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Banco de la Nación Argentina

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Type
  
State enterprise

Headquarters
  
Buenos Aires, Argentina

Area served
  
International

Founder
  
Carlos Pellegrini

Banco de la Nación Argentina httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Native name
  
Banco de la Nación Argentina

Number of locations
  
Domestic: 624 branches Overseas: 15 branches

Key people
  
Carlos Melconian, President

Services
  
Retail Banking Business finance Trade finance Factoring Mutual funds Pension funds Insurance Mortgage loans Consumer Finance Credit cards

Founded
  
1891, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Profiles

Banco de la Nación Argentina (English: Bank of the Argentine Nation) is the national bank of Argentina, and the largest in the country's banking sector.

Contents

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History

The Bank of the Argentine Nation was founded on 18 October 1891 by President Carlos Pellegrini, with the purpose of stabilizing the nation's finances following the Panic of 1890; its first director was Vicente Lorenzo Casares. In its early decades it became a leading financing source for agricultural smallholders, and later for commercial and industrial businesses, as well as handling an array of public sector transactions.

The bank's reputation suffered after it was revealed that bribes had been received by the board of directors in 1994 when contacting IBM for the supply of computers, software, and communication equipment, becoming a prominent political scandal at the time.

Services

Long a significant supplier of domestic lending in a credit-tight economy, the bank attempted—with only partial success—to revive the local credit market during the tenure of Gabriela Ciganotto, who stated the main goal of the bank in her inauguration speech in 2006 as "putting [the bank] at the service of production, especially small and medium businesses, and not of speculation."

In December 2006 the bank ranked 278th in the world in terms of tier one capital (US$ 1.623 billion, or 11% of deposits in December 2006) according to a global survey of top 1000 world banks carried out by The Banker, a Financial Times publication. Domestically, it has long been Argentina's largest bank; in December 2011 it maintained 626 branches, US$30 billion in deposits (28% of the domestic total), and a loan portfolio of US$15 billion (20% of the domestic total). Its lending profile is less oriented toward consumer or mortgage lending than other leading banks in Argentina; one third of its outstanding credit is to the public sector and 80% of the remainder is allocated to commercial loans.

Headquarters

The bank's headquarters are located in the San Nicolás neighborhood of Buenos Aires on the site of the Teatro Colón's first building, bought by the national government in 1888 and later designated as main offices of the recently founded institution. The edifice was remodeled in 1910 by architect Adolfo Büttner to better suit its new role as a bank venue.

In 1938 architect Alejandro Bustillo presented a new design for a much larger building in a revivalist, French-influenced, Monumental Neoclassical style. These new 100,000 m2 (1,100,000 sq ft) headquarters were built in two stages between 1940 and 1955. This building is also home to the Alejandro Bustillo Art Gallery, established in 1971, as well as to a historic and numismatic museum.

  • Architectural evolution of the headquarters of the Bank of the Argentine Nation
  • Branches

    In December 2011 the bank maintained 626 branches throughout Argentina, and 15 more overseas (Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia; Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, Brazil; Georgetown, Cayman Islands; Santiago, Chile; Paris; Tokyo; Panama City; Asunción, Paraguay; Madrid; London; New York City and Miami; Montevideo, Uruguay; and Caracas, Venezuela), along with a representative office in Porto Alegre, Brazil. It employed 16,519 people in Argentina, and more than 200 abroad.

  • Selected branches of the Bank of the Argentine Nation
  • References

    Banco de la Nación Argentina Wikipedia


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