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The customer-facing SG Crédit du Nord (SG meaning Société Générale) brand [2] is applied to both the former Crédit du Nord, and the Société Générale branches in the North of France. [3] As with SG Crédit du Nord, the remaining Crédit du Nord banks' identities are also applied as regional brand names:
Retail Banking in France (Société Générale, Crédit du Nord and Boursorama) International Banking and Financial Services (IBFS) Corporate and Investment Banking (SG CIB), with investment banking and fixed income, structured financing, debt and forex activities on the one side, and equity and consulting activities on the other.
The Banque de l'Union Parisienne (French pronunciation: [bɑ̃k də lynjɔ̃ paʁizjɛn], BUP) was a French investment bank, created in 1904 and merged into Crédit du Nord in 1973. History [ edit ]
Amundi's funds are primarily distributed through the banking networks of its majority shareholders: Crédit Agricole, LCL (a subsidiary of Crédit Agricole), Société Générale and Crédit du Nord (a subsidiary of Société Générale), [11] which collectively comprised more than 70% of Amundi's net inflows at inception, with the remainder being drawn from institutional investors.
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Banque Internationale du Benin (BIBE), Cotonou, Benin Banque Internationale pour la Centrafrique , Bangui, Central African Republic Banque Libano-Française S.A.L. , Beirut, Lebanon
In the early years, these included the Société Marseillaise de Crédit (SMC) in Marseille (est. 1865); the Société lyonnaise de dépôts, de comptes courants et de crédit industriel in Lyon (est. 1865); and the Société de crédit industriel et de dépôts du Nord (1866), a build-up of the Comptoir d'escompte de Lille created in 1848 ...
The Compagnie Algérienne (French pronunciation: [kɔ̃paɲi alʒeʁjɛn]), from 1942 to 1948 Compagnie Algérienne de Crédit et de Banque ([kɔ̃paɲi alʒeʁjɛn də kʁedi e də bɑ̃k], "Algerian Credit and Banking Company"), was a significant French bank with operations in Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and Lebanon as well as mainland France.