Bahrain’s NBB hires Goldman Sachs to explore merger worth $2.43bn

National Bank of Bahrain currently holds a market capitalization of $3.25 billion. File
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Updated 25 June 2024
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Bahrain’s NBB hires Goldman Sachs to explore merger worth $2.43bn

RIYADH: Bahrain’s national bank appointed Goldman Sachs as a financial adviser for its negotiation with top banking institutions regarding a potential merger deal between the two, a disclosure showed.

According to a statement by the body on the country’s stock exchange, National Bank of Bahrain – which currently holds a market capitalization of $3.25 billion – is in the process of appointing an advisor to conduct due studies and diligence related to its merger with rival Bank of Bahrain and Kuwait, known as BBK, which has a valuation of $2.43 billion.

The potential deal coincides with the recent surge of mergers and acquisitions in the region, where businesses and financial institutions within the Gulf Cooperation Council have increasingly favored pooling their resources to achieve operational efficiency and maximize profits.

In Saudi Arabia, for example, the total volume of mergers and acquisitions deals during the first quarter of 2024 reached $955 million, with the chemicals sector accounting for 52.4 percent of the total. 

NBB also appointed Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, a leading international law firm, as a legal advisor for the deal, according to the disclosure while BBK announced the selection of Citigroup Global Markets as its financial advisor.

This continues a trend in the region’s banking sector. Last year, Oman’s second-largest financial institute, Bank Dhofar, pursued a merger with its smaller rival, Ahli United Bank, creating a lender with just under $20 billion in assets.

These deals come as a testament to global rating agency Moody’s expectation in March of last year that banks in the GCC region will witness a rise in M&A activity, enabling future synergies and oil revenue divergences in the area. 

“Consolidation among GCC region banks brings scale to support the diversification of Gulf economies away from oil and benefits in revenue and cost synergies,” said Francesca Paolino, an analyst at Moody’s. 

The rating agency noted that this development would occur despite the region’s pre-existing strong bank financial fundamentals and modest over-banking level.  

It also said that the majority of Middle East M&A activities were concentrated in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt, which collectively recorded 563 deals or 89 percent of the region’s total volume. 


Maersk to resume Suez Canal sailings for MECL service

Updated 15 January 2026
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Maersk to resume Suez Canal sailings for MECL service

  • Shipping companies are weighing a return to the critical Asia-Europe trade corridor more than two years after they started rerouting vessels around Africa following Yemeni Houthi rebels’ attacks

OSLO: Shipping group Maersk will resume sailings via the Red Sea and the Suez Canal for its ​MECL service, connecting the Middle East and India with the US east coast, the Danish company said on Thursday.
“Maersk has decided to implement a structural return to the trans-Suez route for all MECL service sailings,” the company said in a statement, ‌adding that this ‌was part of a ‌stepwise approach ⁠for ​its ‌fleet.
Shipping companies are weighing a return to the critical Asia-Europe trade corridor more than two years after they started rerouting vessels around Africa following Yemeni Houthi rebels’ attacks on ships in the Red Sea in what they said ⁠was a show of solidarity with the Palestinians in Gaza.
Maersk ‌on Monday said one ‍of its vessels ‍had tested the route as a ceasefire in ‍Gaza raised hopes for normal shipping traffic.
The change for the MECL service comes into effect with a sailing departing Oman’s port of Salalah on January ​26.
The Suez Canal is the fastest route linking Europe and Asia and, until ⁠the Houthi attacks, had accounted for about 10 percent of global seaborne trade, according to Clarksons Research.
The ceasefire in the Gaza conflict, in place since October last year, has renewed hope of normalizing Red Sea traffic.
The ceasefire has ended major combat in Gaza over the past three months, but both sides have accused the other of regular violations. More than 440 ‌Palestinians and three Israeli soldiers have been killed since the truce took effect.