Société Belge de Banque explained

The Société Belge de Banque (SBB,) was a medium-sized Belgian bank, established in 1901 as the Banque Générale Belge, renamed in 1932, and eventually merged in 1965 into the Société Générale de Banque.

Beginnings

The Banque Générale Belge (BGB) was established in Namur in 1901, succeeding the partnership (French: société en commandite par actions) named French: A. de Lhoneux, Linon & Cie, an earlier bank founded in 1859. The BGB had a difficult start but its situation improved so that it received approaches for a merger under the German occupation of Belgium during World War I, including from the Banque de Bruxelles, which however did not materialize.

Interwar period

In 1921, the BGB acquired the Belgian operations of the Bunge company, which at the time was headquartered in Antwerp, and of the Anglo-South American Bank, via an all-shares transaction through which the two institutions became shareholders; on that occasion, its head office relocated to Antwerp. Two further capital increases in 1928 were also supported by the Banque Philippson, the Banque Lambert, the Mutuelle Solvay, and the French: Compagnie financière et industrielle de Belgique (known as Finabel).

That same year 1928, the BGB again relocated its head office, by moving to a prominent building erected by the Mutuelle Solvay at number 54 of the prestigious Avenue Louise in Brussels. In 1931 the BGB moved to the other side of the avenue, at number 61.[1] That building was eventually demolished in the mid-1980s to be replaced with a postmodern complex designed by the .[2]

Following financial stress in the late 1920s and early 1930s, the BGB's operations were merged on into Finabel, which changed its name to Société Belge de Banque (SBB) while the old BGB was placed into liquidation. On, the SBB sponsored the creation of the Antwerp Diamond Bank. On, following new Belgian banking legislation, the SBB transformed itself into a non-bank holding company that was renamed the French: Compagnie Industrielle de Belgique, while a new banking affiliate was formed under the old name Société Belge de Banque. In 1936, the SBB's branches in Namur and Verviers were taken over the Banque de Bruxelles. In 1937, the French: Compagnie Industrielle de Belgique was acquired by the Union Chimique Belge (UCB), which thus became the SBB's controlling shareholder. Subsequently, the UCB sold its controlling interest in the SBB to the Janssen family which controlled the Mutuelle Solvay. By 1939, the Société Belge de Banque kept a branch in Antwerp in addition to the Brussels head office, and also controlled the former Empain Bank renamed the French: Banque Industrielle Belge.

Postwar era

In 1946, the SBB acquired the French: Société Belge de Crédit Industriel et Commercial et de Dépôts, a former Belgian affiliate which France's Crédit Industriel et Commercial had established in 1903. The Solvay Group used the SBB as its home bank from 1948 onwards, but as the latter lacked critical mass, Solvay opted to sell it to the Générale de Banque in 1964. The SBB was formally wound up on, simultaneously as the Banque d'Anvers.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Solvay: History of a Multinational Family Firm . 10 - Family and Finance through the Crisis . https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/abs/solvay/family-and-finance-through-the-crisis/092A860E4987F8D3FB3831372780AF7D . Kenneth Bertrams, Nicolas Coupain, and Ernst Homburg . Cambridge University Press . 2013.
  2. Web site: Région de Bruxelles-Capitale / Inventaire du Patrimoine Architectural . Stéphanie Area, Wiltcher's, Conrad Hotel, Hôtel Godefroy, Hôtel Lunden .