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The Bank Al-Maghrib (Arabic: بنك المغرب, lit. ' Bank of Morocco ') is the central bank of the Kingdom of Morocco. It was founded in 1959 as the successor to the State Bank of Morocco (est. 1907). In 2008 Bank Al-Maghrib held reserves of foreign currency with an estimated worth of US$36 billion.
Bank Al Amal; Banque Marocaine pour l'Afrique et l'Orient; Banque Nationale pour le Développement Économique; Bex-Maroc; Citibank; Commerzbank; Crédit Populaire du Maroc; Limar Bank Casa Union Marocaine de Banques; Raw-Mat Bank; Société de Banque & de Crédit; Société Marocaine de Depôt et de Crédit; Société Mithaq Al Maghrib
Palais Zahia building in the medina of Tangier, the State Bank of Morocco's head office from 1907 to 1952 The State Bank's building in Rabat, inaugurated 1925 and the seat of its executive management until succession by Bank Al-Maghrib in 1959 Building at 3, rue Volney in Paris, the State Bank of Morocco's "seat of administration" where board meetings were held from 1907 to 1922
Attijariwafa Bank; Banco Sabadell, part of Banco Sabadell Group; Bank Al-Amal, part-owned by BCP Group; Banque Centrale Populaire, part of BCP Group; Banque Marocaine du Commerce Extérieur (BMCE), part of Banque of Africa - BMCE Group; Banque Marocaine pour le Commerce et l'Industrie (BMCI), part of BNP Paribas Group
The central bank of Morocco (Bank Al Maghrib) In 2007, the financial sector of Morocco maintained an economic environment conducive to further growth of banking activity following a very good year for the sector in 2006. Morocco's banks have been largely unaffected by the credit crisis due to their limited connection to global financial markets.
Since 2003, he has been serving as the governor of Bank Al-Maghrib. [8] Jouahri, has consistently been recognized as one of the world's best central bankers. Global Finance Magazine featured him in their esteemed list in 2017, where he secured an A grade for his performance. [9]
In 1913, the bank's London subsidiary substantially developed its footprint by merging with the Anglo-Foreign Banking Company Ltd (est. 1872). The Banque Sino-Belge subsequently changed its name to Banque Belge pour l'Étranger and marketed itself as a subsidiary of the Générale de Belgique, which the latter had not allowed until then. [5]
Bank name Parent or group Subsidiaries or previous names Head office location SWIFT BIC-code; Argenta (bank) [1] Argenta Group Antwerp: ARSP BE 22 Attijariwafa Bank Europe Belgium [2] Le Groupe Attijariwafa bank Brussels: WAFA BE BB AXA Bank: AXA Group Brussels: AXAB BE 22 Bank J.Van Breda & Co Ackermans & van Haaren (78.75%), Promofi (21.25% ...