--Banks plan to ink deal by end of Friday

--Sberbank to pay almost $3.7 billion for Denizbank

--Russian government selling Sberbank stake

(Adds detail in paragraphs 3 and 4.)

 
   By Alexander Kolyandr 
 

MOSCOW--Struggling French-Belgian lender Dexia SA (DEXB.BT) plans to agree a deal by the end of Friday to sell its Turkish Denizbank AS (DENIZ.IS) business to Russia's biggest bank, OAO Sberbank (SBER.RS), for just under $3.7 billion, a person familiar with the matter told Dow Jones Newswires Thursday.

Dexia and Sberbank launched exclusive talks late May to forge a deal that would be "the biggest in Sberbank's history," a person told Dow Jones Newswires at the time.

Sberbank Chief Executive German Gref has described the Turkish market is the bank's priority for mergers and acquisitions and praised Denizbank as "probably the highest quality asset of those on the Turkish market."

Dexia is being broken up under a plan initiated by the French and Belgian governments after it came close to collapse in October. The bank's reliance on short-term funding left it dangerously exposed to the credit crunch prompted by last summer's deepening European sovereign debt crisis.

The Denizbank acquisition may increase the Russian government's chances of attracting investors in its renewed plan to sell a 7.58% stake in state-controlled Sberbank later this year. The government wants to reduce its stake in Sberbank, the country's oldest lender, to a blocking minority of 25% by 2015.

Sberbank is pursuing expansion abroad and is trying to be business-friendly at home. If completed, the acquisition will be the banking giant's second purchase outside of the former Soviet Union. In February, it bought Volksbank International, which operates in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia and Ukraine.

The Russian economics ministry reiterated Thursday that it plans to sell a Sberbank stake in 2012 along with other state assets as part of a plan to raise RUB300 billion ($9.3 billion) this year.

The Denizbank sale comes at a time when many West European banks are selling assets in order to replenish capital and combat fallout from the euro zone debt crisis. They also need to lift capital buffers to satisfy stricter capital requirements.

Denizbank is one of Dexia's best assets and its disposal marks a major step in the break-up plan. Talks with interested parties had reportedly faltered in recent months, leading to concerns that the business could ultimately be sold at a loss.

After dropping out from the talks to buy Denizbank in November, Sberbank returned to the negotiating table in May.

According to media reports, Qatar National Bank was also interested in buying Denizbank, seeking a price close to its book value, which was about $2.7 billion at the end of the first quarter.

Dexia has owned Denizbank since 2006. It was founded in 1938 as a state-owned bank specializing in funding for the Turkish maritime sector, according to its website. In 1997, the bank was acquired by Zorlu Holding from the Privatization Administration as a banking entity before being acquired by Dexia for a reported $2.4 billion.

It has about 600 branches and 10,826 employees and total assets of TYL44.76 billion ($24 billion), the website says.

Write to Alexander Kolyandr at alexander.kolyandr@dowjones.com

(Olga Razumovskaya in Moscow contributed to this article.)

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