ABSTRACT
From the late nineteenth century to the late twentieth century the European banking sector experienced countless mergers and acquisitions. The outcome of this century of consolidation is strikingly similar across the continent, with the banking sector of each country now dominated by a handful of giant banking corporations. Consolidation and concentration trends in banking was the theme of the Academic Archive Colloquium of the European Association for Banking History held in Madrid in June 1997. This volume is comprised of the 18 papers and responses presented at the Colloquium by a truly international group of delegates. Some of the themes explored in the book include: the significance of mergers for bank archives; the regulation of mergers and their impact on banking legislation; reactions to consolidation from within and without the banking industry; case studies of particular mergers and their impact on the wider banking community. Youssef Cassis's introductory chapter provides a general survey of trends in the consolidation process and suggests that the advent of the Euro may herald a new era in the history of European banking consolidation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I: History and Archives of Consolidation in European Banking: General Trends and some Case Studies
chapter 2|32 pages
Bank Mergers and Consolidation in Spanish History
chapter 3|12 pages
Spanish Banking Archives and the Legacy of Mergers and Acquisitions
chapter 4|20 pages
Marriage Lines: The Archive Dimensions of Bank Mergers
chapter 5|5 pages
Comments
part |2 pages
Part II: Legal Aspects of Bank Mergers
chapter 6|13 pages
Supervision and Regulation of Bank Mergers: A Historical Survey
part |2 pages
Part III: Social and Financial Aspects of Consolidation
part |2 pages
Part IV: Concentration versus Deconcentration in Continental Banking
chapter 13|18 pages
Responses to Banking Concentration in Germany, 1900-33
chapter 15|5 pages
Comments
part |2 pages
Part V: Mergers and European Banking in Latin America