Bank of Africa Group
Private | |
Industry | Financial Services |
Founded | 1982 |
Headquarters | Bamako, Mali |
Key people |
Mohamed Bennani Group Chairman & CEO |
Products | Loans, Savings, Investments, Debit Cards, Credit Cards |
Revenue | Aftertax:€90 million (US$100 million) (2014) |
Total assets | €6 billion (US$6.664 billion) (2014) |
Number of employees | 5,800+ (2014) |
Website | Homepage |
Bank of Africa Group (BOA), also known as Bank of Africa, is a multinational pan-African banking conglomerate, with banking operations in 18 African countries, and a representative office in Paris, France. Bank of Africa maintains its headquarters in Bamako, the capital city of Mali.
Overview
BOA is a large financial services provider in 18 sub-Saharan Countries. As of December 2014, the group's total assets were valued at €6 billion (US$6.664 billion)[1] In addition to its 14 commercial banks, the Group also includes a finance company, a housing bank, a leasing company, one brokerage firm and two investment firms, as well as a management company and a representative office in Paris.[1]
History
The maiden bank of the BOA Group, BOA Mali, was established in late 1982, in Bamako, Mali, by local businesspeople. It was formed to address the scarcity of banking services for local businesses and individuals, which was prevalent not only in Mali at that time, but across most of Francophone West Africa. This initial effort was without any external financial backing.
The success of BOA Mali, led to the establishment of African Financial Holdings (AFH), as the holding company for BOA Mali in 1988. The objective of AFH was (a) to promote the establishment of banking subsidiaries across Africa, with local capital participation as a key component and (b) BOA would offer both management, technical support as well as equity participation in these new banking subsidiaries.
Starting in 1990 with BOA Benin, the group started opening subsidiaries across the continent, initially in Francophone countries but eventually in Anglophone Africa, starting with BOA Kenya in 2004. To increase their capital base, AFH took on new investors including the PROPARCO, a division of the French Development Agency, Netherlands Development Finance Company (FMO) and Natexis (now Natixis) of France.
In 2008, Banque Marocaine du Commerce Exterieur (BMCE) took a 35% shareholding interest in AFH, which had rebranded to Bank of Africa Group, bringing much needed financial capital and banking expertise to the group.[2]
Member companies
Banking subsidiaries
BOA has operational bank subsidiaries in the following countries, as of March 2016:[2]
- BOA Benin
- BOA Burkina Faso
- BOA Burundi
- BOA DRC
- BOA Djibouti
- BOA Ethiopia
- BOA Ghana
- BOA Kenya
- BOA Ivory Coast
- BOA Madagascar
- BOA Mali
- BOA Niger
- BOA Rwanda[1]
- BOA Senegal
- BOA Tanzania
- BOA Togo
- BOA Uganda
- BOA France - Representative office in Paris.
Specialized subsidiaries
The specialized subsidiaries of Bank of Africa Group include the following:
- Banque de l'Habitat du Bénin (BHB)
- Equipbail Benin
- Equipbail Mali
- Equipbail Mada
- Actibourse SA
- Agora SA
- Aissa - BOA's IT company
- Attica SA
Ownership
As at March 2016, the stock of Bank of Africa Group is owned by the following corporate entities and individuals:[3]
Rank | Name of Owner | Percentage Ownership |
---|---|---|
1 | Banque Marocaine du Commerce Exterieur (BMCE) of Morocco | 72.70 |
2 | Private African investors | 16.09 |
3 | Netherlands Development Finance Company (FMO) of the Netherlands | 5.02 |
4 | PROPARCO of France | 3.84 |
5 | Belgian Investment Company for Developing Countries (BIO) | 2.35 |
Total | 100.00 | |
See also
External links
References
- 1 2 3 BOAf (13 October 2015). "Bank of Africa growing its network with a new subsidiary in Rwanda". Bamako: Bank of Africa Group (BOAf). Retrieved 17 March 2016.
- 1 2 BOAf (17 March 2016). "About Bank of Africa Group". Bank of Africa (BOAf). Retrieved 17 March 2016.
- ↑ Kariuki, James (17 March 2016). "Morocco's BMCE ups Bank of Africa stake in capital raising deal". Daily Nation. Nairobi. Retrieved 17 March 2016.