Banco di Napoli

Banco di Napoli
Formerly
Sanpaolo Banco di Napoli
Subsidiary
Industry Financial services
Fate absorbed into Intesa Sanpaolo
Predecessor
  • Banco della Pietà
  • Banco Nazionale di Napoli
  • Banco delle Due Sicilie
  • Banco di Napoli
  • Banco di Napoli S.p.A.
Founded
  • 1539 (mount of piety)
  • 1794 (merger of 8 Naples banks)
  • 2003 (current legal entity)
Defunct 2018[1]
Headquarters 177 via Toledo, Naples, Italy
Products Retail banking
Owner Intesa Sanpaolo (100%)
Parent Intesa Sanpaolo
Website www.bancodinapoli.it

Banco di Napoli S.p.A., was an Italian banking subsidiary of Intesa Sanpaolo group, as one of the 6 retail brands other than "Intesa Sanpaolo".[2] It was acquired by the Italian banking group Sanpaolo IMI (the predecessor of Intesa Sanpaolo) in 2002 and ceased being an independent bank. In February 2018, Intesa Sanpaolo announced their new business plan, which would retire Banco di Napoli and other brands; the legal person of Banco di Napoli would be absorbed into Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A.

History

The Banco of Naples is one of the most important and oldest historic Italian banks, as its origins date back to the so-called public benches of charitable institutions, which arose in Naples between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, especially at a mount of piety founded in 1539 on a pledge to lend without interest, which in 1584 opened a case of deposits, recognized by a proclamation of the viceroy of Naples in the same year.

Seven other similar institutions were later founded in Naples between 1587 and 1640:

  • "Banco dei Poveri" (1563)
  • "Banco della Santissima Annunziata" (1587)
  • "Banco del Popolo" (1589)
  • "Banco dello Spirito Santo" (1590)
  • "Banco di Sant'Eligio" (1592)
  • "Banco di San Giacomo e Vittoria" (1597)
  • "Banco del Salvatore" (1640).

After nearly two centuries of activities independently of each other, a decree of Ferdinand IV of Bourbon, in 1794, leading to the unification of the eight existing institutes into a single structure that is called Banco Nazionale di Napoli.

Following the political changes that took place in the nineteenth century in Naples and Southern Italy, also the Bank of Naples changes name and structure. Passing from the realm of the Bourbons to the matrix Napoleon, the king of Naples, Joachim Murat attempts to transform the Bank into a limited company similar to the Bank of France and create the Bank of the Two Sicilies (Italian: Banco delle Due Sicilie), bound to have the same functions through the Cassa di Corte and Cassa dei Privati. With the revolutionary upheavals of 1849 loses agencies Sicilian who founded the Banco di Sicilia. New changes take place in 1861 with the unification of Italy, the changes that mark the birth of the name Banco di Napoli, the bank will be responsible for the issuance of the currency of the Kingdom of Italy for 65 years.

In 1991, due to Legge Amato, a società per azioni was incorporated as a subsidiary of the original bank to run banking activities, while the original entity, as a statutory corporation became a holding entity instead, later known as Fondazione Banco di Napoli.[3]

However, the S.p.A. was nationalized due to insolvency.

In 1997 the bank was re-privatized, with the formation of a bad bank Società per la Gestione di Attività (SGA), as well as wind-down the subsidiary ISVEIMER; 60% stake of the bank was acquired by Istituto Nazionale delle Assicurazioni (INA) and Banca Nazionale del Lavoro (BNL) via an intermediate holding company (INASSIT, later Banco di Napoli Holding).[4]

INA and BNL later sold the holding company to Sanpaolo IMI.

Following the acquisition of the bank at the end of 2002 by the Sanpaolo IMI group, in 2003 the bank changed its name to "Sanpaolo Banco di Napoli". The operation was carried out in two distinct phases:

  • At the end of 2002 [old] Banco di Napoli S.p.A. was absorbed by the parent company Sanpaolo IMI.
  • A new subsidiary was incorporated as Sanpaolo Banco di Napoli S.p.A. in April 2013, which with effect from 1 July 2003 took over the whole business of the old Banco di Napoli.

With the merger in December 2006 of Banca Intesa and Sanpaolo IMI, the former bank has now become part of the group Intesa Sanpaolo as Banco di Napoli S.p.A..

The present structure

The integration of Banco di Napoli into the group Sanpaolo IMI in 2000 led to its geographical operating area being reduced: all branches in northern and central Europe, which would have overlapped with the existing structure of the parent company, were closed or moved. However, at the same time the southern branches of Sanpaolo IMI were transferred into the newly renamed Sanpaolo Banco di Napoli.

In the Italian regions of Abruzzo, Molise, and Lazio, which were areas where the Banco di Napoli was historically less strong because before the Italian unification they had not been part of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, here at first after the take-over the branches of the bank were incorporated into the Sanpaolo; but later in Abruzzo and Molise it was decided to incorporate them into the Banca dell'Adriatico.

At present, therefore, the Banco di Napoli operates only in Campania, Apulia, Basilicata, and Calabria, with the exception of one branch at the Palazzo Montecitorio in Rome. The bank's network still includes some 687 branches, and it has approximately 5,750 employees.

See also

References

  1. "Intesa Sanpaolo: merger by incorporation of Banco di Napoli S.p.A. into Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A." (Press release). Intesa Sanpaolo. 6 July 2018. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
  2. "2016 Annual Report". Intesa Sanpaolo. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  3. The Ministry of the Treasury (25 July 1991). "Approvazione del progetto di ristrutturazione presentato dal Banco di Napoli" (in Italian). Italian Republic Official Gazette. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  4. "Provvedimento N°32/A (1997): INA-BNL / Banco di Napoli" (PDF) (in Italian). Bank of Italy. 28 May 1997. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.