Exclusive: Polish bank Pekao likely to propose merger with Alior - sources

Reuters  |  WARSAW 

By and Pawel Sobczak

WARSAW (Reuters) - Poland's second largest lender is likely to pursue a merger with smaller rival but will delay publishing a recommendation on the tie-up until after June, two sources familiar with the matter said.

One source told the of Poland's ruling party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, had "accepted the merger, but the publication of the recommendation will be slightly delayed, because not all papers are ready."

The merger would reinforce a consolidation trend in Poland's sector, which has accelerated in recent years as smaller banks struggled to compete in a low interest rate environment and have had to meet demands for more capital from regulators.

"Everything points to a decision for the merger, although it won't be an easy merger," a second source said, confirming a delay to the recommendation that had previously been expected by the end of June. "No final decision was taken," the source said.

Pekao declined to comment.

Pekao and Alior are state-owned after they were both bought back from private investors by state institutions, including country's top insurer

Foreign investors such as and have also been buying up smaller Polish banks, which analysts said was prompting Polish players to expand to compete.

If the merger is approved, Pekao will increase its assets by 70 billion zloty ($18.57 billion) from 186 billion zloty, enabling it to move much closer to its main competitor, state-run PKO BP, which has assets of 297 billion zloty.

Analysts said a merger with Alior would reduce Pekao's ability to pay hefty dividends, which have been a draw for investors.

"Pekao investors are mainly dividend ones, while Alior shareholders belong to the group of players putting money in growth companies," said, adding investors also wanted to see share swap parity and savings from the merger.

In the latest sign of foreign interest in Poland's industry, reported on Wednesday that and were among those interested in Societe Generale's Polish unit

($1 = 3.7700 zlotys)

(Reporting by and Pawel Sobczak; Additional reporting by Wojciech Zurawski; Editing by Jane Merriman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, June 28 2018. 16:57 IST