National Bank of Greece
File:National Bank of Greece.svg | |
Company type | Anonymi Etairia |
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Athex: ETE, NYSE: NBG, LSE: NBGA | |
Industry | Financial services |
Founded | 1841 |
Headquarters | Athens, Greece |
Key people | Apostolos Tamvakakis (CEO), Vassilios Rapanos (Chairman) |
Products | Retail, investment and business banking, asset management |
Revenue | €4.639 billion (2010)[1] |
€405.5 million (2010)[1] | |
Total assets | €120.74 billion (2010)[1] |
Total equity | €10.91 billion (2010)[1] |
Number of employees | 36,380 (average, 2010)[1] |
Website | www.nbg.gr |
The National Bank of Greece (NBG; [Εθνική Τράπεζα της Ελλάδος] Error: {{Lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help)) is the oldest and largest commercial banking group in Greece. The group has a particularly strong presence in Southeastern Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean. It owns subsidiaries in over 18 countries, including Bulgaria, Cyprus, Egypt, Republic of Macedonia, Netherlands, Romania, Russia, Serbia, South Africa, Switzerland, and Turkey.
Founded in 1841 as a commercial bank, NBG enjoyed the right to issue banknotes until the establishment of the Bank of Greece in 1928. It has been listed on the Athens Stock Exchange since the Exchange's foundation in 1880. Since October 1999, the Bank has been listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The NBG Group is involved in the investment banking services, brokerage, insurance, asset management, leasing and factoring markets.
The Bank's branch and ATM network, the largest in Greece (568 domestic banking units and 1370 ΑΤΜs), effectively covers the entire country. It is developing and expanding alternative distribution channels for its products, such as mobile and internet banking. Today, after recent acquisitions in South Eastern Europe the Group's network overseas includes 868 units. Over 9 million deposit accounts and more than 1.5 million lending accounts are held with NBG.
History
- NBG was founded in 1841 in Athens, making it the oldest bank in the country. It was not government-owned from its inception but had the right of note issue, which it lost in 1928 when the newly-established Bank of Greece took over as the country's central bank.[2] Its status was changed to government-owned when, during the first World War, the Bank refused to finance new military equipment for the Greek government. The government then issued legislation that permitted it to appoint its own people to the Bank's board.
- In 1899 NBG acquired the Privileged Bank of Epirus and Thessaly (Pronomiouchos Trapeza Epirothessalias). Andreas Syngros had founded the bank in Volos in 1882. Unfortunately, the bank was unable to recover from his death and from the Greco-Turkish War (1897).
- In 1904 NBG established Banque d’Orient, together with Nationalbank für Deutschland, which almost immediately withdrew from the venture. The Greeks kept the branches in Saloniki, Smyrna and Alexandria.
- In 1907 NBG chose Cyprus as the location for its first branch outside Greece.
- In 1919 NBG acquired the Bank of Crete (Trapeza Kritis).
- In 1923 the Treaty of Lausanne provided for a compulsory exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey, leading to the departure of the Greeks from Smyrna, resulting in the closure of Banque d’Orient's branch.
- In 1930 NBG and Bank of Athens combined their activities in Egypt into a joint subsidiary, Banque Nationale de Grèce et d’Athènes.
- In 1932 NBG acquired Banque d'Orient (Trapeza Anatolis).
- In 1939 it established a subsidiary in New York, Hellenic Bank Trust Company.
- During World War II, Deutsche Bank was responsible for managing NBG for the German Occupation.
- In 1953 the Greek government forced NBG to merge with Bank of Athens to form National Bank of Greece and Athens, later shortened to National Bank of Greece. The merger gave NBG control of the various subsidiaries of the Bank of Athens, including the South African Bank of Athens (est. 1947), which NBG still owns.
- In 1960 Egypt nationalised all banks in Egypt, including Banque Nationale de Grèce et d’Athénes, which it merged into National Bank of Egypt.
- In 1965 NBG acquired Trapeza Epagelmatikis Pistis.
- In 1978 the Greek government permitted the formation of Arab Hellenic Bank with 49% Arab ownership, as an exception to its prohibition on foreign banks owning more than 40% of the equity of a Greek bank. NBG held 51% and provided most of the bank staff. The Libyan Arab-Foreign Bank and Kuwaiti Investment Organisation held 40% between them while other Arab investors held 9%. That same year NBG opened a branch in Cairo.
- In 1994 NBG incorporated its branches in Cyprus into a subsidiary: National Bank of Greece (Cyprus)
- In 1995 the Greek government dissolved the insolvent Arab Hellenic Bank at a cost to Greece's Deposit Guarantee Fund of Euro 1.5m in payments to depositors.
- In 1998 NBG merged with the National Mortgage Bank of Greece (Ethniki Ktimatiki Trapeza Ellados), itself the result of the merger of the National Mortgage Bank and the National Housing Bank of Greece.
- In July, 2000 National Bank of Greece acquired 89.9% of the United Bulgarian Bank (UBB).
- In April, 2000, in a joint deal with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and IFC, NBG acquired a majority stake in Stopanska Banka (Skopje, Republic of Macedonia).
- In 2002 NBG merged with ETEBA – National Investment Bank for Industrial Development.
- In 2002 National Bank of Greece's attempted merger with Alpha Bank fell through.
- In 2003 NBG bought Banca Romaneasca, a Romanian bank, and currently holds 88.7% of all outstanding shares. Banca Romaneasca has 90 branches.
- In 2005 Bank of Nova Scotia acquired all of NBG's operations in Canada.
- In 2005, as part of the NBG Group's ongoing effort to improve its portfolio structure and effectively respond to changes in the domestic and international markets, the Boards of Directors of National Bank of Greece S.A. and National Investment Company S.A. decided to merge the two companies through absorption of the latter by the Bank.[3]
Economy of Greece |
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Overview |
History |
Related |
Notes
- ^ a b c d e "Annual Report 2010" (PDF). National Bank of Greece. Retrieved 5 May 2011.
- ^ Tschoegl, A. 2004. Financial Integration, Dis-integration and Emerging Re-integration in the Eastern Mediterranean, c.1850 to the Present. Financial Markets, Instruments and Institutions 13 (5): 244-284.
- ^ [1] National Bank of Greece Press Release (Athens, 13 May 2005)