LONDON, May 22 – Investec has applied for a banking license in Ireland as the South Africa- and UK-listed lender seeks to expand deeper into the European financial market following Brexit.
The move would allow Investec to broaden its banking operations across the European Union, strengthening its ability to serve corporate and wealthy clients within one of the world’s largest financial systems.
Chief Executive Officer Fani Titi said the lender has been in discussions with Irish regulators for an extended period and expects the licensing process to conclude successfully in the near future.
“We do expect that in the immediate future, we will be successful and we are quite excited about the opportunity that that opens for us in Ireland and the rest of Europe,” Titi said in an interview with Bloomberg TV.
The expansion reflects how banks and financial institutions continue restructuring operations inside the European Union after Brexit changed market access rules for UK-based firms.
Ireland has emerged as a major destination for financial companies seeking continued access to European markets because of its English-speaking workforce, financial infrastructure and regulatory framework.
Investec already operates in Dublin through its European business following the acquisition of NCB Stockbrokers in 2012.
Its Irish operations currently provide treasury risk solutions, derivatives and investment services under regulation by the Central Bank of Ireland.
According to Titi, obtaining a full Irish banking license would allow Investec to operate more aggressively across Europe after UK banks lost certain cross-border operating freedoms following Britain’s exit from the EU.
The lender expects the authorization could be granted before the end of the year.
Investec has recently intensified its international expansion strategy as competition increases among banks and fintech firms targeting affluent customers and cross-border corporate clients.
The group has outlined plans to evolve from a specialist lender into a broader primary banking institution offering current accounts, credit cards, rewards programmes and digital banking services.
The company also plans to nearly double its private-client base by 2030, targeting an additional 122,000 clients beyond its current customer base of roughly 128,000 users.
As part of its broader growth plans, Investec is hiring relationship managers and credit officers ahead of a planned launch of a UK corporate banking operation in the second half of 2027.
Titi said the company remains optimistic about international expansion opportunities, including in the Middle East, despite geopolitical tensions affecting some regional operations.
“Overall, we are on a front foot, we are investing, we are expanding, and we are hiring,” he said.