The board of Polish Getin Holding and Serhiy Tigipko’s TAS Group signed a purchase and sale agreement for Idea Bank on Friday, with the base amount of the deal amounting to $34 million, according to a press release from the group on Friday and a stock exchange announcement from the holding.
According to the statement, the buyer of 100% of the shares is Alkemi Limited (Cyprus), a member of the TAS group, and the transaction is subject to the approval of the Antimonopoly Committee of Ukraine and the National Bank of Ukraine, and is governed by English law and the requirements of the Warsaw Stock Exchange.
Idea Bank Ukraine operates in the retail banking segment and focuses on servicing individuals. The bank’s main products are cash loans, credit cards, deposits, current accounts and debit cards. As of August 1, 2024, total assets of Idea Bank amounted to UAH 11.72 billion, ranking it 27th among 62 Ukrainian banks. Its equity capital as of that date amounted to UAH 1.74 billion, and net profit for the first seven months of this year was UAH 417.3 million.
TAS Group is one of the largest financial and industrial groups in Ukraine, which is represented in banking, insurance, railcar building, metallurgy, packaging materials, logistics, agriculture, food industry and real estate.
The group owns Universal Bank and TAScombank with assets of UAH 134.34 billion and UAH 36.62 billion, respectively, ranking 9th and 16th in the market by this indicator. The agreement stipulates that if the closing date is later than December 31, 2024, Alkemi Limited will pay Getin Holding an additional $0.8 million for each full calendar month starting from January 2025.
Idea Bank (formerly Plus Bank) was founded in 1989. In June 2020, the deal to sell Idea Bank to Ivan Svitek, former CEO of Alfa-Bank (Kyiv), and Ukrainian investment company Dragon Capital was terminated: the parties failed to agree on its commercial terms within the timeframe set by the agreement. Later, Dragon Capital and Svitek managed to buy Unex Bank from Vadym Novynskyi’s Smart Holding before the war.
In late February 2022, Getin Holding announced that it had failed to sell Idea Bank for the second time. The agreement on the terms of sale of its 100% stake to Rinat Akhmetov’s First Ukrainian International Bank (FUIB, Kyiv), signed on November 10, 2021, was terminated due to the failure to meet all the conditions for the transfer of ownership by February 25. Following the termination of the agreement with FUIB, Getin Holding abandoned its plans to sell its Ukrainian subsidiary amid Russia’s ongoing military aggression against Ukraine.
On March 27, 2023, the National Bank of Ukraine recognized the business reputation of both the Polish holding and its main owner, Czarnecki, as impeccable. In this regard, the Ukrainian regulator temporarily deprived Getin Holding of the right to vote on 100% of Idea Bank’s shares and set a one-year deadline for the holding and its main owner Leszek Czarnecki to eliminate the violation, and a year later refused to return the voting rights to the holding. In addition, the NBU approved Jacek Piechota, President of the Polish-Ukrainian Chamber of Commerce, as a trustee of Idea Bank.
In Poland, as a result of the decisions of the Bank Guarantee Fund, the Polish Idea Bank became part of Pekao Bank, while Getin Noble Bank was also put into rehabilitation, changed its name to VeloBank and was sold to the American fund Cerberus Capital Management LP at the end of March this year.
At the end of April this year, the NBU gave Getin Holding six months to sell its 100% stake in the authorized capital of Idea Bank. In addition, a similar demand was made of Mr. Charnetsky, who was required by the NBU to sell 44.98% of Idea Bank to Getin Holding within six months, offering as an alternative to sell Charnetsky’s stake in Getin Holding or LC Corp BV, which belongs to him, to LC Corp BV, which owns 34.17% of Getin Holding.