The Nordic financial sector is witnessing unprecedented bank-sector consolidation and fintech partnership-building activity. The surge in collaborative deals between traditional banks and fintech disrupters is helping finance houses develop deeper competence in next-generation digital and artificial intelligence offerings across core areas such as risk management, data analytics, robo-advisors, portfolio management, and fraud detection and prevention.
The heightened level of regional consolidation, especially among Danish and Norwegian savings banks, has produced more than 50 mergers and acquisitions (M&As) in the first half of 2024. This trend is expected to accelerate in the second half of the year. Moreover, digital banks’ growing presence and competitive impact forcing high-street banks to overhaul their business models and practices to create partner groups to drive domestic and Nordic growth.
Insurance group Sampo’s $4.73 billion takeover offer for the Copenhagen-headquartered Topdanmark reflects heightened interest by banks in growing through M&A deals that have a regional focus. The offer obtained foreign direct investment regulatory clearance in July. Sampo is on track to complete the transaction in September.
“Topdanmark is a perfect fit for Sampo. Our strategies have further aligned as pure property and casualty insurers in recent years,” said Sampo Group CEO Torbjörn Magnusson at the time of the announcement.
Meanwhile, Danske Bank is exploring ways to recalibrate its business model to create mortgage loan product partnerships with rival Danish banks. Carsten Egeriis, Danske Bank’s CEO, says the bank needs to change how it does business to retain private and corporate customers in the face of “disrupters expanding their range of offerings” in the Nordic retail lending space.
Swedbank formed a strategic product-distribution partnership with the Helsinki-based asset manager and life insurance provider Aktia Bank in another significant Nordic cross-border collaboration. The deal expands the Swedish bank’s corporate offerings in Finland while enabling Aktia to ally with Swedbank to provide compatible customer-tailored finance offerings.
In other noteworthy Nordic cross-border events, the Norwegian marine insurer Gard Forsikring expanded its market reach by acquiring the global Marine and Energy unit of Denmark-based Codan (part of Alm. Brand Group) in a deal worth $234 million.