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Bank valuations rising to levels needed for AIB IPO - Irish minister

DUBLIN, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Rising bank share prices suggest Ireland (Other OTC: IRLD - news) may get the kind of value required to sell a 25 percent stake in state-owned Allied Irish Banks (Berlin: 30544177.BE - news) (AIB) this year, Finance Minister Michael Noonan said on Tuesday.

Last year Ireland pushed back the likely timetable for partially cashing out its 21 billion euro ($22 billion) investment to 2017 from 2016, citing unfavourable market conditions. AIB is 99 percent state-owned.

Noonan reiterated that he was not under any time pressure to kick off an initial public offering (IPO) but noted a recovery in the value of bank shares, which he partly attributed to investors anticipating rising interest rates.

"There has been a recovery in recent months. For example, Bank of Ireland (EUREX: 1269463.EX - news) and ptsb (permanent tsb) are now trading well above lows experienced in 2016. Bank of Ireland has appreciated by 52 percent and ptsb by 81 percent," Noonan told parliament.

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"Certainly there's an indication that we might get the kind of values we would require but there are a number of events that would be necessary before we proceed, the issue of a dividend, obviously that would probably enhance value somewhat and then there's the annual returns of AIB which are due out in March."

Shares (Berlin: DI6.BE - news) in 14 percent state-owned Bank of Ireland are still almost 40 percent below their post-financial crisis high reached in 2015 while the smaller, 75 percent government-owned ptsb is similarly shy of its 2015 IPO price.

AIB, Ireland's second-largest bank by assets, is in discussions with regulators over starting to pay a regular dividend to the state, which its chief financial officer said it believed it was absolutely in a position to do.

Ireland last month appointed Bank of America Merrill Lynch , Deutsche Bank (IOB: 0H7D.IL - news) and Davy Stockbrokers as the global coordinators for the potential sale of a stake in the bank.

Asked when he believed an opportune time would come to assess the potential for an IPO, Noonan presented two possibilities for this year.

"There's a window some time from late May through June and then there's another window in the autumn. So one or the other," he said. ($1 = 0.9351 euros) (Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)