ISLAMABAD: The Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP) has approved United Ethanol Industries Limited’s acquisition of shareholding in Pakistan Corporate Restructuring Company Limited (PCRCL), in a move seen as supporting investment activity and broadening participation in Pakistan’s emerging distressed asset and restructuring market.
The approval was granted following a Phase-I competition assessment conducted under the Competition Act, 2010.
The transaction involves the acquisition of ordinary shares in PCRCL from eight commercial banks, including UBL, MCB Bank, Allied Bank, Meezan Bank, HBL, Habib Metropolitan Bank, Bank AL Habib and Bank Alfalah.
PCRCL is licensed by the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) as a corporate restructuring company and operates in the acquisition, management and resolution of non-performing assets (NPAs), as well as restructuring and revival of financially distressed businesses.
Market observers view the sector as increasingly important amid rising stress in segments of the corporate and banking sectors and growing focus on recovery and restructuring mechanisms.
United Ethanol Industries Limited, the acquirer, operates in the ethanol and industrial products segment and is engaged in the production and sale of fuel-grade and industrial-grade ethanol through value-added processing of agricultural raw materials.
According to the CCP’s assessment, the transaction constitutes a conglomerate merger as both entities operate in unrelated business segments with no horizontal or vertical overlap. The Commission concluded that the acquisition is unlikely to substantially lessen competition, create market barriers or strengthen a dominant position in the relevant market.
The relevant market was identified by the Commission as “resolution of Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) and restructuring advisory/agency services” within Pakistan.
The CCP’s merger order stated, “based on the information provided in the Application and subsequent correspondence, the relevant market in Pakistan is at nascent stage and accordingly the Target has not undertaken any significant restructuring transactions in the past 5 years. Therefore, while the Target was the first entity licensed under the Corporate Restructuring Companies Act, 2016, its actual economic footprint within the Non-Performing Loan (NPL) market is negligible.”
The approval comes at a time when regulators are increasingly emphasizing efficient restructuring frameworks, recovery of distressed assets and stronger financial sector resilience. Analysts say the transaction also reflects growing investor interest in specialized financial restructuring and turnaround opportunities.
The CCP stated that it remains focused on facilitating investment, enabling efficient market transactions and promoting a transparent and competitive business environment through timely merger reviews and regulatory oversight.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2026
