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Dresdner Bank

Dresdner Bank AG was a German bank, founded in 1872 in Dresden, then headquartered in Berlin from 1884 to 1945 and in Frankfurt from 1963 onwards after a postwar hiatus. Long Germany's second-largest bank behind Deutsche Bank, it was eventually acquired by Commerzbank in May 2009.

Dresdner Bank AG
Logo in the 2000s
Former Dresdner Bank head office [de] on the Bebelplatz in Berlin (1889-1945), later Deutsche Notenbank (1953-1968), Staatsbank der DDR (1968-1990), and a luxury hotel since 2006
Company typeAktiengesellschaft
IndustryFinancial services
PredecessorBöhmische Escompte-Bank
Danat-Bank 
FoundedNovember 12, 1872 (1872-11-12)
FounderEugen Gutmann 
DefunctMay 2009
FateAcquired by Commerzbank
SuccessorCommerzbank
HeadquartersFrankfurt, Germany
ProductsRetail, commercial and commercial real estate banking
ParentCommerzbank
Websitewww.dresdner-bank.com (redirects to Commerzbank)

1872-1933 edit

 
Eugen Gutmann (1840-1925), founder of Dresdner Bank, 1907 portrait by Max Liebermann

The Dresdner Bank was established on 12 November 1872 through the conversion of Bankhaus Kaskel [de], a Dresden-based private bank founded in 1771, on the advice of banker Eugen Gutmann [de]. The bank's founding consortium of investors consisted of Allgemeine Deutsche Credit-Anstalt [de] (Leipzig), Berliner Handels-Gesellschaft (Berlin), Deutsche Vereinsbank [de] (Frankfurt), Deutsche Effecten- und Wechselbank [de] (Frankfurt) and Anglo-Deutsche Bank [de] (Hamburg), with an initial capital of 8 million Thalers (24 million Marks) and 30 employees in Wilsdruffer Strasse in Dresden. Gutmann became chairman of the new entity's board and led it until his retirement in 1920.

In the 1870s, the Dresdner Bank acquired smaller regional institutes and several banks. In 1881, it opened a branch in Berlin, whose activity quickly exceeded the nominal head office in Dresden. Therefore, the registered office moved to Berlin in 1884, while the place of jurisdiction remained in Dresden until 1950.[citation needed] In 1889, together with Deutsche Bank and others, the Dresdner Bank participated in the creation of Deutsch-Asiatische Bank in Shanghai, and in 1894 of Banca Commerciale Italiana in Milan.[1]: 445  It also developed its own overseas-oriented network by opening branches in Hamburg (1892, when it absorbed the Anglo-Deutsche Bank), Bremen (1895), and London (1901).[1]: 493 

In 1905 Dresdner formed a close alliance with J. P. Morgan & Co. of New York, for joint action in international finance and issue operations, particularly the absorption of American securities by German investors. Operations in the orient and South America were carried on jointly in cooperation with the A. Schaaffhausen'scher Bankverein,[2] including the establishment in 1905 of Deutsche Orientbank which also involved the Nationalbank für Deutschland.[1]: 446 

By end-1908, Dresdner Bank was the second-largest German joint-stock bank by total deposits, with a total of 225 million Marks surpassed only by Deutsche Bank (489 million) and well ahead of Disconto-Gesellschaft (219 million) and Darmstädter Bank (109 million).[1]: 209  At that time, Dresdner Bank was referred to as one of the four "D-Banks" (all of which had names starting with a D) that dominated German commercial banking, together with Darmstädter Bank, Deutsche Bank, and Disconto-Gesellschaft.[3]: 13 

During the First World War, the London branch was forced to close; however, the branch network itself expanded.

By 1930, Dresdner Bank was Germany's third-largest joint-stock bank by total deposits with 2.3 billion Reichsmarks, behind Deutsche Bank und Disconto-Gesellschaft (4.8 billion) and Danat-Bank (2.4 billion), and ahead of Commerz- und Privatbank (1.5 billion), Reichs-Kredit-Gesellschaft (619 million), and Berliner Handels-Gesellschaft (412 million).[4]: 354 

As a consequence of state intervention during the banking crisis in 1931, the German Reich owned 66% and Deutsche Golddiskontbank owned 22% of Dresdner Bank shares; the total government stake in Dresdner Bank reached 97 percent, and (unlike at Deutsche Bank) resulted in significant interference in the bank's management.[5]: 7  As part of the same restructuring, Dresdner Bank acquired full ownership of Mercurbank in Vienna and of Deutsche Orientbank in Istanbul. Its deputy director was Hjalmar Schacht, soon-to-be Minister of Economy under Nazism.

Nazi era edit

Following Adolf Hitler's assumption of power in 1933, the Dresdner Bank, which had been founded by a Jewish banker, Eugen Gutmann, fired all 600 Jewish employees, including board members as well as bank clerks, and cancelled or confiscated their pensions. In May of 1933, "Nazi brownshirts swarmed into the lobby of the Dresdner headquarters and smashed the bronze bust of Eugen to the ground." The bank was declared "Judenrein' ("cleansed" of Jews) and became a tool of Hitler's Nazi regime.[6]

The "Aryanized" bank fully participated in the Nazi regime's aryanization of Jewish businesses and became known as the bank of choice for Heinrich Himmler's SS.[7] As with other banks that had been nationalized to various degrees in 1931, Dresdner Bank was reprivatised in stages in 1936-1937.[5]: 7 

After the Nazi Anschluss in 1938, Dresdner Bank on 15 June 1938 acquired ownership of Vienna-based Länderbank through its local subsidiary the Mercurbank, in a transaction forced under duress.[8] The Prague-based Živnostenská Banka's Austrian subsidiary was simultaneously subsumed in the merged entity, renamed Länderbank Wien AG. The new Länderbank had 33 branch offices in Vienna (36 after acquisition of the Austrian business of Società Italiana di Credito in 1939), in comparison to 24 for the rival Creditanstalt-Bankverein that had come under control of Deutsche Bank.

Later in 1938 following the Nazi annexation of the Sudetenland, Dresdner Bank, through Länderbank Wien, took over the former branches of the Böhmische Escompte-Bank in the South Moravian towns of Břeclav (German: Lundenburg), Mikulov (German: Nikolsburg) and Znojmo (German: Znaim).[9] In subsequent years, most of the Länderbank's resources were used to finance the Nazi war effort,[10] while in March 1939, Dresdner Bank acquired control of Böhmische Escompte-Bank.

During World War II, Dresdner Bank took over the Böhmische Escompte-Bank in Prague, the Societatea Bancară Română in Bucharest, the Handels- und Kreditbank in Riga, and the Kontinentale Bank in Brussels. It also maintained majority control of the Kommerzialbank in Kraków, Deutsche Handels- und Kreditbank in Bratislava, Banque Bulgare de Commerce in Sofia, and founded the Handelstrust West N. V. in Amsterdam.[citation needed] Following the invasion of Yugoslavia and proclamation of the Independent State of Croatia, Dresdner Bank took a 53 percent stake in Jugoslavenska Banka, renamed Kroatische Landesbank by court order of 3 June 1941.[11]: 94  Also in 1941, Dresdner Bank took over management control of the Bank of Athens during the Axis occupation of Greece, without however taking ownership out of consideration for Italian sensitivities.[12] In September 1941, Dresdner Bank appropriated a block of shares owned by Union européenne industrielle et financière, an affiliate of the French Schneider-Creusot group, in the Hungarian General Credit Bank.[13]: 221 

Dresdner Bank helped to finance concentration camps, including Auschwitz.[14] The bank was closely involved in the occupation of Europe, "essentially acting as the bank of the SS in Poland".[7]

As a result of World War II 80% of the bank's buildings were destroyed, costing the bank 162 offices in 56 locations.

1945-2002 edit

 
Dresdner Bank logo on a branch in Cologne, 1965
 
The 1978 Silberturm was part of the head office of Dresdner Bank
 
The Gallileo building in Frankfurt, completed in 2003, was part of the head office of Dresdner Bank until the 2009 merger

Following the end of World War II in Europe, the chairman of the bank's supervisory board, Carl Goetz [de], was arrested by the American occupation forces and held in custody until late 1947. Karl Rasche, the bank's former chief executive (German: Vorstandssprecher) since 1942, was tried at Nuremberg and sentenced to seven years' imprisonment.[15] The Deutsche Orientbank, Dresdner Bank's Turkish subsidiary, was liquidated in 1946.[16]

On 30 July 1977 in Oberursel (Taunus), Jürgen Ponto, the chairman of the board of directors of Dresdner Bank, was shot in his home during an attempted kidnapping by the RAF. Ponto later died from his injuries.[17][18][19][20]

Dresdner Bank expanded its network with acquisition and opening new offices not only in Europe but also in the United States, Singapore, Canada, Australia, Japan, Hong Kong, and China. Dresdner Bank was the first to open its own office in former eastern Germany in Dresden on 2 January 1990. After the acquisition of Kleinwort Benson in 1995 to form its investment-banking arm Dresdner Kleinwort, Dresdner Bank took over the American investment bank Wasserstein Perella Group Inc., New York in 2000. This investment banking unit was then renamed Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein.

In 1999, Dresdner Bank and Banque Nationale de Paris (BNP) proposed a merger but Allianz, a major shareholder of Dresdner Bank, opposed the merger. AXA, a major shareholder in BNP, is a rival of Allianz.[21]

Takeover by Allianz edit

In 2002 Dresdner Bank became a wholly owned subsidiary of the insurance corporation Allianz. In July 2006 Dresdner Kleinwort, dropped Wasserstein from their name and went through a re-organization of corporate bank, capital markets and investment bank. The arm made up of capital markets and investment banking.

In 2008 it was reported that Allianz was looking to dispose of Dresdner Bank. British banking group Lloyds TSB were amongst those rumoured to be interested. However, by July that year Lloyds TSB had denied any interest in making a bid.

Takeover by Commerzbank edit

On August 31, 2008, Commerzbank announced that it would acquire Dresdner Bank for EUR 9.8 billion.[22] Dresdner Bank was legally merged with Commerzbank on 11 May 2009 and ceased to be an independent entity.[23]

In 2009, Deutsche Bank announced it will integrate the Dresdner Agency Security Lending business into its trust and securities services (TSS) business in global transaction banking (GTB).[24]

Dresdner Bank attempted to get a banking operating license in Saint Petersburg, where former KGB agent Vladimir Putin was in charge of foreign economic relations.[a] Dresdner Bank appointed Matthias Warnig, a former Stasi agent and Vladimir Putin's former KGB contact,[26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][b] to negotiate with Putin. The office was opened in 1991.[27][32][c] Warnig became chairman of the board of directors of Dresdner Bank ZAO, Dresdner Bank Russian subsidiary which was located in the massive former German embassy on St. Isaac's Square and was a joint venture with Banque nationale de Paris (BNP).[27]

The bank has had a lucrative business relationship with Gazprom and the state oil company Rosneft. The bank advised on the forced sale of Yukos assets.[37]

In 2017, Frankfurt prosecutors, together with federal crime police and tax officials, conducted searches of Commerzbank offices as well as the flats of three suspects in Frankfurt and nearby Hanau about a "tax evasion probe in which several current and former managers are suspected of evading 40 million euros ($47 million) in taxes via dividend stripping, also known as "cum-ex" transactions".[38] The investigation also extends to trades in 2008 at Dresdner Bank, which was taken over by Commerzbank in 2009.[38]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Lazar Matveev served as a senior KGB liaison officer to the Stasi in Dresden, East Germany, during 1982 to 1989, and was the boss of Vladimir Putin and his former KGB colleagues Sergey Chemezov and Nikolay Tokarev.[25]
  2. ^ Vladimir Putin, KGB, recruited Mathias Warnig, Stasi, because the Stasi had West German spies and the KGB wanted to develop its own spy network in West Germany by recruiting Stasi West German spies into the KGB.[26]
  3. ^ In 1990, Banque nationale de Paris (BNP) entered into an alliance with Dresdner Bank.[27] This alliance to enter the Eastern European markets continued until December 2000.[36]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Jacob Riesser (1911), The German Great Banks and Their Concentration in connection with The Economic Development of Germany (PDF), Washington DC: National Monetary Commission
  2. ^ This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainRines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Dresdner Bank, The" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  3. ^ Federal Reserve Board (March 1945), Army Service Forces Manual M356-5 / Military Government Handbook – Germany – Section 5: Money and Banking, Washington DC: U.S. Army Service Forces
  4. ^ P. Barrett Whale (1930), Joint Stock Banking in Germany: A Study of the German Creditbanks Before and After the War (PDF)
  5. ^ a b Germà Bel (February 2010), "Against the mainstream: Nazi privatization in 1930s Germany", Economic History Review (63:1): 34–55
  6. ^ Goodman, Simon (2015). The Orpheus Clock: the search for my family's art treasures stolen by the Nazis. New York: Scribner. p. 98. ISBN 978-1-4516-9764-3.
  7. ^ a b "Hitler's Willing Bankers". Spiegel Online International.
  8. ^ "Mercurbank". Wien Geschichte Wiki.
  9. ^ "Überblick 1938-1945". Bank Austria.
  10. ^ "Österreichische Länderbank". Wien Geschichte Wiki.
  11. ^ Federal Reserve Board (February 1944), Army Service Forces Manual M355-5 / Civil Affairs Handbook Yugoslavia: Money and Banking, Washington DC: U.S. Army Service Forces
  12. ^ Hein A.M. Klemann & Sergei Kudryashov (2012). Occupied Economies: An Economic History of Nazi-Occupied Europe, 1939-1945. Berg.
  13. ^ Tamás Kovács (October 2017), "The swan song of the Hungarian General Credit Bank" (PDF), Economy and Finance (GÉP), Budapest: Hungarian Banking Association, 4:3
  14. ^ "Report: German Bank Helped Build Auschwitz". Deutsche Welle.
  15. ^ Ralf Ahrens (2005), Cleansing Corporate History as Constructing Corporate Identity: The Case of Dresdner Bank after World War II (PDF), European Business History Association
  16. ^ "Die Deutsche Orient-Bank". Deutsche Vertretungen in der Türkei.
  17. ^ Winkler, Heinrich August (2007). Germany: 1933-1990. Oxford University Press. p. 318. ISBN 978-0-19-926598-5. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  18. ^ Melzer, Patricia (2009). "'Death in the Shape of a Young Girl': Feminist Responses to Media Representations of Women Terrorists during the 'German Autumn' of 1977". International Feminist Journal of Politics. 11 (1): 35–62. doi:10.1080/14616740802567782. S2CID 145187393.
  19. ^ . Time. 15 August 1977. Archived from the original on December 15, 2008. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  20. ^ "Über Jürgen Ponto" [About Jürgen Ponto] (in German). Commerzbank. 2017-07-24. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  21. ^ "BNP denies Dresdner tie: France's biggest bank says it's not holding merger talks with Germany's number three". CNN. September 9, 1999. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  22. ^ Esterl, Mike; Cimilluca, Dana (2008-09-01). "Commerzbank to Acquire German Rival Dresdner". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
  23. ^ Dresdner Bank Facts and Figures
  24. ^ "Deutsche Bank to Acquire Dresdner Bank's Global Agency Securities Lending Business". www.businesswire.com. 2009-05-13. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
  25. ^ Politike.ru | Лазарь Матвеев | http://politike.ru/termin/matveev-lazar-lazarevich.html
  26. ^ a b Dawisha, Karen (2014). Putin's Kleptocracy: Who Owns Russia?. Simon & Schuster. pp. 51–6. ISBN 978-1-4767-9519-5.
  27. ^ a b c d . The St. Petersburg Times. March 1, 2005. Archived from the original on June 13, 2008. Retrieved June 15, 2012.
  28. ^ Nölting, Andreas; Stuhr, Arne (February 23, 2005). "Der Präsident, die Stasi und der Banker" [The president, the Stasi and the banker]. Manager Magazin (in German). Archived from the original on February 12, 2021. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  29. ^ Chazan, Guy; Crawford, David (February 23, 2005). . The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved January 13, 2018. Archive is in Russian
  30. ^ . February 23, 2005. Archived from the original on 23 February 2005.
  31. ^ "Маттиас Варниг - старый друг Путина // The Wall Street Journal: Глава российского отделения Dresdner Bank, занимавшегося оценкой Юганскнефтегаза - агент Штази, завербованный Путиным в Дрездене". www.compromat.ru.
  32. ^ a b Macrakis, Kristie (2008). Seduced by Secrets Inside the Stasi's Spy-Tech World. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521887472.
  33. ^ Franchetti, Mark (March 19, 2000). "Young Putin's Spy Disaster". The Sunday Times. Retrieved January 13, 2018.[permanent dead link]
  34. ^ Pietsch, Irene (2001). Heikle Freundschaftgen: Mit den Putins Russland erleben [Delicate Friendships: Experiences with the Putins Russia] (in German). Vienna: Molden Verlag. ISBN 978-3854850595.
  35. ^ Питч, Ирен (Pitch, Iren); Алексеевой, И.; Л.Есаковой; Р.Эйвадиса) (2002). Пикантная дружба: Моя подруга Людмила Путина, товарищ [The Spicey Friendship: My Friend Lyudmila Putina, Her Family and Dear Companion] (in Russian). Moscow: Zakharov. ISBN 978-5815901810.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  36. ^ "BNP-Paribas, Dresdner Will Split Up Their Eastern Europe Joint Ventures". Washington Post. December 22, 2000. Archived from the original on October 1, 2022. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  37. ^ Nord Stream, Matthias Warnig (codename "Arthur") and the Gazprom Lobby Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 6 Issue: 114
  38. ^ a b Sheahan, Maria; Sims, Tom; Seidenstuecker, Hans (November 14, 2017). "German prosecutors raid Commerzbank in tax evasion probe". Reuters. Retrieved February 11, 2021.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Dresdner Bank at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website
  • History - Timeline
  • Allianz Group corporate website
  • Documents and clippings about Dresdner Bank in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

dresdner, bank, german, bank, founded, 1872, dresden, then, headquartered, berlin, from, 1884, 1945, frankfurt, from, 1963, onwards, after, postwar, hiatus, long, germany, second, largest, bank, behind, deutsche, bank, eventually, acquired, commerzbank, 2009, . Dresdner Bank AG was a German bank founded in 1872 in Dresden then headquartered in Berlin from 1884 to 1945 and in Frankfurt from 1963 onwards after a postwar hiatus Long Germany s second largest bank behind Deutsche Bank it was eventually acquired by Commerzbank in May 2009 Dresdner Bank AGLogo in the 2000sFormer Dresdner Bank head office de on the Bebelplatz in Berlin 1889 1945 later Deutsche Notenbank 1953 1968 Staatsbank der DDR 1968 1990 and a luxury hotel since 2006Company typeAktiengesellschaftIndustryFinancial servicesPredecessorBohmische Escompte BankDanat Bank FoundedNovember 12 1872 1872 11 12 FounderEugen Gutmann DefunctMay 2009FateAcquired by CommerzbankSuccessorCommerzbankHeadquartersFrankfurt GermanyProductsRetail commercial and commercial real estate bankingParentCommerzbankWebsitewww wbr dresdner bank wbr com redirects to Commerzbank Contents 1 1872 1933 2 Nazi era 3 1945 2002 4 Takeover by Allianz 5 Takeover by Commerzbank 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External links1872 1933 edit nbsp Eugen Gutmann 1840 1925 founder of Dresdner Bank 1907 portrait by Max LiebermannThe Dresdner Bank was established on 12 November 1872 through the conversion of Bankhaus Kaskel de a Dresden based private bank founded in 1771 on the advice of banker Eugen Gutmann de The bank s founding consortium of investors consisted of Allgemeine Deutsche Credit Anstalt de Leipzig Berliner Handels Gesellschaft Berlin Deutsche Vereinsbank de Frankfurt Deutsche Effecten und Wechselbank de Frankfurt and Anglo Deutsche Bank de Hamburg with an initial capital of 8 million Thalers 24 million Marks and 30 employees in Wilsdruffer Strasse in Dresden Gutmann became chairman of the new entity s board and led it until his retirement in 1920 In the 1870s the Dresdner Bank acquired smaller regional institutes and several banks In 1881 it opened a branch in Berlin whose activity quickly exceeded the nominal head office in Dresden Therefore the registered office moved to Berlin in 1884 while the place of jurisdiction remained in Dresden until 1950 citation needed In 1889 together with Deutsche Bank and others the Dresdner Bank participated in the creation of Deutsch Asiatische Bank in Shanghai and in 1894 of Banca Commerciale Italiana in Milan 1 445 It also developed its own overseas oriented network by opening branches in Hamburg 1892 when it absorbed the Anglo Deutsche Bank Bremen 1895 and London 1901 1 493 In 1905 Dresdner formed a close alliance with J P Morgan amp Co of New York for joint action in international finance and issue operations particularly the absorption of American securities by German investors Operations in the orient and South America were carried on jointly in cooperation with the A Schaaffhausen scher Bankverein 2 including the establishment in 1905 of Deutsche Orientbank which also involved the Nationalbank fur Deutschland 1 446 By end 1908 Dresdner Bank was the second largest German joint stock bank by total deposits with a total of 225 million Marks surpassed only by Deutsche Bank 489 million and well ahead of Disconto Gesellschaft 219 million and Darmstadter Bank 109 million 1 209 At that time Dresdner Bank was referred to as one of the four D Banks all of which had names starting with a D that dominated German commercial banking together with Darmstadter Bank Deutsche Bank and Disconto Gesellschaft 3 13 During the First World War the London branch was forced to close however the branch network itself expanded By 1930 Dresdner Bank was Germany s third largest joint stock bank by total deposits with 2 3 billion Reichsmarks behind Deutsche Bank und Disconto Gesellschaft 4 8 billion and Danat Bank 2 4 billion and ahead of Commerz und Privatbank 1 5 billion Reichs Kredit Gesellschaft 619 million and Berliner Handels Gesellschaft 412 million 4 354 As a consequence of state intervention during the banking crisis in 1931 the German Reich owned 66 and Deutsche Golddiskontbank owned 22 of Dresdner Bank shares the total government stake in Dresdner Bank reached 97 percent and unlike at Deutsche Bank resulted in significant interference in the bank s management 5 7 As part of the same restructuring Dresdner Bank acquired full ownership of Mercurbank in Vienna and of Deutsche Orientbank in Istanbul Its deputy director was Hjalmar Schacht soon to be Minister of Economy under Nazism Nazi era editFollowing Adolf Hitler s assumption of power in 1933 the Dresdner Bank which had been founded by a Jewish banker Eugen Gutmann fired all 600 Jewish employees including board members as well as bank clerks and cancelled or confiscated their pensions In May of 1933 Nazi brownshirts swarmed into the lobby of the Dresdner headquarters and smashed the bronze bust of Eugen to the ground The bank was declared Judenrein cleansed of Jews and became a tool of Hitler s Nazi regime 6 The Aryanized bank fully participated in the Nazi regime s aryanization of Jewish businesses and became known as the bank of choice for Heinrich Himmler s SS 7 As with other banks that had been nationalized to various degrees in 1931 Dresdner Bank was reprivatised in stages in 1936 1937 5 7 After the Nazi Anschluss in 1938 Dresdner Bank on 15 June 1938 acquired ownership of Vienna based Landerbank through its local subsidiary the Mercurbank in a transaction forced under duress 8 The Prague based Zivnostenska Banka s Austrian subsidiary was simultaneously subsumed in the merged entity renamed Landerbank Wien AG The new Landerbank had 33 branch offices in Vienna 36 after acquisition of the Austrian business of Societa Italiana di Credito in 1939 in comparison to 24 for the rival Creditanstalt Bankverein that had come under control of Deutsche Bank Later in 1938 following the Nazi annexation of the Sudetenland Dresdner Bank through Landerbank Wien took over the former branches of the Bohmische Escompte Bank in the South Moravian towns of Breclav German Lundenburg Mikulov German Nikolsburg and Znojmo German Znaim 9 In subsequent years most of the Landerbank s resources were used to finance the Nazi war effort 10 while in March 1939 Dresdner Bank acquired control of Bohmische Escompte Bank During World War II Dresdner Bank took over the Bohmische Escompte Bank in Prague the Societatea Bancară Romană in Bucharest the Handels und Kreditbank in Riga and the Kontinentale Bank in Brussels It also maintained majority control of the Kommerzialbank in Krakow Deutsche Handels und Kreditbank in Bratislava Banque Bulgare de Commerce in Sofia and founded the Handelstrust West N V in Amsterdam citation needed Following the invasion of Yugoslavia and proclamation of the Independent State of Croatia Dresdner Bank took a 53 percent stake in Jugoslavenska Banka renamed Kroatische Landesbank by court order of 3 June 1941 11 94 Also in 1941 Dresdner Bank took over management control of the Bank of Athens during the Axis occupation of Greece without however taking ownership out of consideration for Italian sensitivities 12 In September 1941 Dresdner Bank appropriated a block of shares owned by Union europeenne industrielle et financiere an affiliate of the French Schneider Creusot group in the Hungarian General Credit Bank 13 221 Dresdner Bank helped to finance concentration camps including Auschwitz 14 The bank was closely involved in the occupation of Europe essentially acting as the bank of the SS in Poland 7 As a result of World War II 80 of the bank s buildings were destroyed costing the bank 162 offices in 56 locations 1945 2002 edit nbsp Dresdner Bank logo on a branch in Cologne 1965 nbsp The 1978 Silberturm was part of the head office of Dresdner Bank nbsp The Gallileo building in Frankfurt completed in 2003 was part of the head office of Dresdner Bank until the 2009 mergerFollowing the end of World War II in Europe the chairman of the bank s supervisory board Carl Goetz de was arrested by the American occupation forces and held in custody until late 1947 Karl Rasche the bank s former chief executive German Vorstandssprecher since 1942 was tried at Nuremberg and sentenced to seven years imprisonment 15 The Deutsche Orientbank Dresdner Bank s Turkish subsidiary was liquidated in 1946 16 On 30 July 1977 in Oberursel Taunus Jurgen Ponto the chairman of the board of directors of Dresdner Bank was shot in his home during an attempted kidnapping by the RAF Ponto later died from his injuries 17 18 19 20 Dresdner Bank expanded its network with acquisition and opening new offices not only in Europe but also in the United States Singapore Canada Australia Japan Hong Kong and China Dresdner Bank was the first to open its own office in former eastern Germany in Dresden on 2 January 1990 After the acquisition of Kleinwort Benson in 1995 to form its investment banking arm Dresdner Kleinwort Dresdner Bank took over the American investment bank Wasserstein Perella Group Inc New York in 2000 This investment banking unit was then renamed Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein In 1999 Dresdner Bank and Banque Nationale de Paris BNP proposed a merger but Allianz a major shareholder of Dresdner Bank opposed the merger AXA a major shareholder in BNP is a rival of Allianz 21 Takeover by Allianz editIn 2002 Dresdner Bank became a wholly owned subsidiary of the insurance corporation Allianz In July 2006 Dresdner Kleinwort dropped Wasserstein from their name and went through a re organization of corporate bank capital markets and investment bank The arm made up of capital markets and investment banking In 2008 it was reported that Allianz was looking to dispose of Dresdner Bank British banking group Lloyds TSB were amongst those rumoured to be interested However by July that year Lloyds TSB had denied any interest in making a bid Takeover by Commerzbank editOn August 31 2008 Commerzbank announced that it would acquire Dresdner Bank for EUR 9 8 billion 22 Dresdner Bank was legally merged with Commerzbank on 11 May 2009 and ceased to be an independent entity 23 In 2009 Deutsche Bank announced it will integrate the Dresdner Agency Security Lending business into its trust and securities services TSS business in global transaction banking GTB 24 Dresdner Bank attempted to get a banking operating license in Saint Petersburg where former KGB agent Vladimir Putin was in charge of foreign economic relations a Dresdner Bank appointed Matthias Warnig a former Stasi agent and Vladimir Putin s former KGB contact 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 b to negotiate with Putin The office was opened in 1991 27 32 c Warnig became chairman of the board of directors of Dresdner Bank ZAO Dresdner Bank Russian subsidiary which was located in the massive former German embassy on St Isaac s Square and was a joint venture with Banque nationale de Paris BNP 27 The bank has had a lucrative business relationship with Gazprom and the state oil company Rosneft The bank advised on the forced sale of Yukos assets 37 In 2017 Frankfurt prosecutors together with federal crime police and tax officials conducted searches of Commerzbank offices as well as the flats of three suspects in Frankfurt and nearby Hanau about a tax evasion probe in which several current and former managers are suspected of evading 40 million euros 47 million in taxes via dividend stripping also known as cum ex transactions 38 The investigation also extends to trades in 2008 at Dresdner Bank which was taken over by Commerzbank in 2009 38 See also editAllgemeine Deutsche Credit Anstalt Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service The Holocaust Nuremberg Laws Anti Jewish legislation in pre war Nazi Germany Jakob GoldschmidtNotes edit Lazar Matveev served as a senior KGB liaison officer to the Stasi in Dresden East Germany during 1982 to 1989 and was the boss of Vladimir Putin and his former KGB colleagues Sergey Chemezov and Nikolay Tokarev 25 Vladimir Putin KGB recruited Mathias Warnig Stasi because the Stasi had West German spies and the KGB wanted to develop its own spy network in West Germany by recruiting Stasi West German spies into the KGB 26 In 1990 Banque nationale de Paris BNP entered into an alliance with Dresdner Bank 27 This alliance to enter the Eastern European markets continued until December 2000 36 References edit a b c d Jacob Riesser 1911 The German Great Banks and Their Concentration in connection with The Economic Development of Germany PDF Washington DC National Monetary Commission This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Rines George Edwin ed 1920 Dresdner Bank The Encyclopedia Americana Federal Reserve Board March 1945 Army Service Forces Manual M356 5 Military Government Handbook Germany Section 5 Money and Banking Washington DC U S Army Service Forces P Barrett Whale 1930 Joint Stock Banking in Germany A Study of the German Creditbanks Before and After the War PDF a b Germa Bel February 2010 Against the mainstream Nazi privatization in 1930s Germany Economic History Review 63 1 34 55 Goodman Simon 2015 The Orpheus Clock the search for my family s art treasures stolen by the Nazis New York Scribner p 98 ISBN 978 1 4516 9764 3 a b Hitler s Willing Bankers Spiegel Online International Mercurbank Wien Geschichte Wiki Uberblick 1938 1945 Bank Austria Osterreichische Landerbank Wien Geschichte Wiki Federal Reserve Board February 1944 Army Service Forces Manual M355 5 Civil Affairs Handbook Yugoslavia Money and Banking Washington DC U S Army Service Forces Hein A M Klemann amp Sergei Kudryashov 2012 Occupied Economies An Economic History of Nazi Occupied Europe 1939 1945 Berg Tamas Kovacs October 2017 The swan song of the Hungarian General Credit Bank PDF Economy and Finance GEP Budapest Hungarian Banking Association 4 3 Report German Bank Helped Build Auschwitz Deutsche Welle Ralf Ahrens 2005 Cleansing Corporate History as Constructing Corporate Identity The Case of Dresdner Bank after World War II PDF European Business History Association Die Deutsche Orient Bank Deutsche Vertretungen in der Turkei Winkler Heinrich August 2007 Germany 1933 1990 Oxford University Press p 318 ISBN 978 0 19 926598 5 Retrieved 13 September 2013 Melzer Patricia 2009 Death in the Shape of a Young Girl Feminist Responses to Media Representations of Women Terrorists during the German Autumn of 1977 International Feminist Journal of Politics 11 1 35 62 doi 10 1080 14616740802567782 S2CID 145187393 Red Roses from Roter Morgen Time 15 August 1977 Archived from the original on December 15 2008 Retrieved 9 January 2018 Uber Jurgen Ponto About Jurgen Ponto in German Commerzbank 2017 07 24 Retrieved 5 June 2018 BNP denies Dresdner tie France s biggest bank says it s not holding merger talks with Germany s number three CNN September 9 1999 Retrieved August 9 2023 Esterl Mike Cimilluca Dana 2008 09 01 Commerzbank to Acquire German Rival Dresdner Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 2020 05 27 Dresdner Bank Facts and Figures Deutsche Bank to Acquire Dresdner Bank s Global Agency Securities Lending Business www businesswire com 2009 05 13 Retrieved 2020 05 27 Politike ru Lazar Matveev http politike ru termin matveev lazar lazarevich html a b Dawisha Karen 2014 Putin s Kleptocracy Who Owns Russia Simon amp Schuster pp 51 6 ISBN 978 1 4767 9519 5 a b c d Report Links Putin to Dresdner The St Petersburg Times March 1 2005 Archived from the original on June 13 2008 Retrieved June 15 2012 Nolting Andreas Stuhr Arne February 23 2005 Der Prasident die Stasi und der Banker The president the Stasi and the banker Manager Magazin in German Archived from the original on February 12 2021 Retrieved January 13 2018 Chazan Guy Crawford David February 23 2005 In From the Cold A Friendship Forged in Spying Pays Dividends in Russia Today Top Dresdner Banker s Ties to Putin Go Back to Days When They Were Agents The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved January 13 2018 Archive is in Russian Inopressa Druzhba skreplennaya shpionazhem segodnya prinosit dividendy v Rossii February 23 2005 Archived from the original on 23 February 2005 Mattias Varnig staryj drug Putina The Wall Street Journal Glava rossijskogo otdeleniya Dresdner Bank zanimavshegosya ocenkoj Yuganskneftegaza agent Shtazi zaverbovannyj Putinym v Drezdene www compromat ru a b Macrakis Kristie 2008 Seduced by Secrets Inside the Stasi s Spy Tech World New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521887472 Franchetti Mark March 19 2000 Young Putin s Spy Disaster The Sunday Times Retrieved January 13 2018 permanent dead link Pietsch Irene 2001 Heikle Freundschaftgen Mit den Putins Russland erleben Delicate Friendships Experiences with the Putins Russia in German Vienna Molden Verlag ISBN 978 3854850595 Pitch Iren Pitch Iren Alekseevoj I L Esakovoj R Ejvadisa 2002 Pikantnaya druzhba Moya podruga Lyudmila Putina tovarish The Spicey Friendship My Friend Lyudmila Putina Her Family and Dear Companion in Russian Moscow Zakharov ISBN 978 5815901810 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link BNP Paribas Dresdner Will Split Up Their Eastern Europe Joint Ventures Washington Post December 22 2000 Archived from the original on October 1 2022 Retrieved August 9 2023 Nord Stream Matthias Warnig codename Arthur and the Gazprom Lobby Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume 6 Issue 114 a b Sheahan Maria Sims Tom Seidenstuecker Hans November 14 2017 German prosecutors raid Commerzbank in tax evasion probe Reuters Retrieved February 11 2021 External links edit nbsp Banks portal nbsp Media related to Dresdner Bank at Wikimedia Commons Official website History Timeline Allianz Group corporate website Dresdner Kleinwort Dresdner Cetelem Yahoo Dresdner Bank AG Company Profile Documents and clippings about Dresdner Bank in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dresdner Bank amp oldid 1207144292, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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