ’s 8 0,
workers. Privately held, the company doesn’t disclose figures for
revenue and profits.

16 | FORBES ASIA OCTOBER 2017

FORBES ASIA
ALL IN THE FAMILY

‘Banking


Is Exciting’


A family of entrepreneurs has built KBZ into a finance
powerhouse in Myanmar. Mom and Dad are in charge,
but keep an eye on their twentysomething daughters.

BY RON GLUCKMAN

A GENERATION EMERGES
Free download pdf