Bank of Cyprus

Bank of Cyprus Public Company Ltd
Τράπεζα Κύπρου Δημόσια Εταιρεία Λίμιτεδ
Native name
Τράπεζα Κύπρου Δημόσια Εταιρεία Λίμιτεδ
Public Company
Traded as CSE: BOCY
LSE: BOCH
Industry Banking, Financial services
Founded 1899
Headquarters Strovolos, Nicosia, Cyprus
Number of locations
Decrease126 (Q2 2017)
Area served
Cyprus, UK
Key people
Josef Ackermann (Chairman)
John Hourican (CEO)
Products Retail and business banking, Credit cards, mortgage loans, corporate banking, factoring, insurance, brokerage, private banking, wealth management, Investment management, investment banking.
Revenue Increase963 million (2016)[1]
Increase€686 million (2016)[1]
Profit Increase€64 million (2016)[1]
Total assets Decrease€22.2 billion (Q4 2016)[1]
Total equity Increase€3.07 billion (Q4 2016)[1] Common equity Tier 1 capital = 13.9% (fully loaded Basel III)
Number of employees
Decrease4,302 (Q2 2017)[1]
Subsidiaries General Insurance Cyprus
EuroLife (Cyprus)
Website www.bankofcyprus.com

Bank of Cyprus (Greek: Τράπεζα Κύπρου) is a Cyprus bank.

Current operations

The Bank of Cyprus currently operates through a total of 126 branches/business offices, of which 121 operate in Cyprus, four in the United Kingdom, (€1.3 Billion in loans), one in Romania (€206 million net exposure). The group has representative offices in Greece, (€472 million net exposure) Russia, (€44 million net exposure)[2] Ukraine and China.

The shares of the bank are listed on the Cyprus Stock Exchange (CSE). The Bank is the largest listed company on the CSE in terms of market capitalization. Since October 8, 2007 the Bank of Cyprus has been part of the Cyprus 10 Index, which comprises the 10 largest companies in Cyprus. The Bank of Cyprus was also listed on the Athens Exchange since 2000 and had been part of the FTSE/Athex Large Cap index from 9 October 2006 until March 2013. However, in late 2016 it has announced plans to de-list from Athens on 9th January 2017 and list on the London Stock Exchange in January 2017.[3]

History

Bank of Cyprus headquarters next to Central Bank of Cyprus
Bank of Cyprus new offices in Aglandjia suburb of Nicosia
BoC bid for Interbank in New York for about $43 million. Interbank was 78% owned by Greek businessman Dimitris Kontominas, and the remaining equity was dispersed among three other shareholders. With four branches in New York, including the Astoria, Queens area where there is a strong Greek presence, the bank catered to the Greek American community. The U.S. Federal Reserve withheld its approval and bid expired.

Controversy

Bank of Cyprus (Romania) announced in mid-December 2009 that it had purchased 9.7 per cent of TLV's (Banca Transilvania) shares for EUR 58M, and in May 2010 expressed interest in taking over 20 per cent of the bank's stock. DIICOT, the body that investigates organized crime and terrorism, charged the head of Banca Transilvania's administration council, Horia Ciorcila, and the head of Bank of Cyprus (Romania), Georgios Christofourou, with stock market manipulation and money laundering in this transaction.[8] DIICOT also charged a former vice-president of the administration council or Banca Transilvania, Claudiu Silaghi, and Bank of Cyprus employees Anastasios Isaakidis, along with four other individuals. Bank of Cyprus (Romania) denied any wrongdoing. The Bucharest Tribunal acquitted Ciorcila and Christofourou on 4 July 2011, as did the Bucharest Court of Appeal on 27 June 2012. On 2 July 2014, the Romanian High Court of Justice rejected the second appeal made by DIICOT, as ungrounded.[9] Consequently, the acquittal decisions issued by the Bucharest Tribunal (2011) and Court of Appeal (2012), have been maintained, confirming the full acquittal of all the defendants. The decision of the Romanian High Court of Justice is final.

Deposit tax and bailout or bailin

A decision was imposed by EU finance ministers to force depositors in Cyprus to take a loss (bail in), in order to help fund an International Monetary Fund and euro zone bailout (bail-in in the case of Bank of Cyprus: with 47.5% of uninsured depositors, above 100,000 Euro, contributing to the bank's recapitalization).

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Group Financial Results for the six months ended 30 June 2016" (PDF). Bank of Cyprus. Retrieved 31 August 2016.
  2. "Bank of Cyprus moves into Russia". BBC. 7 June 2007. Archived from the original on 12 June 2007. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  3. "Bank Of Cyprus". Archived from the original on 2007-09-30.
  4. "Cyprus Bank buys 80 per cent of Russia's Uniastrum". The Economic Times. Bennett Coleman & Co. Ltd. 28 June 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  5. "Russian oligarch key shareholder in Bank of Cyprus". Reuters. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  6. "CYPRUS: BOCY sets AGM for Nov. 20 - CB green light to Wilbur Ross". Financial Mirror. Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  7. 110 Moments in Our History. 2009. Bank of Cyprus.
  8. "Banca Transilvania and Bank of Cyprus heads accused of insider trading". Romanian Business Insider. 12 July 2010.
  9. http://www.scj.ro/dosare.asp?view=detalii&id=300000000339790
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