Office Central de Crédit Hypothécaire explained

the Office Central de Crédit Hypothécaire (Dutch; Flemish: '''Centraal Bureau voor Hypothecair Krediet''', acronymized as OCCH/CBHK,) was a Belgian public financial institution, created in 1936 to support mortgage credit and dismantled in 2000-2001.

Overview

The Office was established by a decree of, amended by a decree of, aimed primarily to further the development of residential building for the middle classes, mostly by providing cheap credit assistance to existing mortgage credit organizations. The Belgian Treasury put 50 million Belgian francs at the disposal of the OCCH and it was authorized to issue bonds or notes under the guarantee of the Belgian state.

The OCCH's role and usefulness as a public-sector organization came into debate in the 1980s and 1990s. The Belgian government coalition agreement of foresaw a combination of public-sector banks, resulting in legislation of that mandated the integration of the Crédit Communal de Belgique, Société Nationale de Crédit à l'Industrie, and OCCH. The Crédit Communal, however, ensured that these provisions were not implemented.

In December 2000, the OCCH's profitable mortgage services were acquired by Dutch specialzed financial institution .[1] In 2001, the rest of the business, including the OCCH's branch network and brand name, was acquired by Antwerp-based Argenta. The former OCCH's legal entity, holding a legacy portfolio of problem loans, was renamed as Credibe, and in 2018 was eventually merged into the, a holding company belonging to the Belgian government.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Office Central de Crédit Hypothécaire. cpe-credit.com .
  2. Web site: L'Echo . Fin de parcours pour Credibe . . Benoît Mathieu & Simon Souris.