Ukraine’s biggest bank does not rule out settling a legal dispute with its former main shareholders out of court, the head of PrivatBank’s supervisory board said on Tuesday.
The Ukrainian authorities took PrivatBank into state hands in December 2016 and have spent nearly $6bn so far to plug a hole in its balance sheet caused by what the government says were fraudulent lending practices and money-laundering.
The former owners, two of Ukraine’s richest men, dispute the authorities’ assessment of the bank’s health when it was nationalised.
The case led to hundreds of lawsuits and the authorities see it as a test of their fight against corruption. An investigation commissioned by the central bank in January found 95% of PrivatBank’s corporate loans had gone to companies linked to the former owners or their affiliates.
As a result, more than 85% of its portfolio is made up of non-performing loans as of June 1, the central bank says. Engin Akchakocha, head of the PrivatBank’s supervisory board, said “every option is on the table” when asked if he would consider an out-of-court settlement with the bank’s former main shareholders, although he said he did not want to comment directly on the legal cases.
“Resolving a problem peacefully is easier and better than trying to resolve it through a fight,” he said.
“It all needs appropriate willpower and goodwill,” he said when asked about the prospect of the former owners helping tackle PrivatBank’s bad loans. “As of today, we are not in communication with the former shareholders of the bank on resolving these issues on a voluntary basis,” he said, but he added that he did not rule out such a route.
Lawyers for Ihor Kolomoisky and Gennadiy Bogolyubov, the two former main shareholders, could not immediately be reached for comment.
Akchakocha was appointed chairman of the supervisory board in January 2017, after working as chief banking regulator in Turkey during its financial crisis in 2001. Under his guidance, PrivatBank aims to return to profit in 2018 after two years of losses and to find a buyer by 2022. The bank’s strategy includes focusing mostly on retail banking and making only limited forays into corporate lending, said Akchakocha, adding that PrivatBank had implemented a range of changes to its governance since nationalisation.
The supervisory board “started to change the bank’s way of doing business, understanding of risk, and implementing controls,” he said, adding this included re-establishing a risk management unit, an internal audit department and a compliance office.
PrivatBank’s non-performing loans needed to be removed from its balance sheet for a successful privatisation, he said, adding the bank might need to be split up to make it attractive for a sale due to its size. 
The bank had assets of 254.6bn hryvnias ($9.7bn) as of end-March 2018. Asked if foreign financial institutions could become shareholders before a full privatisation, he said: “If we think that it will add to the value of the final transaction, it may be an option.”