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Oldenburgische Landesbank

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Oldenburgische Landesbank AG
Company typePublic
IndustryFinancial services
PredecessorOldenburgische Spar- und Leihbank Edit this on Wikidata
Founded15 January 1869
Headquarters,
Number of locations
90
Key people
Stefan Barth, CEO
€343.9m (H1 2024)
Total assets€32.3bn (H1 2024)
Number of employees
1,666 FTE (H1 2024)
Websiteolb.de
Logo until August 2019

Oldenburgische Landesbank AG (OLB) is a private financial institution from north-west Germany that serves its customers under the two renowned brands OLB Bank and Bankhaus Neelmeyer throughout Germany and in selected neighbouring European countries. Its headquarters are in Oldenburg.

OLB was founded in 1869 by the Frankfurt-based bank Erlanger & Söhne with the privilege of issuing banknotes. Their first director was Lorenz Zuckermandel.[1] Today, the universal bank is partner for its clients in two strategic business segments: Private & Business Customers including high-net-worth customers in the field of Wealth Management, and Corporates & Diversified Lending including for instance Corporate Finance, Commercial Real Estate, Acquisition Finance and Football Finance.

OLB maintains a wide network of locations, which focuses on the northwestern part of Germany, known as Weser-Ems (comprising Osnabrück Land, Emsland, County of Bentheim, East Frisia, Ammerland, Friesland, Oldenburg (Oldenburg), and Oldenburg Münsterland), as well as Bremen (since 1 July 2009). Its first branch in North Rhine-Westphalia opened 7 November 2011 in Rheine, yet has been closed again in the meantime.[2]

Currently, OLB operates 40 branches in north-west Germany, including 16 competence centres serving as anchor points for personal customer relationship management and regional advisory services, plus about 40 worksite-branches throughout Germany following the merger of Degussa Bank. In addition, the Bank operates a few dozen self-service branches in Germany. The bank bundled its advisory services at larger locations, which led to smaller branches being closed or converted to self-service branches, while at the same time OLB is also continuing to expand its business across Germany via digital channels, platforms and partners.[3]

On 23 June 2017, Bremer Kreditbank AG acquired a majority stake in OLB from Allianz. The parent company Bremer Kreditbank was merged with OLB in 2018. In addition, Wüstenrot Bank was acquired by Wüstenrot & Württembergische in 2018. This was followed by the signing of an agreement to purchase Degussa Bank in September 2022. With the official closing on April 30, 2024, OLB became the new owner of Degussa Bank and merged Degussa Bank into OLB at the end of August 2024.[4]

OLB’s shares are largely held by shareholders associated with Teacher Retirement System of Texas, the private equity firm Apollo.[5][6] and Grovepoint Investment Management.

Board of Managing Directors

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  • Stefan Barth (CEO)
  • Dr Rainer Polster (CFO)
  • Chris Eggert (CRO)
  • Aytac Aydin (COO, Head of Retail)
  • Marc Ampaw (CIO)
  • Giacomo Petrobelli (CIO)

References

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  1. ^ Erster Jahres-Abschluss am 31. Dezember 1869, in: Königlich Preußischer Staats-Anzeiger, Nr. 57. 8. März 1870 Abends, S. 927-928
  2. ^ Westfälische Nachrichten: OLB eröffnet Filiale in Rheine[permanent dead link] Beitrag 7. November 2011, retrieved, 11 February 2012
  3. ^ "Privatkundengeschäft der Olb: Weniger Filialen, längere Beratungszeiten". 4 February 2020.
  4. ^ "OLB successfully completes acquisition of Degussa Bank | OLB". 30 April 2024.
  5. ^ "Allianz sells stake in Oldenburgische Landesbank AG - Press | Allianz". www.allianz.com. Retrieved 2018-02-17.
  6. ^ "Allianz sells private bank OLB to Apollo for 300 million euros". Reuters. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 2018-02-17.
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