Crédit Anversois Explained

Crédit Anversois should not be confused with Banque d'Anvers.

The Crédit Anversois was a Belgian bank, founded in 1898 and liquidated in 1939-1941. Just before World War I, it was the fourth-largest bank by total assets in Antwerp, itself Belgium's second banking center behind Brussels. By 1930, it had expanded so that it ranked fourth-largest in all of Belgium, only surpassed by the Société Générale de Belgique, Banque de Bruxelles, and Algemeene Bankvereeniging.

Name

Even though the bank was primarily active in the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium, it was referred to by its French name including in Dutch-speaking or English-speaking contexts.

History

The Crédit Anversois was founded in 1898 with support from France's Comptoir national d'escompte de Paris, then soon counted Germany's Darmstädter Bank and Nationalbank für Deutschland among its shareholders, joined in 1911 by the Crédit Mobilier Français. It initially engaged in industrial investment, but after losses in 1900-1901, pivoted instead towards commercial credit.

On the eve of the First World War, Banque du Crédit Anversois adopted a policy of expansion, establishing a presence throughout Wallonia and setting up provincial branches such as the one in Verviers, Liège.[1]

Its head office was in Antwerp, at courte rue de l'Hôpital / Korte Gasthuisstraat 42, in a building designed by architect . It also erected buildings at Bondgenotenlaan 54 in Leuven, at 133 Crapaurue in Verviers (built 1913-1914, arch. Charles Thirion), and at 4 boulevard d'Avroy in Liège (in 1922).[2]

In 1913, it took a major stake in the Bruges-based, which was subsequently rebranded "Crédit des Flandres – filiale du Crédit Anversois".[3] In 1919, it acquired three other local banks in Dutch-speaking Belgium, the Banque Brugeoise, the Crédit Tirlemontois, and the Crédit Limbourgeois,.

The Crédit Anversois never recovered from the financial turmoil of the early 1930s. Following the 1934 Belgian legislation that mandated the separation of commercial and investment banking, its troubled equity investment portfolio was spun off in a holding company, the French: Société de Participations Financières et Industrielles or Sopafinin, on which the bank kept a large claim on which it delayed impairment for several years, with the blessing of the Belgian Banking Commission. The Belgian financial crisis of 1939 put an end to that period of forbearance, and the Crédit Anversois was allowed by a court in December 1939 to suspend payments pending restructuring, amid allegations of embezzlement. At the time, it had 1,500 employees and 138 branches. The liquidation, led by, was completed in 1941 with financial help from the French: Office de Liquidation des Interventions de Crise, a temporary resolution agency that existed in Belgium between 1936 and 1942.

Leadership

Aviator Jean de Selys Longchamps worked for the Crédit Anversois before World War II.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hasquin, Hervé . Histoire-économies-sociétés, de 1830 à nos jours . 1980 . 2 . 232 . fr . L'emprise de la société générale et de la Banque de Bruxelles . https://connaitrelawallonie.wallonie.be/sites/wallonie/files/livres/fichiers/wph_histoire_tii_p231-246.pdf.
  2. Web site: Le Corps consulaire reçu par Delen Private Bank . . Liege28.
  3. Journal de Bruges, 5 April 1913.