Finansbank
Traded as | BİST: FINBN |
---|---|
Industry | Banking, Financial services |
Founded | 26 October 1987 |
Headquarters | Büyükdere Avenue, Levent, Istanbul, Turkey |
Key people | Ömer A. Aras (Chairman & CEO) |
Total assets | 90.41 billion[1] (2015) |
Total equity | 8.94 billion[1] (2015) |
Owner | QNB Group (99.8%)[2] |
Number of employees | 13,000[1] (2015) |
Website |
www |
Finansbank is a Turkish bank with headquarters in Levent, Istanbul. It was established by leading Turkish banker Hüsnü Özyeğin in 1987 and for a period was the Turkish bank with the largest network of foreign branches. In 2006 Greek commercial bank National Bank of Greece purchased the bank's domestic operations, spinning the international operations off under the name Credit Europe Bank.
As of September 30, 2015, the bank operates with 647 branches and 13,000 employees.[1] In the third quarter of 2015, Finansbank's profit was 673 million TL;[1] its total loans rose to 57 billion 194 million TL;[1] total assets rose to 90 billion 410 million TL;[1] customer deposit portfolio rose to 47 billion 306 million TL;[1] and total equities reached 8 billion 937 million TL.[1]
In late 2015, the National Bank of Greece announced it will sell the bank to Qatari QNB Group in a deal worth 2.7 billion Euros.[2][3]
History of purchases
On March 18, 2014, Turkish daily Hürriyet reported the purchase by National Bank of Greece (NBG) of Soyak Kristal Kule (Soyak Crystal Tower), a 40-floor, 60,000 square-meter office tower in the Levent business district of Istanbul. The property was purchased for a reported price of $303M (US) from Koru Property Investments, a subsidiary of Soyak Group in Turkey. Hürriyet reported that NBG intended to use the newly constructed tower as Finansbank's headquarters.[4] The property includes an adjoining 12-floor structure of 30,000 square-meters which is topped by a helipad. The main building's Turkish name, Kristal Kule (Crystal Tower) refers to the glass-sheathed structure's asymmetric, faceted, sloping silhouette.[5] The project was the first in Istanbul to use performance-based design (PBD). The principal architects were Pei Cobb Freed & Partners. The design, planning, engineering, and consulting firm, Arup, provided project management services for the project and offers images of the tower at its site.[5]
On 22 December 2015, the National Bank of Greece (NBG) announced it will sell the bank to Qatari QNB Group including €910m of subordinate debt for a sum of €2.75bn in cash.[2][3] The transaction would give the Greek bank a liquidity boost of €3.4bn, which it would use to pay down its expensive debt to the Greek Central Bank following a number of bailouts of Greek sovereign debt backed by the European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund.[2][3]
Subsidiaries
- Finans Emeklilik
- Finans Faktoring
- Finans Invest
- Finans Leasing
- Finans Portföy
- Finans Tüketici Finansmanı
- IBTech
Banking Services
- Consumer Banking
- SME Banking
- Corporate Banking
- Private Banking
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Finansbank: About us". Finansbank. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 Laura Noonan (22 December 2015). "NBG offloads Finansbank to QNB at bargain price". Financial Times. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
- 1 2 3 "Qatar's QNB buys Greek NBG's Finansbank for 2.7 bln euros". Reuters. 22 December 2015. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
- ↑ http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/istanbuls-lavish-crystal-tower-sold-to-greek-bank.aspx?pageID=238&nID=63738&NewsCatID=345
- 1 2 http://www.arup.com/Projects/Soyak_Kristal_Kule.aspx
External links
- Official website (Turkish)