Native name
|
Banca Popolare di Vicenza S.p.A. |
---|---|
Società per Azioni | |
Industry | Financial services |
Founded | 1866 |
Headquarters | 18 via Btg. Framarin, Vicenza, Italy |
Number of locations
|
554 locations (June 2016) |
Area served
|
16 regions of Italy; Republic of Ireland, New York, São Paulo, Moscow, New Delhi, Hong Kong and Shanghai |
Key people
|
|
Services | Retail and corporate banking |
Profit | (€1.407 billion) (2015) |
Total assets | €39.783 billion (2015) |
Total equity | €2.534 billion (2015) |
Owner | Atlante (99.33%) |
Number of employees
|
5,273 (2015 average) |
Parent | Atlante |
Subsidiaries |
|
Capital ratio | 10.75% (CET1, June 2016 data) |
Website | www |
Footnotes / references in consolidated basis |
Banca Popolare di Vicenza (BPVi) is an Italian bank. The bank was the 13th largest retail and corporate bank of Italy by total assets, according to Mediobanca.
BPVi is a multi-regional bank which had branches in most of the Italy regions, except Aosta Valley in the north, Molise and Basilicata in the south, as well as Sardinia Island. Moreover, only one branch in Campania, Abruzzo, Marche and only two branches in Apulia, Trentino – South Tyrol and Umbria. The bank had 193 branches in Veneto, 67 in Lombardy, 61 in Tuscany and 50 in Friuli – Venezia Giulia.
The bank, according to 2015 annual report, was owned by the public of more than 100,000 natural person (88.5%). Only 11.5% were owned by companies, administrative body and institution, such as Cattolica Assicurazioni (0.89%) and Fondazione Cariprato (0.35%).
The bank had two major subsidiaries, Banca Nuova , operated mainly in Sicily and Calabria, as well as FarBanca, a bank for pharmacist. The bank expanded in 1990s by merged with other co-operative people's bank (Italian: Banca Popolare) of the whole Italy.
Banca Popolare di Vicenza was the first cooperative bank in Veneto region. The bank was also known as Banca Popolare Vicentina.
In 1985 the bank acquired Banca Popolare Agricola di Lonigo, in 1988, Banca Popolare di Thiene, in 1991, Banca Popolare dei Sette Comuni-Asiago, in 1994, Banca Popolare di Venezia, in 1996, Banca Popolare di Castelfranco Veneto (became BP Treiviso in 1999) and Banca Popolare di Trieste, in 1997 Banca Popolare della Provincia di Belluno, in 1998 Banca Popolare "C. Piva" di Valdobbiadene and Banca Popolare Udinese. In 2000 the group acquired Banca Nuova di Palermo and Banca del Popolo di Trapani, which became Banca Nuova in 2002. In 2002 the group acquired Cassa di Risparmio di Prato (Cariprato) from Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena, which had 60 branches mainly in Tuscany region. In 2010 Cariprato was absorbed into the bank.