By Dmitry Zhdannikov
LONDON (Reuters) - Fast-growing trading house Mercuria, led by two former Goldman Sachs
JPMorgan decided to sell its multi-billion dollar physical commodities division last year under rising regulatory scrutiny and political pressure on banks to retreat to their core business of lending instead of speculating in raw materials.
In recent weeks, Mercuria was competing with Australian bank Macquarie Group
"This week, JPM entered into exclusive talks with Mercuria," one of the sources familiar with the process told Reuters.
The final deal could take a few months to conclude, one of the sources said. The deal, if agreed, would catapult Mercuria into the top tier of trading houses with Glencore Xstrata
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Private and lightly regulated trading houses have benefited most from a major retreat by banks from commodities trading over the past two years.
Companies like Glencore and Russian oil major Rosneft
JPMorgan and Mercuria both declined to comment.
Mercuria was founded by Marco Dunand and Daniel Jaeggi, who both worked as executives at Goldman Sachs and then trading house Sempra, which was later bought by JPMorgan from the Royal Bank of Scotland
In less than a decade, Dunand and Jaeggi have built Mercuria from a relatively small trading house into one of the world's largest oil traders with annual revenues of around $100 billion and 700 traders around the globe.
The deal value has yet to be agreed and will depend to a large extent on the valuation of large stockpiles of oil and metals the bank holds, one source said.
In documents circulated to potential buyers, JPMorgan valued its physical commodity business at $3.3 billion, with an annual income of $750 million. JPMorgan paid nearly $2 billion to buy the largest part of the business from RBS in 2010.
(Reporting by Dmitry Zhdannikov, Oleg Vukmanovic, Veronica Brown, Henning Gloystein and David Sheppard; Editing by William Hardy and Peter Graff)