LONDON--A consortium of investors led by U.S. private equity company Corsair Capital will take a stake in a standalone bank formed from 314 Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC (RBS) branches that the U.K. lender must sell to appease European regulators.

Friday, RBS said it will list the 314 branches as a separate business called Williams & Glyn's in around two years. The consortium of investors, which includes the Church Commissioners for England, who manage the assets of the Church of England, and Centerbridge Partners Europe LLP, will pay GBP600 million for a bond that will convert into no more than a 49% stake in the branches once they are spun off.

As a condition of RBs' government bailout in 2008, the European Commission made the U.K. bank sell part of its U.K. branch network. Last year, a long standing deal to sell the branches to Santander U.K. collapsed forcing RBS executives to either find another buyer or list them as a separate business.

As the U.K. economy slowly rebounds, the branches, which make up 5% of the U.K.'s SME corporate banking market, have attracted a range of bidders including other private equity firms. RBS received an offer--worth up to GBP1.5 billion--from U.K. investment vehicle W&G Investments to buy the branches outright. A person familiar with the matter said the sale offer would have seen RBS lose too much money on the deal.

By attracting cornerstone investors RBS hopes be able to list the branches in one go, rather than two, and also ensure that the branches are listed at a fair price. The investors will also help RBS create the standalone bank and have agreed to pay RBS up to an extra GBP200 million based on the performance of the Williams & Glyn's shares in the 18 months following the IPO. In the meantime RBS will have to ask the European Commission for a two-year extension on the deadline for the branch disposal, which was supposed to happen this year.

The Williams & Glyn's business will serve nearly 1.7 million customers, and will employ approximately 6,000 people. The business will have a GBP19.7 billion loan book, funded by GBP22.2 billion in customer deposits, RBS said in a statement.

"Williams & Glyn's will play an important role in the U.K. banking landscape and will be an excellent new addition to the market, with a particular strength in small business banking," RBS Chairman Philip Hampton said in a statement.

RBS, which is 81%-owned by the U.K. government, isn't alone in having to ditch branches to appease European regulators. Lloyds Banking Group PLC must sell 632 branches following its 2009 bailout. A deal with Co-operative Bank PLC fell apart earlier this year, and Lloyds has resurrected an old brand, TSB, hoping to float the branches as a separate bank in 2014.

Meanwhile U.K. politicians have touted these various new banks as a way of bolstering competition in the U.K. banking market. Skeptics warn that these new banks will have relatively small market shares, making it hard for them to take on larger competitors.

Write to Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com

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