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Crédit Mutuel

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(Redirected from Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale) French cooperative bank

Crédit Mutuel
Headquarters of Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale in the Wacken neighborhood of Strasbourg, France
Company typeCredit union
IndustryFinancial services
Predecessor27 February 1882; 142 years ago (1882-02-27) first bank based on the Raiffeisen model
Founded10 September 1947; 77 years ago (1947-09-10) first cooperative bank of Crédit Mutuel
HeadquartersParis, France
Key peopleNicolas Théry, President of the National Confederation and of Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale;
Julien Carmona, president of Crédit Mutuel Arkéa
Products
RevenueIncrease 20.4 billion (2022)
Operating incomeDecrease €7 billion (2022)
Net incomeDecrease €4.1 billion (2022)
Total assetsIncrease €1.108 trillion (2022)
Total equityIncrease €68.6 billion (2022)
Number of employeesIncrease 83,636 (2022)
Websitecreditmutuel.com

Crédit Mutuel (French pronunciation: [kʁedi mytɥɛl]) is a French cooperative banking group, one of the country's top five banks with over 30 million customers. It traces its origins back to the German cooperative movement inspired by Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen in Alsace–Lorraine under German rule, in the 1880s. Crédit Mutuel was a member of the International Raiffeisen Union (IRU).

Crédit Mutuel has been designated as a Significant Institution since the entry into force of European Banking Supervision in late 2014, and as a consequence is directly supervised by the European Central Bank.

History

The first local cooperative bank inspired by the Raiffeisen system on what is now French territory was created in February 1882 in La Wantzenau, a village near Strasbourg. The network in German-ruled Alsace–Lorraine grew quickly to 127 local banks in 1892, and 471 in 1914. Louis Durand (1859-1916), a lawyer in Lyon, was inspired by the Raiffeisen model and started a similar network from 1893, grouped under the Union des caisses rurales et ouvrières de France (UCROF).

Following France's recovery of Alsace-Lorraine after World War I, some of the local banks joined the Crédit Agricole network, while others preferred to maintain their Raiffeisen identity and adopted the Crédit Mutuel name. The Banque Fédérative du Crédit Mutuel (BFCM) in Strasbourg was established in 1919 as a financial entity for the reorganized network. Prior to the law of September 10, 1947, local banks were recognized as non-profit entities. Following the enactment of this legislation, they were reclassified as cooperatives. In 1958, new legislation remodeled the group's governance and established the Confédération Nationale du Crédit Mutuel as its central organization in Paris.

In 2008, Crédit Mutuel bought Citibank's retail bank activities in Germany for 5.2 billion euros. Citibank Germany had over 3 million clients and 7% of the market share in Germany. Citibank sold multiple retail units across Europe and the world to reduce risk and focus on core activities like corporate and investment banking. The German network was subsequently rebranded Targobank.

Organization

Head office of Crédit Mutuel Arkéa near Brest
New extension of the Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale complex in Strasbourg

The Crédit Mutuel group has a decentralized structure, despite being designated as a single significant institution under European Banking Supervision. Its central entity is the Confédération Nationale du Crédit Mutuel (CNCM) in Paris. The CNCM was headquartered from 1981 to 2020 at 88–90, rue Cardinet in Paris, and in 2020 moved to a newly erected building at 46, Rue du Bastion near the high-rise Tribunal judiciaire de Paris.

In France, the group's main retail network is formed of around 2,000 individual local Crédit Mutuel banks (French: caisses), which are owned by their customers in line with the Raiffeisen system. These local cooperative banks are grouped into 18 regional federations and one nationwide agricultural federation.

Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale

In 1992, the Fédération du Crédit Mutuel de Centre Est Europe (CMCEE) was formed in Strasbourg, where the Crédit Mutuel was born in German-ruled Alsace–Lorraine, through the merger of the regional federations of Alsace, Lorraine, Franche-Comté and Centre-Est, the latter including Bourgogne and Champagne-Ardennes. Since 2011, a number of regional federations have formed a quasi-national grouping led by the CMCEE, initially called the "CM11" and known since 2018 as the Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale, which as of early 2022 brings together 14 of the 18 regional federations plus the nationwide agricultural federation. The local banks of the Alliance fédérale collectively own the Caisse fédérale de Crédit Mutuel in Strasbourg, which in turns owns 91.7% of the Banque fédérative du Crédit Mutuel (BFCM), with an additional 6.4% of the latter being held by regional federations through their regional caisses. The Caisse fédérale also owns the Caisse agricole du Crédit Mutuel, which serves the nationwide agricultural federation except in Brittany.

The BFCM in turns owns most of the group's assets beyond the network of local cooperative banks, both in France and abroad. As of early 2022, these included Crédit Industriel et Commercial, a significant banking group which is older than Crédit Mutuel itself, purchased in stages between 1998 and 2017; subsidiaries that host consumer credit (Cofidis), real estate, asset management, insurance, private equity, factoring and leasing; Groupe EBRA [fr], a fully-owned media group active in Eastern France; and 96% of the Banque européenne du Crédit Mutuel (BECM), a specialized bank that provides property lending in France and Germany. Other affiliates outside of France include:

Crédit Mutuel Arkéa and other federations

The federations outside of the Alliance fédérale are those of Brittany (headquartered at Le Relecq-Kerhuon near Brest) and Sud-Ouest (in Bordeaux), which together form a grouping called Crédit mutuel Arkéa with its own brand identity; Maine-Anjou-Basse-Normandie (MABN, in Laval); and Océan (in La Roche-sur-Yon). Each of the Arkéa, MABN and Océan groupings have their own serving banking entity, respectively the Caisse interfédérale Crédit Mutuel Arkéa, Caisse Fédérale du Crédit Mutuel de Maine-Anjou et Basse-Normandie, and Caisse Fédérale du Crédit Mutuel Océan. Arkéa also has specialized financial services subsidiaries mirroring those of the BFCM, as well as an online bank, Fortuneo [fr], which it acquired in 2006, and the Belgian Keytrade Bank, acquired in 2016.

Caisse Centrale du Crédit Mutuel

The Caisse Centrale du Crédit Mutuel, run by the CNCM in Paris and not to be confused with the Caisse Fédérale in Strasbourg, is a bank that serves financial functions for the entire group, including the Alliance fédérale and Arkéa. Its capital structure is a reflection of the Crédit Mutuel group's structure. As of end-2021, its shareholders were the Caisse Fédérale de Crédit Mutuel (54.07%); Crédit Mutuel Arkéa (20.15%); the Caisse Fédérale du Crédit Mutuel Nord Europe (13.11%); the Caisse Fédérale du Crédit Mutuel de Maine-Anjou et Basse-Normandie (7.26%); and the Caisse Fédérale du Crédit Mutuel Océan (5.41%). the regional federation of Crédit Mutuel Nord Europe, based in Lille, joined the Alliance fédérale with effect on 1 January 2022, so that its stake may be expected to be consolidated with that of the Caisse Fédérale.

Motto

Crédit Mutuel's corporate motto is "La banque qui appartient à ses clients, ça change tout!" ("The bank owned by its customers, that changes everything!")

Controversy

Check processing fees

In 2010 the French government's Autorité de la concurrence (the department in charge of regulating competition) fined eleven banks, including Crédit Mutuel, the sum of €384,900,000 for colluding to charge unjustified fees on check processing, especially for extra fees charged during the transition from paper check transfer to "Exchanges Check-Image" electronic transfer.

CIC and the National Bank of Haiti

Main article: National Bank of Haiti

Crédit Mutuel's subsidiary the Crédit Industriel et Commercial (CIC), known for having helped finance the construction of the Eiffel Tower, played a controversial role in extracting income from Haiti and transferring the wealth into France at around the same time. According to a 2022 New York Times investigation into France's colonial legacy in Haiti, the bank benefited loan and concession arrangements with the Haitian Government that required the latter to transfer to CIC and its partners nearly half of all taxes the government collected on exports. By "effectively choking off the nation’s primary source of income," the CIC "left a crippling legacy of financial extraction and dashed hopes — even by the standards of a nation with a long history of both."

See also

Other banking networks derived from the Raiffeisen system:

References

  1. ^ "2022 Financial Report Credit Mutuel Group" (PDF). Credit Mutuel. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  2. "E-K | I. R. U." Archived from the original on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
  3. "The list of significant supervised entities and the list of less significant institutions" (PDF). European Central Bank. 4 September 2014.
  4. "List of supervised entities" (PDF). European Central Bank. 1 January 2023.
  5. ^ "Our History". creditmutuel.com. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
  6. "Citi sells German arm for $6.7 bln to French mutual". Reuters. 8 December 2008. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  7. Jennifer Surane (30 November 2020). "Citi's Jane Fraser Talks About the Priorities She'll Set as CEO". Bloomberg. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  8. "Solid results & a significant second-half upturn: Credit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale is well placed for the recovery" (PDF). Crédit Mutuel Alliance Fédérale. 18 February 2021. p. 30.
  9. Collusion in the banking sector, Press Release of Autorité de la concurrence, République Française, 20 September 2010, retrv 2010 9 20
  10. 3rd UPDATE: French Watchdog Fines 11 Banks For Fee Cartel , Elena Bertson, Dow Jones News Wires / Wall Street Journal online, retr 2010 9 20
  11. Apuzzo, Matt; Méheut, Constant; Gebrekidan, Selam; Porter, Catherine (20 May 2022). "How a French Bank Captured Haiti". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 May 2022.

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