Fifth Third Bancorp to buy Comerica for $10.9 billion in tie-up of big
regional banks
[October 07, 2025] By
MICHELLE CHAPMAN
Fifth Third Bancorp is buying Comerica for $10.9 billion in an all-stock
deal, tying up two big regional banks.
The buyout will create the 9th largest U.S. bank with approximately $288
billion in assets, the companies said Monday.
The combined company will have operations in the Southeast, Texas and
California, and will greatly solidify Fifth Third's position in the
Midwest. It is anticipated that over half of Fifth Third’s branches will
be located in the Southeast, Texas, Arizona and California by 2030.
“This combination marks a pivotal moment for Fifth Third as we
accelerate our strategy to build density in high-growth markets and
deepen our commercial capabilities,” Fifth Third Bank Chairman and CEO
Tim Spence said in a statement. “Comerica’s strong middle market
franchise and complementary footprint make this a natural fit."
Comerica’s stockholders will receive 1.8663 Fifth Third shares for each
share they own. This representing $82.88 per share as of Fifth Third’s
closing stock price on Friday.

Fifth Third shareholders will own about 73% of the combined company,
while Comerica shareholders will own approximately 27%.
There has been some consolidation in the regional bank sector recently.
A month ago, PNC Financial said that it would buy Colorado-based
FirstBank for $4.1 billion, giving PNC a substantial presence in the
Colorado banking market as well as Arizona.
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In this Jan. 21, 2009 file photo, signs outside a Fifth Third Bank
are lit up at dusk in Cincinnati.(AP Photo/Al Behrman, file)
 The FirstBank acquisition would make
PNC the largest bank in the Denver market, and give it more than 70
branches in Arizona. PNC will also grow to roughly $575 billion in
assets.
PNC is typically referred to as a super regional bank, a group of
large national banks that are significant in size, often hundreds of
billions in assets and hundreds of branches, but are dwarfed in size
by the banking giants Wells Fargo, Bank of America and JPMorgan
Chase, who have size and scale that the super regionals cannot
replicate.
Three members of Comerica’s board will join the board of Fifth
Third, based in Cincinnati, once the deal is complete. Chairman and
CEO Curt Farmer of Comerica, based in Dallas, will serve as vice
chair and Peter Sefzik, Comerica’s chief banking officer, will lead
Fifth Third’s wealth and asset Management business.
The deal is expected to close at the end of the first quarter of
2026. It still needs the approval of both companies’ shareholders.
Shares of Comerica rose 11% before the opening bell Monday, while
shares of Fifth Third sank 2%.
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