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Bank of Africa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bank of Africa Group
Company typePrivate
CSE: 1100
IndustryFinancial services
Founded1959
HeadquartersCasablanca, Morocco
Key people
Othman Benjelloun
Group Chairman & CEO
ProductsCredit cards, consumer banking, corporate banking, finance and insurance, investment banking, mortgage loans, private banking, private equity, savings, securities, asset management, wealth management
Increase 76 million (2017)
Total assetsIncrease 9.406 billion (2021)
Total equityIncrease 746 million (2016)
Number of employees
Increase 5655 (2016)
Websitebankofafrica.ma

Bank of Africa (BOA) is an international financial services group headquartered in Casablanca, Morocco. It was formed through the 2010 acquisition of Bank of Africa (est. 1982 in Mali) by the Banque Marocaine du Commerce Extérieur (BMCE, Arabic: البنك المغربي للتجارة الخارجية, lit.'Moroccan Bank of Foreign Trade', est. 1959), following which BMCE rebranded its commercial operations as Bank of Africa in 2020. The BMCE name survives in the byline "BMCE Group" incorporated in the BOA brand identity.

As of 2024, BOA's two main shareholders were Moroccan financier Othman Benjelloun and French bank Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale, with around 27 and 25 percent respectively. BOA is listed on the Casablanca Stock Exchange.

As of 2024, BOA was the third-largest bank in Morocco, behind market leader Attijariwafa Bank and the cooperative BCP Group.[1]

History

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Banque Marocaine du Commerce Extérieur

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BMCE logo in 2015

At the time of Moroccan independence, the new country's banking system was dominated by French banks, namely the Banque Commerciale du Maroc controlled by Crédit Industriel et Commercial and the local operations of Banque Nationale pour le Commerce et l'Industrie, Crédit Lyonnais, and Société Générale as well as Algeria-centric Compagnie Algérienne and Crédit Foncier d'Algérie et de Tunisie (CFAT). The creation of BMCE in 1959 was the first step in a decades-long process, known locally as marocanisation, of reduction of that colonial legacy.

BMCE was established in 1959 as a government-owned commercial entity and in 1962 opened its capital to foreign strategic investors, the main one being Banca Commerciale Italiana (BCI) which had been present in Morocco since 1928 and brought BMCE its network of branches in the country.[2] By late 1962, the foreign shareholders included BCI (16.7 percent), Mouton Roger Group (12.5 percent), Banco di Roma, Bank of America, Bank of West Africa (BWA), Banque Française du Commerce Extérieur, Commerzbank, and Skandinaviska Banken (2.8 percent each); private Moroccan shareholders held an additional 4.2 percent, while the Moroccan government retained 50 percent.[3] In 1965 BWA, acquired that year by Standard Bank, transferred to BMCE its branch in Tangier.

In 1971, BMCE took over the bulk of the Société de Banque du Maghreb (SBM), the Moroccan subsidiary of the former CFAT,[4]: 269  while Société Générale Morocco acquired about a fifth of the SBM's activity.[5] BMCE then opened its first overseas branch in Paris in 1972,[6] and listed on the Casablanca Stock Exchange in 1974. In 1975, it absorbed the Banco Español en Marruecos, headquartered in Tétouan,[7] and in 1989 opened BMCE International in Madrid, which in 1993 became part of a fully-fledged Spanish subsidiary.[8]: 75 

In 1989, it took a minority stake in the public development bank of Mali, the first expansion of a Moroccan bank into sub-Saharan Africa.[6] In 1995, it was privatized and taken over by Othman Benjelloun through his controlling ownership of insurer Royale Marocaine d'Assurance [fr].

Bank of Africa

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Bank of Africa was established in late 1982, in Bamako, Mali, by local businesspeople. It was formed to address the scarcity of banking services for local businesses and individuals, which was prevalent not only in Mali at that time, but across most of Francophone West Africa. This initial effort was without any external financial backing.

The initial success of BOA led to the group gradual expansion and reorganization away from its Malian origins. In 1988, African Financial Holdings (AFH) was established in Luxembourg as a holding company for BOA Mali and operations to be added in other African countries.[9]: 8  The objectives of AFH were to promote the establishment of banking subsidiaries across Africa, with local capital participation as a key component and to offer both management, technical support as well as equity participation in these new banking subsidiaries. To increase their capital base, AFH then took on new investors including Proparco (an affiliate of the French Development Agency), the Netherlands Development Finance Company (FMO), and Paris-based Natexis (later Natixis).

AFH / Bank of Africa Group expanded through a mix of internal growth and acquisitions, including:

Meanwhile BOA established and grew operations of its own in Benin (1990), Burkina Faso (1998), Senegal (2001), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (2010), Togo (2013), and Ethiopia (2014).[10]: 2, 8  In 2004, in partnership with the local government, it also created a specialized mortgage bank in Cotonou, the Banque de l'Habitat du Benin (BHB), which however did not develop as significantly as initially envisaged.[11] In 2010, BOA opened a subsidiary in France, developing from an earlier representative office opened in Paris in 2000.[10]: 3 

Merger and aftermath

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In 2008, Luxembourg-based AFH, the parent company of the Bank of Africa Group, rebranded itself into Bank of Africa Group S.A., and BMCE took a 35% shareholding interest, bringing financial capital and banking expertise.[12] BMCE became majority owner of the BOA group in 2010, and held a 72.6 percent equity stake by 2013.[6]

In 2020, BMCE itself assumed the new name Bank of Africa - BMCE Group.[13] Through successive transactions since 2004, Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale has become the second major shareholder of the group with 25% of the company's equity as of end-2020.[14] The largest shareholder remains Othman Benjelloun at 27.4 percent, through his O Capital holding company and insurance company RMA Watanya.

Operations

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A Bank of Africa billboard in Niger, 2019

As of end-2023, Bank of Africa S.A. (Luxembourg) remained as an internal holding company of the group, with its equity capital owned by Bank of Africa - BMCE Group (72.41 percent), FMO (9.41 percent), Proparco (3.73 percent), and other shareholders (14.45 percent). The sub-Saharan African country in which BOA held the most assets was Burkina Faso, followed by Ivory Coast and Benin.[15]: 4, 7  In total, international activities (outside Morocco) represented 32 percent of the group's consolidated assets at end-2023.[16]: 185 

Also at end-2023, Bank of Africa - BMCE Group retained direct control of operations in Morocco, while BOA SA had majority-owned subsidiaries in Benin (54.1 percent stake), Burkina Faso (56.5 percent), the DRC (86.6 percent), Djibouti (100 percent), France (94.8 percent), Ghana (98 percent), Kenya (89.5 percent), Ivory Coast (69.8 percent), Madagascar (61.1 percent), Mali (64.2 percent), Niger (59.1 percent), Rwanda (95 percent), Senegal (61.7 percent), Tanzania (96.2 percent), Togo (94.5 percent), and Uganda (92.2 percent), as well as minority stakes in the Banque de l'Habitat du Bénin (24.2 percent)[15]: 8  and Banque de Crédit de Bujumbura (24.22 percent).[15]: 116  The individual entities' other shareholders are typically a mix of Western and multilateral development institutions, and local individuals and entities. BOA also maintains representative offices in Ethiopia, Spain, the United Kingdom, China, Italy, Germany, UAE, Belgium, Canada, and the Netherlands.[17]

Nonbank subsidiaries:

  • Banque de l'Habitat du Bénin (BHB)
  • Equipbail Benin
  • Equipbail Mali
  • Equipbail Mada
  • Actibourse SA
  • Aissa, BOA's IT company
  • Attica SA

Additional entities of the BOA Group:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Adil Faouzi (14 April 2024). "Morocco's Banking Sector Shines in Forbes' 2024 List of MENA's 30 Most Valuable Banks". Morocco World News.
  2. ^ "La Banque marocaine du commerce extérieur : une expérience réussie". Le Monde. 30 November 1962.
  3. ^ "Comitfrance - Milano, 1904 - 1998". Intesa Sanpaolo.
  4. ^ Hubert Bonin (2004), Un outre-mer bancaire méditerranéen. Histoire du crédit foncier d’Algérie et de Tunisie (1880-1997), Publications de la Société française d'histoire des outre-mers
  5. ^ "Société Générale Maroc à travers le temps". Société Générale Maroc.
  6. ^ a b c "L'histoire de Bank of Africa racontée par Mounir Jazouli". Medias24. 21 April 2022.
  7. ^ "Banco Español en Marruecos". Dun & Bradstreet.
  8. ^ BMCE Bank (2014), Émission d'un emprunt obligataire subordonné non coté (PDF)
  9. ^ Alios Finance (2014), Note d'Informations (PDF)
  10. ^ a b c Bank of Africa Group, Annual Report 2013 (PDF)
  11. ^ Frédéric Maury (21 January 2013). "Bénin : la Banque de l'habitat peine à loger". Jeune Afrique.
  12. ^ BOAf (17 March 2016). "About Bank of Africa Group". Bank of Africa (BOAf). Retrieved 17 March 2016.
  13. ^ "BMCE Bank of Africa devient officiellement Bank of Africa". L'Economiste. 10 March 2020.
  14. ^ "Solid results & a significant second-half upturn: Credit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale is well placed for the recovery" (PDF). Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale. 18 February 2021. p. 30.
  15. ^ a b c Bank of Africa, Annual Report 2023 (PDF)
  16. ^ Rapport financier annuel 2023 (PDF), Bank of Africa - BMCE Group
  17. ^ Bank of Africa (12 September 2022). "Bank of Arica: Contact Us - Headquarters". Bank of Africa. Casablanca, Morocco. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
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