IFX Payments May Terminate £3M Argentex Acquisition on Insolvency Grounds
IFX Payments said today (Monday) it's considering pulling out of its takeover bid for foreign exchange (FX) broker Argentex Group, just days after the struggling British currency firm appointed administrators due to funding problems.
IFX Payments May Walk Away From Argentex Deal After Administration
The payments company issued a statement saying Argentex entering administration is "of material significance" to the acquisition deal. IFX Payments is now talking with regulatory panels about invoking insolvency conditions that would let it walk away from the purchase.
Back in April, IFX had built escape clauses into its takeover documents. The company specifically said it wouldn't go through with buying Argentex if the target firm faced winding-up procedures or other insolvency processes. Those conditions now appear relevant given Argentex's current troubles.
The potential collapse of this deal caps a dramatic few months for Argentex. The company was originally valued at around £120 million when it went public in 2019, but a series of missteps left it fighting for survival.
From Boom to Bust in Three Months
Argentex's problems started earlier this year when the U.S. dollar crashed to three-year lows. The London-listed firm had been offering "zero-zero" margin arrangements to some clients, essentially letting them trade foreign exchange without putting up collateral.
When the dollar plummeted, partly due to new U.S. tariffs and comments from President Trump. Argentex got hit with margin calls from its banking partners. But since many clients hadn't posted collateral, the company couldn't cover these demands, creating a severe cash crunch.
The firm had to suspend share trading in April and scrambled to find a lifeline. That's when IFX Payments stepped in with a £6.5 million emergency loan and later agreed to acquire the entire company for just £3 million, a fraction of its former value.

"We are very pleased to announce the proposed acquisition of Argentex, which will enhance our regulated capabilities, diversify our product portfolio, particularly in FX risk management and institutional offering, and further expand our geographical reach and network," IFX CEO Will Marwick said at the time.
Argentex CEO Jim Ormonde resigned immediately when the rescue deal was announced. The company's board unanimously backed the takeover, saying shareholders would get 2.49 pence per share, better than nothing if the firm went under completely.
Deal Now in Doubt
But Argentex's financial situation apparently kept getting worse. The company announced Friday it was bringing in administrators to handle its affairs, typically a precursor to either a company restructuring or liquidation.
IFX now says this administration appointment gives it grounds to invoke the insolvency conditions written into the original deal documents. The payments firm is consulting with the UK Takeover Panel about officially triggering these escape clauses.
If IFX does walk away, Argentex's roughly 1,000 shareholders could be left with little to nothing. The company had processed over $200 billion in FX transactions across 140+ currencies during its better days and maintained offices in Amsterdam, Australia, and Dubai.
The saga highlights growing regulatory scrutiny of risk management practices in the wholesale trading sector. The Financial Conduct Authority has been pushing firms to improve their liquidity planning after several market disruptions.