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Banco Português de Investimento (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈbɐ̃ku puɾtuˈɣeʒ ðɨ ĩvɨʃtiˈmẽtu], "Portuguese Investment Bank"), or simply BPI, is a Portuguese private investment bank, currently owned by finance multinational CaixaBank. Founded in 1981, it runs the banking business with companies, institutional and private clients.
Banco Espírito Santo : bailed-out by the Portuguese state in 2014 and re-organised into Novobanco; Banco Português do Atlântico; Banco Português de Negócios : sold to the Angolese Bank Banco BIC in 2012; Banco Privado Português; Banif Financial Group : bailed-out by the Portuguese state in 2015 and sold to Banco Santander
Banco de Comércio e Indústria, Angola; Banco de Costa Rica, San José, Costa Rica; Banco de Crédito de Bolivia, La Paz, Bolivia; Banco de Crédito del Perú, Lima, Peru; Banco de Crédito e Inversiones (BCI), Santiago, Chile; Banco de Desenvolvimento de Angola, Angola; Banco de la Nacion, San Isidro, Peru; Banco de la Nacion Argentina ...
Queen Maria II of Portugal established the bank by royal charter on 19 November 1846 to act as a commercial bank and issuing bank. It came about as the result of a merger of the Banco de Lisboa, the first bank founded in Portugal, and the Companhia de Confiança Nacional, an investment company specialised in the financing of the public debt.
Portugal's central bank is the Banco de Portugal, which is an integral part of the European System of Central Banks. The largest Portuguese banks are Banco Comercial Português and the state-owned Caixa Geral de Depósitos. [136] Portuguese banks hold strategic stakes in other sectors of the economy, including the insurance sector.
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Fernando Ulrich was Deputy Manager of Sociedade Portuguesa de Investimentos (SPI) from 1983 to 1985 and Chief of the Cabinet of the Portuguese Minister of Finance from 1981 to 1983, when Francisco Pinto Balsemão was the head of the Government of Portugal.
Carlos Costa started his career in 1973 as a lecturer in economics at the University of Porto and graduated there. [2] Following his graduation he continued his studies at Sorbonne [3] and then in 1981 went to the former Banco Português do Atlântico, now Banco Comercial Português (BCP), research department.