Banque Franco-Serbe
The Banque Franco-Serbe (BFS, "French-Serbian Bank") was a French bank founded in 1910 to support French projects in the Kingdom of Serbia. It was a major financial institution in Serbia, then the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and Kingdom of Yugoslavia until World War II.


History
The Banque Franco-Serbe was created in 1910 by a group of French-linked financial institutions, mainly the Imperial Ottoman Bank of Constantinople (known by its French acronym BIO), the Banque de l'Union parisienne (BUP) of Paris, and the Société financière d’Orient of Brussels,[2] the latter of which had been created by the BIO in 1896 to support markets for Ottoman securities in which it had troubled exposures.[3] The Paris-based Société Générale and Bardac family bank also participated. The BFS's Parisian head office was initially established in a building that had been acquired by the BUP in 1905 at 14, rue Le Peletier,[4]: 40 and moved in the early 1920s to a new building at 100, rue de la Victoire.[1] The BFS had a branch in Belgrade from the start. It also soon opened an office in London.[1]
In 1914, following the Balkan Wars, the BFS took over the former BIO branches in Bitola and Skopje. During World War I, its activity in Serbia was suspended and its local gold reserves were shipped by the French Navy to Marseille via Thessaloniki. By 1925, it had additional branches in Fiume, Thessaloniki, and Zagreb,[1] and by 1930 also in Niš.[5] Following financial difficulties, the BIO, by then controlled by the Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas (BPPB), became the BFS's majority owner through a capital restructuring in 1928.[1]
The operations of the BFS in Yugoslavia were nationalized by the Communist authorities by December 1946, together with all other banks in the country,[6] and merged into the National Bank of Yugoslavia.[7] The French entity kept existing until at least the 1970s as a subsidiary of the BPPB.[1]
Leadership
- Arsène Henry, Chairman 1910-1928
- Raoul Mallet, Chairman 1928-1937
- Frédéric Pillet-Will (son of the namesake financier), Chairman 1937-1948 (?)
- Philippe Mallet, Chairman and Chief Executive 1948-1973[1]
Gallery
- The Bitola branch in January 1917, damaged by fighting on the Macedonian front of World War I
- The same building in 2014, now a branch of Stopanska Banka
Notes
- "Banque Franco-Serbe" (PDF). Entreprises coloniales françaises. 2016.
- "Banque ottomane (et Banque franco-serbe)". Archives nationales du monde du travail.
- "Société financière d'Orient" (PDF). Entreprises coloniales françaises. 2016.
- Hubert Bonin (2011), La Banque de l’Union Parisienne (1874/1904-1974). De l’Europe aux Outre-Mers, Publications de la Société française d'histoire des outre-mers
- "Banque Ottomane" (PDF). ICRC. 1930.
- Jouko J. Hauvonen (1970), Postwar Developments in Money and Banking in Yugoslavia (PDF), International Monetary Fund, p. 564
- Katarina Todić (March 2015), A Traditional Friendship? France and Yugoslavia in the Cold War World, 1945–1969 (PDF), Hamilton, Ontario: McMaster University, p. 80