Wiener Bankverein Explained

Wiener Bankverein should not be confused with Wiener Stadtbank.

The Wiener Bankverein or Bank-Verein (WBV,) was a major bank in the Habsburg Monarchy and the First Austrian Republic, founded in 1869. In 1888 it was the fourth-largest bank of Austria-Hungary by market capitalization, behind the Austro-Hungarian Bank, the Länderbank, and the Creditanstalt. It merged with the troubled Creditanstalt in 1934 to form Creditanstalt-Bankverein. Wiener Bankverein is thus one of the many predecessor entities of UniCredit, as the latter in 2005 acquired Bank Austria which itself had merged with Creditanstalt in 1997.[1]

Habsburg era

The Wiener Bankverein's creation was sponsored in 1869 by the Allgemeine Bodencreditanstalt, which had been established in Vienna in 1863.[2] In 1871, with assistance from Anglo-Austrian Bank and Darmstädter Bank, it sponsored the creation of a joint-stock bank in Constantinople, the German: Austro-Ottomanische Bank; but that venture soon faltered and was acquired by the Imperial Ottoman Bank in 1874.[3] It the late 19th century, the WBV became active in financing ventures in southeastern Europe including railways in the Balkans and petroleum production in Romania. In 1890, it founded the Hungarian Industrial and Commercial Bank in Budapest, with privileged tax status granted by ad hoc legislation. In 1895, it led the creation of the Landesbank für Bosnien und Herzegowina in Sarajevo. In 1906, it returned to Constantinople and opened a branch office there, soon followed by the construction of a prominent branch building inaugurated in 1912. It opened a branch in Zagreb in 1908. By 1912, it had the largest network of all Austrian joint-stock banks, with 49 branches in comparison to 31 for the Länderbank and 21 for the Creditanstalt.[4]

On, the prospect of impending war triggered a bank run at the Wiener Bankverein's branch in Constantinople, which was subsequently closed on .[5] It opened a branch in Belgrade under Austro-Hungarian occupation in 1916 during World War I.

Austrian Republic

Following the war's end and post-war financial turmoil in the newly formed First Austrian Republic, the Société Générale de Belgique (SGB) and its affiliate the Banque Belge pour l'Étranger (BBE) recapitalized Wiener Bankverein in 1920, joined in 1922 by Basler Handelsbank and in 1927 by Dillon, Read & Co..

Following the banking crisis of 1931, the Bankverein experienced financial distressed. In 1932, it transferred a significant portfolio of problem assets to a government-owned vehicle, the German: Gesellschaft für Revision und Treuhandige Verwaltung and issued new shares to restore its capital base, but that transaction and a similar one in 1933 proved insufficient. Eventually, the Wiener Bankverein was merged on into the recapitalized Creditanstalt, which simultaneously took over the viable operations of Niederösterreichische Escompte-Gesellschaft. The resulting merged entity adopted the name German: Österreichische Creditanstalt - Wiener Bankverein, in short Creditanstalt-Bankverein.

Affiliates in Czechoslovakia, Poland and Yugoslavia

As part of their restructuring of the WBV, the Société Générale de Belgique and Banque Belge pour l'Étranger created new domestic banks in the Empire's successor states, in which they initially had joint controlling ownership together with their partner the Basler Handelsbank:

The AJB gained prominence in Yugoslavia during the 1930s, when it was the largest bank to avoid falling under a "moratorium" on its liabilities following the European banking crisis of 1931. In 1940 following the German invasion of Belgium, Deutsche Bank bought out the Belgian stake under duress and became its dominant shareholder, with 88 percent held either directly or through Creditanstalt, also under Deutsche Bank's control since Anschluss in 1938; businessman Franz Neuhausen became its Chairman. Deutsche Bank simultaneously took control of the Landesbank in Sarajevo. Following the German invasion of Yugoslavia, the AJB was divided into two separate institutions:

Both banks' assets were confiscated by the newly established Communist authorities in October 1944, and they were subsequently liquidated.

Buildings

Vienna head office

From its foundation in 1869, the Wiener Bankverein's head office was at Herrengasse 6-8, later extended to what was then Herrengasse 10, in the former .[7] In 1912, the WBV moved to a new head office it had built at the corner of German: Schottenring and German: Schottengasse, on a design by architects and ; the Palais Liechtenstein was promptly demolished, and replaced in the 1930s by the high-rise building branded .[7]

The WBV building on Schottengasse later became the headquarters of the merged Creditanstalt-Bankverein from 1934, then of Bank Austria from 1997, and of Bank Austria-Creditanstalt from 2002 to 2017.[8] The building was then renovated and converted into a commercial compound branded, including an Interspar hypermarket, and inaugurated in 2021.[9]

Other locations

The Wiener Bankverein also erected a branch office building in the Galata neighborhood of Constantinople, on a highly visible location at the northern entrance of the Golden Horn, designed by Gotthilf and Neumann and completed in 1912. In 1921, the property was acquired by the newly created Banque Française des Pays d'Orient.[10] In the 1930s, it was used by the Turkish tobacco concern that had succeeded the Ottoman Tobacco Company in 1925, and in 1944 became a branch of Ziraat Bank.[11]

The WBV branch office in Prague was designed by Neumann and and completed in 1908, with expressionist sculptures by Franz Metzner.[12] Around that time, the WBV had branches in Agram (later Zagreb), Aussig an der Elbe (Ústí nad Labem), Bielitz-Biala (Bielsko-Biała), Brünn (Brno), Czernowitz (Chernivtsi), Graz, Karlsbad (Karlovy Vary), Klagenfurt, Krakau (Kraków), Lemberg (Lviv), Pilsen (Plzeň), and Teplitz (Teplice) in addition to Vienna, Prague and Constantinople.

A new branch building in Zagreb was designed by Gotthilf and Neumann and completed in 1923; it was renovated in the 2010s and converted into Amadria Park Hotel.[13]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Deutsche Welle . . A Bank Merger With the East in Mind .
  2. Web site: Central European Economic and Social History . Types of banks in the Habsburg Empire . Susanne Wurm . .
  3. Book: La Banque impériale ottomane . André Autheman . 1996 . Institut de la gestion publique et du développement économique : Comité pour l'Histoire Economique et Financière de la France . Paris . IV. La Banque impériale ottomane, trésorier de l’Empire . Histoire économique et financière - XIXe-XXe . 57–67 . 9782111294219 . https://books.openedition.org/igpde/4769 .
  4. Web site: Bank Austria . Überblick 1855-1914 .
  5. Book: La Banque impériale ottomane . André Autheman . 1996 . Institut de la gestion publique et du développement économique : Comité pour l'Histoire Economique et Financière de la France . Paris . XIV. La Banque impériale ottomane pendant la Grande Guerre . Histoire économique et financière - XIXe-XXe . 231–248 . 9782111294219 . https://books.openedition.org/igpde/4779 .
  6. Austrian banks in Poland up to 1948 . January 2005 . Bank Austria Creditanstalt: 150 Jahre österreichische Bankengeschichte im Zentrum Europas . 253–267 . Paul Zsolonay Verlag . Janusz Kaliński .
  7. Web site: Wien Geschichte Wiki . Bankgebäude .
  8. Web site: Wien Geschichte Wiki . Creditanstalt-Bankverein .
  9. Web site: Spar macht die ehemalige Zentrale der Creditanstalt zum Esstempel. 25 May 2021.
  10. Web site: Levantine Heritage . Selection of foreign bank branches in the Ottoman Empire . 2015 .
  11. Web site: Nomadic Niko . . Karaköy Square .
  12. Web site: ArchINForm . Gebäude des Wiener Bankvereines .
  13. Web site: licegrada HR . Zgrada hrvatske podružnice Wiener Bankverein na križanju Jurišićeve i Palmotićeve . . Ivan Klindić .