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The Banque Internationale Arabe de Tunisie was founded by Mansour Moalla in 1976, [7] as a result of a merger of the Tunisian branches of the Société Marseillaise de Crédit and the British Bank of the Middle East. [8] It is headquartered in Tunis, Tunisia. [1] It has 185 offices in Tunisia and 1 office in Libya. [1]
Tunisian Foreign Bank; North Africa International Bank; Wifak International Bank (WIB) Al Baraka Bank Tunisia, part of Al Baraka Group; Banque Zitouna (BZ) Banque de Financement des Petites et Moyennes Entreprises (BFPME) Banque Tuniso-Libyenne (BTL) Banque de Tunisie et des Emirats (BTE) Qatar National Bank Tunisia (QNB), part of QNB Group
Advert of the Banque de Tunisie, 1900. The Banque de Tunisie was created on 23 September 1884 by the Banque Transatlantique which converted its existing Tunis office into a fully-fledged local bank, three years after the establishment of the French protectorate of Tunisia.
Following the fall of the authoritarian president Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, the poor health of the three major state banks has come to light.Because the three big state banks (Société Tunisienne de Banque, Banque de l'Habitat, and Banque Nationale Agricole) make up about 40% of total banking assets in the country, they are structurally important for the economy. [7]
In 1982, Arab Bank changed its name to Arab Tunisian Bank. In 2008, the General Assembly decided to grow the bank's capital from 60 million dinars to 100 million dinars within two years. [2] They increased the capital of the bank to 80 million dinars in 2008 as a first step. [3] Today, ATB has a network of 103 branches and 12 subsidiaries. [4]
The Bank owns and manages a Tunisian women's football team called the AS Banque de l'Habitat. [7] The club has won the Tunisian Women's Championship on three occasions [8] and were the first team to represent Tunisia at in the CAF Champions league qualifiers. [9] [10] Since January 6, 2023 Wajdi Koubaa is the president of BH Bank. [11]
Cash-strapped Tunisia wants to take the unprecedented step of borrowing billions from its central bank to address budget deficits and bandage its economic crisis, a step that experts warn could ...
This page was last edited on 23 December 2023, at 23:27 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.