Banque Misr

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Banque Misr
IndustryFinance
Founded1920
HeadquartersCairo, Egypt
ProductsFinancial Services
RevenueLE 1 billion (2004)
Number of employees
20,000 (2022) Edit this on Wikidata
Websitehttp://www.banquemisr.com/
For Egypt's central bank, please see Central Bank of Egypt

Banque Misr (Arabic: بنك مصر) (Translated: The Bank of Egypt) is an Egyptian bank founded by industrialist Talaat Pasha Harb in 1920.

Operations

The bank has branch offices in all of Egypt's governorates, and currency exchange and work permit offices for overseas workers in Egypt.

Related organizations: Banque Misr presents long lists of its investment projects on its website, complete with investor information pages for each:

History

  • 1920 Talaat Pasha Harb founded the bank in 1920. He had published books in 1907 and 1911 calling for the founding of a national bank with Egyptian financing. (The National Bank of Egypt was British-owned, and all the other banks in Egypt were owned by foreigners.) Harb modeled Bank Misr’s operations on those of Deutsche Orientbank with which he was familiar due to his friendship with the owner of a Sephardi Jewish bank, Banque Suarès. Harb established Banque Misr and its companies on the basis of certain concepts: all its dealings were in Arabic, Egyptians operated the bank, and the bank restricted share ownership to Egyptian citizens. Misr’s Board of Directors included a number of Sephardic Jews and a Coptic Christian.
  • 1926 Bank Misr established Banque Misr-La France to serve Egyptian tourists to France.
  • 1930 Bank Misr and Banque Essadine, in Lebanon, formed Banque Misr-Syrie-Liban, which then absorbed Banque Ezzeddine & Adib (Izz al-Din) in Tripoli.
  • 1939 Banque Misr failed but was reorganized.
  • 1960 Gamal Nasser nationalised all banks in Egypt, foreign and domestic, including the four largest domestic banks — National Bank of Egypt, Banque Misr, Bank of Alexandria and Banque du Caire.
  • 1961 Syria nationalized all banks operating in the country, including those of Banque Misr.
  • 1963 In Libya, Banque Misr created Nahda Arabian Bank to hold its branches there.
  • 1971 Banque Misr absorbed Banque de Port-Said. Banque de Port-Said had been created in 1960 to hold the Egyptian operations of several foreign bank, including Ionian Bank, Ottoman Bank, Banque Belge et Internationale en Egypte and Bank of Tokyo.
  • 1975 Liberalization of foreign entry led several Egyptian banks to establish joint venture banks with foreign banks.
  • 1976 Banque Misr established Misr International Bank (MIBank) with Banque Misr owning 44%, First Chicago 20%, Europartners 10.5%, UBAF Bank 8.5%, Banco di Roma 7.375%, and Mitsui Bank 2.625%.
Misr established Misr American International Bank (MAIB) with Bank of America.
Misr established Misr Exterior Bank in a joint venture with Banco Exterior de Espana.

External links