CLEVELAND, April 30, 2026, 07:01 EDT
- KeyCorp is set to expand into Western Europe after agreeing to buy Clearwater UK, marking the Cleveland lender’s initial push into the region’s advisory market. The deal, subject to regulatory sign-off, targets a close in the second half of 2026.
- The agreement comes as KeyCorp pushes deeper into fee-driven lines. Investment banking and debt placement fees jumped 12.6% to $197 million in the first quarter.
- Terms haven’t been released. Both analysts and company execs are calling this move a focused, small-scale addition rather than a full bank merger.
KeyCorp’s deal for Clearwater Corporate Finance LLP is now up for approval, marking a step toward what would be the U.S. regional lender’s first investment-banking outpost in Western Europe. The move is part of Key’s effort to boost fee revenue beyond its core lending business.
The sequence is important. This month, KeyCorp posted a jump in first-quarter profit, buoyed by lending strength and a pick-up in dealmaking. According to Reuters, the Cleveland-based bank saw investment banking and debt placement fees climb to $197 million, with corporate activity lifting advisory revenue across Wall Street.
With Clearwater, KeyBanc Capital Markets steps into the UK’s middle-market M&A scene—mergers and acquisitions—as well as private equity and debt advisory. Clearwater operates out of Birmingham, London, Leeds and Manchester, and works with clients in sectors from financial services and healthcare to industrials, real estate, and technology.
KeyBanc Capital Markets and Clearwater have worked together since 2020, and now the deal moves things forward. KeyCorp says merging the platforms will open doors for U.S. private equity sponsors and corporate clients to reach European deals and exits. European clients, on the other hand, get a way into the U.S. M&A market.
Randy Paine, president of Key Institutional Bank, described the deal as “the natural next step in the relationship,” emphasizing its alignment with Key’s institutional banking growth strategy. KeyCorp
Clearwater UK’s CEO Mark Taylor insisted the firm’s core market and service lineup aren’t changing—just getting “only enhanced.” Chief operating officer Bruce Weir described the deal as “an endorsement of Clearwater’s broader business strategy.” Clearwater
Key isn’t disclosing the financial details. A spokesperson called it a “strategic tuck-in acquisition” intended to boost the bank’s fee-based revenue in Western Europe, according to comments to Banking Dive. Regulatory filings cited by RBC Capital Markets analyst Gerard Cassidy show Clearwater pulled in £52.2 million of revenue in fiscal 2025—a jump of 75%—and employed around 117 people. Banking Dive
Scott Siefers at Piper Sandler called Clearwater “a nice enhancement” for Key, noting the two already have a partnership—which, he wrote, should set the stage for a “smooth integration.” Banking Dive
Browne Jacobson revealed this week it acted for Clearwater on the cross-border deal. Corporate partners Gavin Cummings and Matt Dorman led the team, with other lawyers in tax, corporate, and employment pitching in. “Trusted to deliver this strategic transaction,” Cummings said. Browne Jacobson
The move stands out as a modest one, especially given the bigger deals seen lately in the U.S. regional banking space. Back in December, Reuters reported KeyCorp CEO Chris Gorman’s stance: the bank was “not participating” in any acquisitions. Activist investor HoldCo had urged Key to stay away from bank deals, after previously leaning on Comerica to sell itself to Fifth Third Bancorp for $10.9 billion. Reuters
That difference is important for investors tracking how capital is put to work. KeyCorp posted a 10% jump in first-quarter revenue to $1.95 billion over the prior year, with noninterest income up 8%. CEO Chris Gorman pointed out that priority fee-based businesses—investment banking, commercial payments, and wealth management—delivered 12% growth.
The transaction hasn’t crossed the finish line yet. It’s still waiting on approval from the UK Financial Conduct Authority, plus other standard closing hurdles. Advisory revenue, too, can shift fast—especially if M&A activity cools off or integration across borders takes longer than planned. KeyCorp targets the second half of 2026 for closing.