Powered By Blogger

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Indian Bank




Indian Bank
TypePublic
Traded asBSE523465
NSEINDIANB
IndustryBanking
Founded1907
HeadquartersChennaiIndia
Key peopleT.M.Bhasin (Chairman & MD)
RevenueINR 9030.78 Crores ~ $2007m (2009-10)
Employees22,000
ParentGovernment of India
Websitewww.indianbank.in

Indian Bank (BSE523465NSEINDIANB) is a major Indian Commercial Bankheadquartered in Chennai (Madras), India. It has 22,000 employees, 1,657 branches and is one of the big public sector banks of India. It has overseas branches in ColomboSri Lanka,Singapore, and 229 correspondent banks in 69 countries. The Government of India nationalized the bank, along with 13 other major commercial banks, on 19 July 1969.

Contents

 [hide]

[edit]History

Indian bank was founded by Annamalai and Ramaswami Chettiar in 1907. This was in response to the financial crash faced by two leading trading companies in Madras, Arbuthnot's and Binny's.[1]

[edit]Timeline

  • 1907: Established on 15 August
  • 1932: Indian Bank opened a branch in Colombo.
  • 1935: IB opened a branch in Jaffna.
  • 1939: IB closed the Jaffna branch.
  • 1940: IB opened a branch in Rangoon (Yangon).
  • 1941: IB closed the Rangoon branch but opened branches in Singapore (where future branch manager KB Pisharody(1915–1998) started his career in the same year), and in Kuala LumpurIpoh, and Penang. The rapid advance of the Japanese Army forced IB to close all its branches in Malaya and Singapore.
  • 1942: IB closed the Colombo branch.
  • Post-WWII: IB reopened its Malayan and Singapore branches.
  • 1948: IB reopened its branch in Colombo.
  • 1960s: IB acquired Mannargudi Bank (est. 1932) and Salem Bank (est. 1925).
  • 1969: The Government of India nationalized 14 top banks, including Indian Bank.
  • 1973: Indian Overseas Bank, Indian Bank and United Commercial Bank established United Asian Bank Berhad in which IOB held 16.67% of the paid up capital, as a result of a new banking law in Malaysia that prohibited foreign government banks from operating in the country.
  • 1978: IB became a technical adviser to P T Bank Rama in Indonesia, the result of the merger of P T Bank Masyarakat and P T Bank Ramayana.
  • 1980: IB, Bank of Baroda, and Union Bank of India established IUB International Finance, a licensed deposit taker in Hong Kong. Each of the three banks took an equal share in the joint venture.
  • 1987: IB acquired Bank of Tanjore (Bank of Thanjavur) in Tamil Nadu in a rescue.
  • 1998: Bank of Baroda bought out its partners in IUB Intl. Fin. in Hong Kong. Apparently this was a response to regulatory changes following Hong Kong’s reversion. IUB became Bank of Baroda (Hong Kong), a restricted license bank.
  • 2007: IB celebrated its centenary year.

[edit]Diversified banking activities - 3 Subsidiary companies

  • Indbank Merchant Banking Services Ltd
  • IndBank Housing Ltd.
  • IndFund Management Ltd

[edit]See also

[edit]References

  1. ^ Stanley A. Cochanek. Business and Politics in India. University of California Press. pp. 152.

[edit]Further reading

  • Seshadri, R.K. 1982. A swadeshi bank from south India. Madras: Indian Bank.

[edit]External links