Pierre Mariani Explained

Pierre Mariani
Birth Date:1956 4, df=y
Birth Place:Rabat
Occupation:Banker
Alma Mater:HEC Paris
Sciences Po
ENA

Pierre Mariani is a public servant and CEO of bank.[1]

Biography

Pierre Mariani, born April 6, 1956, in Rabat, Morocco, his father is a police commissioner of Corsican origin and his mother is a teacher of Italian origin.[2]

He studied at Sciences Po and obtained a degree in public law. Pierre Mariani also graduated from HEC Paris, then from the École nationale d'administration (ENA), promotion Henri François d'Aguesseau in 1982.[3]

He began his career as a public finance inspector at the Ministry of the Economy, before being Nicolas Sarkozy's chief of staff at the Ministry of the Budget from 1993 to 1995 under the Édouard Balladur government. He then joined the private financial sector as director of the Société française d’investissements immobiliers et de gestion (SEFIMEG) from 1995 to 1997. He then headed the BNP Paribas investment bank, Banexi, then, in 1999, became responsible for international financial services and retail banking at BNP Paribas.[4]

In October 2008, he was appointed managing director and chairman of the management committee of Dexia, already in difficulty following the subprime crisis. He replaces Pierre Richard. According to Libération, he received a 30% salary increase.[5]

In 2011, under his leadership, Dexia announced a record loss of 10 billion euros.[6]

On August 2, 2012, he left the management of Dexia, which announced the next day further heavy losses in the first half and which was in virtual bankruptcy.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pierre Mariani, un banquier très politique. May 5, 2011. L'Express.
  2. Web site: Pierre Mariani, un proche de l'Elysée. BERNARD. DELATTRE. July 23, 2024. La Libre.be.
  3. Web site: Portrait de Pierre Mariani.
  4. Web site: Pierre Mariani. October 8, 2008. Les Echos.
  5. Web site: Jean-Luc Dehaene et Pierre Mariani prennent la direction de Dexioa. October 7, 2008. Le Monde.
  6. Web site: Pierre Mariani quitte Dexia, banque en voie de disparition. Libération.