Alexbank
Egyptian bank
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alexbank, formely known as Bank of Alexandria is an Egyptian. Founded in 1957, It has a market share of almost 7%. Intesa Sanpaolo is the major shareholder in the bank.
New Borg El Arab city Branch | |
| Formerly | Bank of Alexandria |
|---|---|
Company type | Private bank |
| Industry | Financial services |
| Founded | 1957 |
| Headquarters | , |
Number of locations | 210 (2025)[1] |
Key people | Ziad Bahaa-Eldin (Chairman) |
| EGP 22,2 billion (2025) (USD 415 millions)[2] | |
| Total assets | EGP 242 billion (2025) (USD 4,52 billion)[2] |
| Total equity | EGP 35,9 billion (2025) (USD 671 millions)[2] |
Number of employees | 4200 (2025) |
| Parent | Intesa Sanpaolo |
| Website | www |
The bank holds 70.25% of the bank shares, IFC holds 9.75%, and the Egyptian Government holds 20%. Mahmoud Abdel Salam Omar, who is a former head of the Egyptian Banks Federation, is a former chairman of the bank.[3]
History
- In 1857, local Greek merchants established a Bank of Alexandria to cater to the needs of the Greek merchant community. This bank was liquidated in 1877.
- 1864 The English overseas bank, Anglo-Egyptian Bank was founded.
- 1924 Anglo Egyptian Bank merged with The Colonial Bank (est. 1836) and the First National Bank of South Africa (est. 1891) to form Barclays Bank (Dominion, Colonial and Overseas).[4] Barclays had inherited the ownership of The Colonial Bank when it acquired the London Provincial and South Western Bank[5] in 1918.
- 1957 The Egyptian government founded Bank of Alexandria to take over the Egyptian operations of Barclays Bank DCO, which the Egyptian government had nationalized in 1956 after British and French troops attacked Egypt and occupied the Suez Canal during the Suez Crisis.
- 1964 Bank of Alexandria acquired Banque du Nile and Import-Export Bank of Egypt.
- 17 October 2006, The Egyptian government privatized Bank of Alexandria. Sanpaolo IMI, the Italian bank which itself was acquired by Banca Intesa, agreed to pay $1.6 billion for 80% of Bank of Alexandria. This was the first privatization in Egypt of a fully government-owned bank.