Item 1.01 Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement.
On April 22, 2021, Summit Community Bank, Inc. (“Summit”), a subsidiary of Summit Financial Group, Inc. (the “Company”) entered into a Purchase and Assumption Agreement (the “Purchase Agreement”) with MVB Bank, Inc. (“MVB Bank”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of MVB Financial Corp. (“MVB Financial”), pursuant to which Summit will purchase certain assets and assume certain liabilities (the “Acquisition”) of substantially all of MVB Bank’s Southern West Virginia community banking operations, including its full service banking centers located at: 400 Washington Street East, Charleston; 3754 Teays Valley Road, Hurricane; 660 Central Avenue, Barboursville; and 999 4th Avenue, Huntington, and its drive-up banking locations at 6441 Farmdale Road, Barboursville, and 940 5th Avenue, Huntington (collectively, the “Branches”).
Pursuant to the terms of the Purchase Agreement, Summit has agreed to assume certain deposit liabilities and to acquire certain loans, as well as cash, real property, personal property and other fixed assets associated with the Branches. The deposit and loan balances are expected to amount to approximately $193 million and $57 million, respectively.
The purchase price for the purchased assets will be computed as the sum of the: (i) average daily closing balance of the deposits for the thirty (30) day period prior to the closing multiplied by 6.00%; (ii) the aggregate amount of cash on hand as of the closing date; (iii) the aggregate net book value of all assets being assumed (excluding cash on hand, real property and accrued interest with respect to the loans to be acquired); (iv) the appraised value of the real property to be acquired; and (v) accrued interest with respect to the loans to be acquired. The purchase price is subject to a customary post-closing adjustment based on the delivery within 30 calendar days following the closing date of a final closing statement setting forth the purchase price and any necessary adjustment payment amount.
The completion of the Acquisition is subject to regulatory approval required by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the West Virginia Division of Financial Institutions, as well as normal customary closing conditions. Subject to the satisfaction of such conditions, MVB Bank and Summit expect to close the Acquisition in the third quarter of 2021.
MVB Bank and Summit have made customary representations, warranties, and covenants in the Purchase Agreement. MVB Bank and Summit have also agreed to indemnify each other (subject to customary limitations) with respect to the Acquisition, including for breaches of representations and warranties, breaches of covenants, liabilities not retained or assumed, and conduct of the business of the Branches and operation and use of the purchased assets during certain time periods.
The foregoing description of the Purchase Agreement and related transactions does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to the Purchase Agreement, which is filed as Exhibit 2.1 to this Form 8-K, and is incorporated into this report by reference. Except for its status as a contractual document that establishes and governs the legal relations between the parties with respect to the transactions described above, the Purchase Agreement is not intended to be a source of factual, business or operational information about the parties. Representations and warranties may be used as a tool to allocate risks between the parties to the Purchase Agreement, including where the parties do not have complete knowledge of all facts, instead of establishing these matters as facts. Furthermore, they may be subject to standards of materiality applicable to the contracting parties, which may differ from those applicable to investors. The assertions embodied in such representations and warranties are qualified by information contained in disclosure schedules that the parties exchanged in connection with signing the Purchase Agreement. Accordingly, investors and security holders should not rely on such representations and warranties as characterizations of the actual state of facts or circumstances, because they were only made as of the date of the Purchase Agreement and are modified in important part by the underlying disclosure schedules in the Purchase Agreement. Moreover, information concerning the subject matter of such representations and warranties may change after the date of the Purchase Agreement, which subsequent information may or may not be fully reflected in the Company’s public disclosures.