Kaupthing has been run by Iceland’s central bank since it was taken over in late 2008, when the country’s overextended commercial banking system collapsed in the global financial crisis.
The central bank is selling Kaupthing’s FIH unit for five billion Danish kroner ($885 million) to a consortium comprising of Swedish insurance group Folksam, two Danish pension funds, ATP and PFA Pension, and Danish financial consultancy CPDyvig.
FIH, the sixth-biggest Danish banking group, has assets of 125 billion kroner and is 99.89 percent owned by Kaupthing. It employs 370 staff and is based in Copenhagen. The deal is subject to regulatory approval.
Kaupthing built up businesses abroad during the boom years before the crash, using cheap debt to acquire a stable of varied assets but it found it could not cover its obligations when credit dried up in 2008, with the Iceland government forced to rescue it and its peers.
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