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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
Banifólio – Sociedade Gestora de Patrimónios, S.A. (1992) Banif – Banco Internacional do Funchal (Cayman), Ltd. (1993) Açoreana Seguros (1996) Banco Comercial dos Açores (1996) BanifServ Agrupamento Complementar de Empresas de Serviços, Sistemas e Tecnologias de Informação (1997) Banif – Banco de Investimento, S.A. (2000)
Banca Popolare Italiana, an Italian bank merged into Banco Popolare; Banco Português de Investimento, a Portuguese bank; Bank of the Philippine Islands, the oldest bank in the Philippines; Bpifrance, a French bank
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.
Banco Comercial Português (BCP, lit. ' Portuguese Commercial Bank ' ) is a Portuguese bank that was founded in 1985 and is the largest private bank in the country. BCP is a member of the Euronext 100 stock index and its current chief executive officer is Miguel Maya Dias Pinheiro.
BES has had a stable shareholder structure since 1991. The main shareholders, ESFG and Crédit Agricole, hold 50.8% of the capital. The Group's presence today is felt in 23 countries on four continents through branches, offices of representation, or sub-companies, making the Banco Espírito Santo Group the most international of the Portuguese financial groups.
1997 — CGD established Banco Comercial e de Investimentos in Mozambique. 1998 — CGD acquired Banco Bandeirantes in Brazil, to which it transferred some accounts from Banco Financial Português. It also established a branch in Cape Verde , which in 1999 it converted to a subsidiary, Banco Interatlântico, of which it now owns 70%.