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Société Générale's head office is in the Tours Société Générale in the business district of La Défense in the city of Nanterre, west of Paris. The company moved there in June 1995 from the former head office along Boulevard Haussmann in the 9th arrondissement of Paris. The head office has 7,000 employees. [39]
Société Générale Twin Towers are two office skyscrapers located in La Défense, a high-rise business district, and in Nanterre, France, west of Paris. Their exterior designs are identical. They are the second tallest twin towers in the EU and Europe’s third tallest twin towers after City of Capitals in Moscow and Les Mercuriales twin ...
It is the fifth tallest building in la Défense, after Tour First, Tour Total, Tour Areva and Tour T1. Tour Granite was ordered by the Société Générale banking group. It was built as a complement to the Société Générale twin towers whose office space was insufficient for the needs of the group. Like the existing two towers, Tour Granite ...
The Crédit Mobilier (French pronunciation: [kʁedi mɔbilje]; officially the Société Générale du Crédit Mobilier [sɔsjete ʒeneʁal dy kʁedi mɔbilje], lit. ' general company for movable [collateral-backed] credit ' ) was a French banking company created in 1852 by the Pereire brothers , and one of the world’s most significant and ...
Tour Ariane (English: Ariane Tower); previously known as tour Générale between 1973 and 1995, is an office skyscraper located in La Défense, the high-rise business district situated west of Paris, France. [1] Built in 1975, it belongs to the 2nd generation of skyscrapers in La Défense. The tower is 152 m (499 ft) tall and has 36 floors. [2]
In 1999, BNP and Société Générale fought a complex battle on the stock market, with Société Générale bidding for Paribas and BNP bidding for Société Générale and counter-bidding for Paribas. BNP's bid for Société Générale failed, while its bid for Paribas succeeded leading to a merger of BNP and Paribas one year later on 23 May ...
Cartoon of Charles Ferry, a board member of the Banque Franco-Égyptienne in the 1870s, bringing financing to Egypt. The Banque franco-égyptienne [] (BFE, “French-Egyptian Bank”) was created in 1870 on the initiative of financier Louis-Raphaël Bischoffsheim in the context of financial stress of the Khedivate of Egypt, which had close relations with France at the time. [1]
Tours Société Générale, the group head office in Paris La Défense; Société Générale Bank Heist, a 1976 bank robbery in Nice; Baden v Société Générale, a 1983 UK law case; 2008 Société Générale trading loss, a financial crisis episode; Société Générale, London Branch v Geys, a 2012 UK labor law case