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Banque Transatlantique is headquartered in Paris and has subsidiaries in Brussels and Luxembourg (which was established in 2002), a branch in London, and representative offices in Geneva, Hong Kong, Montreal, New York, Singapore and Washington, DC. It has a strong focus on serving expatriates, diplomats and international civil servants.
[2]: 211 The Pereires were forced to relinquished control of the Crédit Mobilier on 14 September 1867, at the demand of the Banque de France. [2]: 213 Even so, they kept some of their wealth and properties, but had to face numerous lawsuits in the ensuing years and in 1872 were compelled to sell their art collections. [1]: 392
Edificio Europa, seat of BCT then of Deutsche Bank in Barcelona Former BCT building, now Deutsche Bank at Paseo de la Castellana 18 in Madrid. During World War II, by contrast, all of the DUB's South American branches were expropriated, even in Argentina where Juan Perón, despite his sympathies for the Axis powers, declared war on Germany in March 1945 under U.S. pressure.
Société Marseillaise de Crédit, Marseille, France Société Nationale de Crédit et d'Investissement , Luxembourg City, Luxembourg Societe Tunisienne de Banque , Tunis, Tunisia
Eugène Péreire (1 October 1831 – 21 March 1908) was a French financier and politician of Sephardic Jewish origin from Portugal. [1] [2] The son of Isaac Péreire of the prominent Péreire brothers, he founded Banque Transatlantique in 1881.
2 : BNP Paribas: 2,867.44 ... Banque Eni; Banque Transatlantique Belgium; Beobank; ... See the exhaustive list of banks operating in France, on the FBF website [23 ...
Pascal Cagni has also been an independent director of Banque Transatlantique (CIC Group) since 2006. [23] He was a non-executive director of Kingfisher Plc (2010–2019), [24] a member of Vivendi's Supervisory Board (2012-2017)[22], and a non-executive director of Style.com, the Condé Nast Group's online sales site (2015-2017). [25]
On 7 March 2013, France 2 aired an eight-minute investigative report purporting to expose a weapons smuggling channel from Serbia to France. The report authors, journalists Franck Genauzeau and Régis Mathé, traveled to Serbia in February 2013 where they filmed a story claiming that Serbia is a hub for international weapons smuggling.