Banca Popolare di Milano

Banca Popolare di Milano
Società cooperativa a responsabilità limitata
Traded as BIT: PMI
Industry Financial services
Founded 1865
Headquarters Milan, Italy
Number of locations
655 branches, 9 corporate centres, 14 private banking centres, 27 family banking centres (2015)
Key people
Services Retail, investment and private banking
Profit Increase €288.907 million (2015)
Total assets Increase €50.203 billion (2015)
Total equity Increase €4.627 billion (2015)
Number of employees
Decrease 7743 (2015)
Divisions WeBank
Subsidiaries
Capital ratio 11.53% (CET1)
Website Official website (in Italian & English)
Footnotes / references
in consolidated basis[1]

Banca Popolare di Milano known as Bipiemme or just BPM is an Italian cooperative bank based in Milan, Lombardy.

About 62% of the branches were from Lombardy (410); the group also had branches in Emilia-Romagna (28), Lazio (65), Apulia (36), Piedmont (87), Liguria (11), Veneto (7), Tuscany (5), Campania (2), Marche (1), Molise (1), Abruzzo (1) and Friuli– Venezia Giulia (1).[1]

In 2016 it was announced that the bank would be merged with Banco Popolare.

History

The second cooperative bank in Italy (the first one was the Banca Popolare di Lodi), it was founded in 1865[2] in Milan by Luigi Luzzatti, who later served as the nation's Prime Minister. Luzzatti drew his inspiration from the 'credit associations' developed by Hermann Schulze-Delitzsch in Germany a decade earlier.[3]

BPM has grown considerably since the 1950s by buying interests in other banks such as Banca Popolare di Roma, la Banca Briantea, Banca Agricola Milanese, Banca Popolare Cooperativa Vogherese, Banca Popolare di Bologna e Ferrara, Banca Popolare di Apricena, Ina Banca, Cassa di Risparmio di Alessandria, Banca di Legnano and Banca Popolare di Mantova.

In 1999 Banca Popolare di Milano opened an online banking service called WeBank.

Today BPM is a minority owner of Cassa di Risparmio di Asti and Crediop.

References

  1. 1 2 "2015 Bilancio" (PDF) (in Italian). Banca Popolare di Milano. 5 April 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  2. ↑ "STATUTO" [Articles of association] (PDF) (in Italian). Banca Popolare di Milano. 6 August 2015. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  3. ↑ Henry W. Wolff. People's Banks. P.S. King & Son, London, 1910, pp. 254-319.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.