Banque Franco-Japonaise
The Banque Franco-Japonaise (BFJ) (Japanese: 日仏銀行, Hepburn: Nichi-Futsu Ginkō, lit. 'French-Japanese Bank') was a mid-sized bank headquartered in Paris, France. It was founded in 1912 with intent to pursue common projects with Japanese stakeholders in Asia, especially in China.[1]: 4 OverviewThe BFJ was established on 1 July 1912 on the initiative of Société Générale.[2] Its initial capital of 25 million French francs was split between Société Générale and the Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas on the one hand (60 percent), and the Industrial Bank of Japan on the other hand (40 percent).[1]: 4 It listed on the Paris Stock Exchange on 13 March 1914.[3] The BFJ's initial chairman was Henri Guernaut, member of the board of Société Générale and its future chairman as well. René Dorizon, himself the son of Société Générale Director Louis Dorizon, had been instrumental in the BFJ's creation and was its first chief executive (French: directeur général).[4]: 137 Soeda Juichi was one of the bank's promoters on the Japanese side.[5] The bank was initially established at 132, rue Réaumur in Paris,[4]: 14 in a building originally erected in 1901 for the short-lived Banque Spéciale des Valeurs Industrielles.[6] The BSJ then relocated and was at 34, rue de Chateaudun by 1918,[7] and eventually at 33, rue Cambon by 1929.[8] By the late 1930s it had branches in Tokyo and Kobe.[9] During World War II, the BFJ was associated with the Vichy Government and by the end of the war was one of only two foreign banks that retained activities in Japan, the other being Deutsche Bank für Ostasien,[10]: 378 which had been established during the war to facilitate trade with Nazi Germany.[11]: 9 In October 1945, Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers Douglas MacArthur mandated the liquidation of the BFJ's Japanese branches together with those of the Bank of Chōsen, Bank of Taiwan, Chōsen Industrial Bank, and Deutsche Bank für Ostasien.[12] By 1951, the BFJ was still in activity in Paris, by then controlled by Jean de Gunzburg (1884–1959) of the Gunzburg family ,[13] who had already been among the bank's board members during the 1920s.[8] It was involved in gold trades with the Soviet Union via offshore financial centers such as Beirut and Tangier.[13] See alsoReferences
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