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Bank of Ireland to help fund smaller rivals as part of KBC deal

Published by Wanda Rich

Posted on May 24, 2022

2 min read

· Last updated: February 7, 2026

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Branch of Bank of Ireland in Dublin, illustrating its role in the KBC acquisition - Global Banking & Finance Review
The image shows a Bank of Ireland branch in Dublin, highlighting its commitment to fund smaller lenders as part of the KBC asset acquisition, crucial for maintaining competition in the Irish banking market.
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DUBLIN (Reuters) – Bank of Ireland has committed to make up to 1 billion euros ($1.07 billion) in total funding available to two smaller non-bank lenders as part of competition clearance granted on Tuesday for its deal to buy most of KBC’s Irish assets. Bank of Ireland, the country’s largest bank by assets, agreed in […]

DUBLIN (Reuters) – Bank of Ireland has committed to make up to 1 billion euros ($1.07 billion) in total funding available to two smaller non-bank lenders as part of competition clearance granted on Tuesday for its deal to buy most of KBC’s Irish assets.

Bank of Ireland, the country’s largest bank by assets, agreed in October to a 5 billion euro deal to buy “substantially all” of KBC’s Irish performing assets as the Belgian financial group become the latest lender to leave the shrinking Irish market.

To ameliorate any effects on competition, Bank of Ireland committed to purchase up to 1 billion euros of residential mortgage backed securities to be issued in the future by Finance Ireland and Dilosk, Ireland’s competition regulator said.

Bank of Ireland said the remedies will not materially impact the overall financial benefits of the acquisition. Analysts at Goodbody Strockbrokers said there had been some concern in the market that the regulator would impose stricter conditions.

Dilosk, whose ICS Mortgages brand has over 1.4 billion euros of mortgages under management, said in a statement that the agreement would reduce the cost of funding and boost its ambition to reach a 10% market share over the next few years.

Bank of Ireland, Allied Irish Banks and Permanent TSB had a combined 70% share of the mortgage market at the end of last year. The three are the only high street banks remaining in Ireland following the exits of KBC and NatWest’s Ulster Bank.

($1 = 0.9324 euros)

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a mortgage?
A mortgage is a loan specifically used to purchase real estate, where the property itself serves as collateral for the loan.
What are residential mortgage-backed securities?
Residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) are investment products created by pooling together various residential mortgages and selling shares to investors.
What is competition clearance?
Competition clearance is the approval process by regulatory authorities to ensure that a merger or acquisition does not harm market competition.

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