Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Permanent TSB

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Type
  
Public company

Industry
  
Financial services

Revenue
  
694 million EUR (2015)

Traded as
  
ISEQ: IL0A

Operating income
  
€ (399) million (2015)


Key people
  
Jeremy Masding (CEO) Alan Cook (Chairman of the Board)

Products
  
banking, asset management

Stock price
  
ILPMF (OTCMKTS) US$ 2.64 -0.26 (-8.97%)20 Mar, 4:00 PM GMT-4 - Disclaimer

Headquarters
  
Dublin, Republic of Ireland

CEO
  
Jeremy Masding (14 Feb 2012–)

Founded
  
1884, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Subsidiaries
  
Irish Progressive Services International

Profiles

Permanent tsb at the finance committee


Permanent TSB Group Holdings plc, formerly Irish Life and Permanent plc (Irish: Cuideachta Bheatha na hÉireann) is a provider of personal financial services in Ireland.

Contents

Permanent tsb plc company profile and swot analysis


History

The company is historically derived from three different companies:

  • Irish Life Assurance
  • Irish Permanent Building Society
  • Trustee Savings Bank
  • It trades under the names:

  • Irish Life for life assurance, investments and pensions
  • permanent tsb for banking, mortgages, loans, credit and debit cards
  • Irish Life Assurance

    Irish Life was a life assurance company created in 1939 with state assistance and concentrated on life assurance and investment products.

  • The City of Dublin Assurance Company, Limited;
  • the Irish Life and General Assurance Company, Limited;
  • the Irish National Assurance Company, Limited; and
  • the Munster and Leinster Assurance Company, Limited
  • were amalgamated.

    Later some British companies shed their Irish operations, and merged them into this new company. They were:

  • the Prudential,
  • the Britannic,
  • the Liverpool Victoria Friendly Society,
  • the Pearl, and
  • the Refuge.
  • Shares in the business were finally sold to the public in July 1991. In 1965 Irish Life entered the UK market and competed against its former parent, initially under its own name.

    In 1999, Irish Life Assurance plc and the Irish Permanent Building Society merged to form the Irish Life and Permanent Group. In March 2012, Irish Life Assurance was sold to the Irish State for €1.3 billion as part of a bank recapitalisation program following the Irish financial crisis.

    Irish Permanent Building Society

    Permanent TSB, previously the Irish Permanent Building Society, was founded as The Irish Temperance Permanent Benefit Building Society which was founded in 1884. In 1940 under new managing director Edmund Farrell its name was changed to Irish Permanent Building Society. Farrell, and later his son, Edmund Farrell Jnr managed the building society until about 1990.
    In 1992 Irish Permanent Finance, specialising in auto finance, was established.
    In 1992 branch operations were opened in London and Belfast.
    In 1992 a Banking subsidiary established in the Isle of Man.
    In 1994 the Irish private banking operation of Guinness & Mahon was acquired.
    In 1996 Capital Home Loans a UK mortgage lender was acquired.

    It was a mutual organisation, jointly owned by those saving and borrowing. It demutualised to form a plc on 21 September 1994. Irish Permanent was a predominantly personal banking and mortgage company which currently does business in the name of permanent tsb because of the 2001 acquisition of the Irish Trustee Savings Bank from the Government of Ireland.

    Trustee Savings Bank

    The origins of the TSB Bank date back to 1816 when the first Irish Savings Bank was established in Waterford. Shortly afterwards, savings banks were established in Cork, Dublin, Monaghan and Limerick. The Dublin and Monaghan banks merged in 1977, followed by the amalgamation of the Cork and Limerick banks in 1986. In 1988, Waterford was incorporated into the Dublin bank and finally, in 1992, Cork and Limerick Savings Bank amalgamated with Trustee Savings Bank Dublin, to form TSB Bank. It was purchased by Irish Life and Permanent from the Government of Ireland in 2001.

    Recent history

    During the Irish banking crisis the group was split. The profitable Irish Life Group was purchased by the government for €1.3 billion, and subsequently sold to Great-west Lifeco in July 2013. The bank received a further €2.7 billion of capital from the Irish State, bringing it into majority state ownership.

    The Group has over one million customers in Ireland. The chief executive of Irish Life & Permanent was Kevin Murphy, who succeeded Denis Casey in that capacity in May 2009. He retired in June 2013. In March 2011 during the Irish banking crisis the bank was said to be in need of an external €4.0 billion bailout. This view is disputed by shareholders.

    In February 2011 SEB (Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB) acquired Irish Life International Ltd (ILI), so it now operates under the corporate name Life International Assurance Company Limited.

    On 19 February 2013, Great-West Lifeco of Canada, announced its acquisition of the Irish Life Group for €1.3 Billion. This was disputed by the shareholders. The Supreme Court gave its judgement on 9 July 2013, rejecting the shareholders' application to delay the sale, pending the hearing of their challenge of the sale. This was heard on 21 January 2014. and concluded on 13 February 2014. Judgement was reserved and on 15 August 2014 the case was referred to Europe.

    In October 2016, the US bank Cerberus Capital Management bought the UK loan book.

    References

    Permanent TSB Wikipedia