* CIB is Egypt's largest lender by market value
* Deal is close to market price
* Private equity firm Actis to be largest single investor
* CIB shares down more than 5 percent
(Adds Actis planning to have board representation)
CAIRO, July 8 (Reuters) - Private equity firm Actis has agreed to pay $244 million to acquire a 9.3 percent stake in Commercial International Bank, Egypt's largest lender by market value, Actis said on Wednesday.
Actis, which invests in emerging markets, said it would buy 27.3 million CIB global depositary receipts for $8.93 each, just above Tuesday's closing price of $8.68. It said it believed CIB had "excellent growth potential".
CIB said it welcomed the move as the bank accelerated its growth in consumer banking.
Radwa El-Swaify, senior banking analyst for Beltone Financial, said the deal was "close to the market price and to analysts' valuations, which we think is a fair deal".
Actis said the acquisition -- which is for 50 percent of a stake held by a consortium led by U.S. group Ripplewood Holdings -- would make it the largest single investor in CIB.
"Within Egypt, CIB is the market's leading bank, perfectly positioned to achieve significant growth by extending its services into the retail banking sector," Actis Senior Partner Paul Fletcher said in a statement.
EFG-Hermes Investment Banking, which acted as financial adviser to Actis on the deal, said it was the largest merger and acquisition transaction in Egypt this year.
Karim Awad, head of investment banking at EFG-Hermes, said Actis planned to have representation on the board, but it had not yet been decided how seats would be divided.
"It plans to be an active shareholder," Awad said. CIB's board currently has two executive and six non-executive members, two of whom represent the Ripplewood consortium.
Separately, Belgian holding firm RHJ International will sell part of its 3.2 percent stake in CIB, an RHJ spokesman said.
RHJ's entire 3.2 percent stake in CIB is worth about 430 million Egyptian pounds ($77 million) based on CIB's current share price of roughly 46 pounds. RHJ is run by the founder of Ripplewood.
By 1104 GMT shares in CIB had fallen 5.5 percent on news of the Actis deal to 46.30 pounds.
The purchase "might have sent the impression that this is the fair value of the bank and caused people to sell to take profits", Beltone's Swaify said, adding that Ripplewood's willingness to sell may have also sparked some negative sentiment. (Reporting by Cynthia Johnston and Patrick Werr in Cairo and Ann Jolis in Brussels; Writing by Cynthia Johnston; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter and Will Waterman)