The Midweek Sun

Atlas Mara says Nigerian and Middle East banks among suitors for Africa assets

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Atlas Mara, the pan-African banking group started by Bob Diamond, has drawn interest from Nigerian and Middle Eastern lenders for its remaining assets on the continent, according to people familiar with the matter.

The London-listed group has received a number of approaches for its 49.97percent holding in Lagos-based Union Bank of Nigeria, the people said, asking not to be identified as the talks are private. Nigeria’s Zenith Bank and Access Bank are among suitors that have expressed interest, alongside other African rivals such as Morocco’s Attijariwa­fa Bank, the people said. Middle Eastern banks and private equity suitors have also shown interest, according to the people. Some potential buyers have indicated they may acquire all of Atlas Mara’s remaining assets in Africa, which would include its Zimbabwe unit, the people said. Atlas Mara has been working with Rothschild & Company to consider options for its Union Bank stake, Bloomberg News has reported. No final decisions have been made, and there’s no certainty the deliberati­ons will lead to a transactio­n, the people said. Representa­tives for Atlas Mara and Zenith Bank didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. Attijariwa­fa Bank MD Ismail Douiri and a representa­tive for Access Bank declined to comment. A deal could bring down the curtain on Atlas Mara’s African foray after Diamond, a former Barclays CEO, misjudged competitio­n on the continent and overpaid for acquisitio­ns. The company said on Wednesday that it has secured regulatory approval for the sales of its businesses in Botswana and Mozambique and received interest in other assets, without elaboratin­g.

Atlas Mara also said it completed a planned restructur­ing process, and extended a standstill agreement with its creditors to May 17 to complete necessary documentat­ion. It’s still in legal disputes with two creditors, TLG and Norsad, it added.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has accelerate­d the need to reposition the company, which has seen a plunge of about 96percent in its stock since it started trading toward the end of 2013. The firm’s stake in UBN, Nigeria’s sixth-biggest bank by market value, is its largest investment and seen as a foothold into the continent’s most populous nation.

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