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Bank Lombard Odier & Co

The Lombard Odier Group is an independent Swiss banking group based in Geneva. Its operations are organised into three divisions: private banking (wealth management), asset management, and IT and back and middle office services for other financial institutions. In 2022, the bank had total client assets of CHF 300 billion,[2] which makes it one of the biggest players in the Swiss private banking sector.[5][6]

Bank Lombard Odier & Co Ltd
TypeCorporate partnership (société en commandite par actions)
IndustryPrivate banking
PredecessorLombard, Odier & Cie; Darier, Hentsch & Cie.
Founded2002 (11 January 1796, 1876)
FounderHenri Hentsch, Jean-Gédéon Lombard
HeadquartersGeneva, Switzerland
Key people
Hubert Keller, Frédéric Rochat, Denis Pittet, Annika Falkengren, Alexandre Zeller and Jean-Pascal Porcherot.[1]
AUM CHF 300 billion (2022)[2]
Number of employees
2,720 (2022)[3]
Capital ratio30%[2]
RatingFitch: AA−[4]
Websitewww.lombardodier.com

The group was formed in the summer of 2002, as Lombard, Odier, Darier, Hentsch & Cie, by the merger of Lombard, Odier & Cie and Darier, Hentsch & Cie. As the latter was originally founded in 1796, the group has a claim to being the oldest private bank in Geneva.[7] The company name was simplified to Lombard Odier Group in 2010, although the firm continues to include on its official logo the names of the four founding partners.

Since 2014, the bank has held the status of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The Lombard Odier Group is a legal holding company under Swiss law, bearing the name Lombard Odier Company SCmA since 2016.[8] This holding company owns all firms belonging to the group, most notably the bank Lombard Odier & Cie SA, and Lombard Odier Asset Management (Europe) Limited in London, which forms the asset management branch of the group. Lombard Odier Investment Managers (LOIM) is the name the group is known by in the international field of asset management.

Outside of Switzerland, the group has branches in Europe, the Americas, Asia and the Middle East. Including its network of collaborators, the group has around 2,720 employees worldwide in 2022.

History edit

The founding families edit

The Lombard family (from Lombardi) arrived in Geneva in 1573 from Tortorella (Kingdom of Naples), fleeing religious persecution under viceroy Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle.[9][10] The two sons of Theodoro Lombardi, César and Marc-Antoine Lombard, performed dressage and were involved in the horse trade. They received the title of burgesses of Geneva in 1589 for their services in the fight against the duke of Savoie.[9] Jean-Gédéon Lombard, a 6th generation descendant of César Lombard, became associated with the bank Hentsch, Lombard & Cie in 1798, marking the entry of the Lombard family into the field of Genevan banking.[9]

The Odier family is first documented as being in Geneva circa 1714, the same time when Antoine Odier received his title as Genevan burgess.[11] The family came from Pont-en-Royans in France.[11] Members of the family held positions as politicians, doctors, artists, engineers, and then bankers. Charles Odier became associated with the bank Lombard, Bonna & Cie in 1830, which then became Lombard, Odier & Cie.[11]

The Darier family arrived in Geneva in 1738 from the Dauphiné region in France.[12] Louis Darier died accidentally shortly after the birth of his son, Hugues Darier, who became a prominent figure in clockmaking and obtained the title of burgess of Geneva in 1787.[12] Jules Darier-Rey, Hugues’ grandson, became associated with the bank Chaponnière & Cie in 1873. The firm became Darier, Chaponnière & Cie in 1875, and then Darier & Cie in 1880.[12] Another of Hugues Darier's sons, Jean-Louis Darier (1766–1825), earlier on contributed to the beginnings of the bank Ferrier, Lullin & Cie in 1795, but this organisation remains without any link to what is now Lombard Odier.[12]

The Hentsch family arrived in Geneva circa 1758, while Benjamin-Gottlob Hentsch (a clergyman) emigrated from Lower-Lusatia to become a tutor in Switzerland.[13] His son, Henri Hentsch (1761–1835), founded the family bank in 1796.[13]

Origins of the bank (1796–1800) edit

 
Henri Hentsch (1761–1835)

From 1789, the business and finance trade in Geneva were impacted by the French Revolution.[14][15] In 1793, Henri Hentsch was arrested by the Genevan revolutionaries and temporarily exiled to Nyon, where he began a silk trading business with an associate, Edmé Mémo.[16][17][18] Despite the environment of economic difficulty and increased unemployment,[19] Henri Hentsch came back to Geneva to found H. Hentsch & Cie on 11 January 1796, at the age of 35.[15][16][17] The firm, designated as a house of "Silk and Sales", traded silk in parallel with its banking activities as a first step. This was a classic format at the time, but it quickly abandoned trading to concentrate on banking as its sole focus.[15][17] The firm allowed traders to take out loans, negotiate debts, settle bills of exchange, and more generally it allowed the trade of precious metals to be conducted, and exchange transactions to be carried out. All of this occurred at a time when several currencies were in circulation in Geneva.[17]

On 26 April 1798, the Republic of Geneva was annexed by the French Republic. Henri Hentsch's cousin, Jean-Gédéon Lombard, then became a member of the Executive Council of the City of Geneva.[16][20] Initially a proctor of Henri Hentsch, Jean-Gédéon became his partner at the bank on 19 June 1798.[16] The firm then took the name Henri Hentsch & Lombard.[16] However, not long after this, Henri Hentsch and Jean-Gédéon Lombard came to a disagreement on the strategy they should take facing the climate of local economic downturn;[19] Jean-Gédéon Lombard wanted to limit the risks imposed by concentrating on bills of exchange operations which generated fixed commissions, while Henri Hentsch, renowned for his entrepreneurial and tenacious character, saw them moving into the international market, particularly for the finance of operations led by the First French Empire.[17] The two partners separated amicably on 22 September 1800, and the bank returned to its former name Henri Hentsch & Cie, while Jean-Gédéon Lombard partnered with his brother-in-law Jean-Jacques Lullin to create the bank Lombard Lullin & Cie.[15][16]

Lombard, Odier & Cie edit

 
Jean-Gédéon Lombard (1763–1848)

Lombard, Lullin & Cie were heavily affected by the economic environment during the bank's first few years. From 1800, the bankruptcy of the firm Corsanges in Lyon resulted in Jean-Gédéon Lombard losing 30,000 francs, causing Jean-Jacques Lullin to go bankrupt.[21] In spite of this, the firm was able to continue in business. Jean-Jacques Lullin left the bank on 31 December 1815, but continued as a limited partner until his death in 1837.[22] Therefore, from 1816 the firm took the name Jean-Gédéon Lombard & Cie until 1 January 1826, when Jean-Gédéon Lombard partnered with Paul-Frédéric Bonna. The bank then took the name Lombard, Bonna & Cie.[23] On 31 March 1830, Paul Frédéric Bonna left the firm to start his own bank, Bonna & Cie. The bank remained active for almost a century, before being absorbed into Hentsch & Cie in 1920.[23]

In 1830, Jean-Gédéon Lombard (aged 66), handed over the bank to his eldest son Jean-Eloi Lombard.[22] He then appointed Charles Odier as associate manager on 1 April 1830, and the bank became Lombard, Odier & Cie.[9][24] Charles Odier, who was 25 years old at the time, had learned the banking profession from the firm Gabriel Odier & Cie, which was managed by his Parisian cousin, and held significant assets from the success of the company F. Courant & Odier, which he founded in 1826 in Le Havre for importing cotton from the USA.[25] Jean-Eloi Lombard dedicated himself to local business while Charles Odier concerned himself with international business, particularly thanks to contacts that he had maintained from the US.[26] Under the management of Jean-Eloi Lombard and Charles Odier, the bank financed large infrastructure works which characterised the Industrial Revolution. In 1834, Lombard, Odier & Cie co-financed the construction work at the Canal de Roanne in Digoin, a project which turned out to be unprofitable despite the successful completion of the canal. The firm then embarked on financing railways, and from 1852 to 1872, Charles Odier acted as one of the administrators of the West Switzerland Company.[26]

In 1834, Alexandre Lombard, the third son of Jean-Gédéon Lombard (aged 24), became a managing partner for the bank.[27] He was responsible for steering Lombard, Odier & Cie towards the American market,[27] at a time when the American frontier needed both funding and construction for facilities, roads, railways and canals. This approach, which was deemed risky due to it coinciding with the end of the American financial crisis of 1837, proved to be a winning strategy ten years later. As the political and economic environment in Europe deteriorated following the revolts of 1848, the US experienced great expansion. Alexandre Lombard prioritised financing American railway companies. The bank issued letters to its clients containing quotes for international stock, at a time when these were difficult to access.[28] In 1857, the partners from Lombard, Odier & Cie participated in creating the Geneva Stock Exchange.[29]

On 1 December 1859, the only son of Charles Odier, Jacques (also known as James[30]) Odier, became a partner at the bank. This followed his trip to the US in 1854 and his marriage to Blanche Lombard in 1856, the daughter of Jean-Eloi.[31] Jacques Odier continued to grow Lombard, Odier & Cie on American soil.[31] In 1870 he joined the executive board for the Genevan branch of what would become the Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas (Bank of Paris and the Netherlands).[32][33] Along with Jules Darier-Rey, in 1872 he also co-founded the Genevan life insurance company Genevoise Compagnie d'Assurance sur la Vie, which would later be chaired by his son Émile and then his grandson Edmond.[34] Alexis Lombard, the son of Jean-Eloi Lombard and brother-in-law of Jacques Odier, became a partner in 1866.[35] He became a founding member of the Chamber of Commerce of Geneva in 1872, created the Genevan Bank of loans and deposits in 1881, and became a member of the board of the Swiss National Bank after it was created in 1907.[34]

Jules Verne mentioned Lombard, Odier & Cie in his novel From the Earth to the Moon (1865). In the novel, the bank collected donations to finance the scientific expedition. "Subscription lists were opened in all the principal cities of the Union, with a central office at the Baltimore Bank, 9 Baltimore Street. In addition, subscriptions were received at the following banks in the different states of the two continents: [...] At Berlin, Mendelssohn. At Geneva, Lombard, Odier and Co. At Constantinople, The Ottoman Bank.".[36]

Alexis Lombard and Jacques Odier remained partners at the bank for half a century, continuing to manage the firm through the First World War, while their descendants Albert Lombard and Émile Odier were conscripted into the Swiss army.[31] Throughout the war, business was unstable for the bank; nevertheless, they made it through this time without facing any major adversities, thanks to the strength of the Swiss franc and the country's neutrality, which allowed Swiss banks to act as places of refuge in Europe. Moreover, the bank remained primarily focused on investments in the US, which were not directly affected by the conflict. At the beginning of the 20th century, Lombard, Odier & Cie with only sixteen employees and three office staff, was one of the largest private banks in Geneva.[37]

 
The Wall Street Crash of 1929 had wide repercussions in Europe and on Swiss banks

After the Great War, Émile Odier, (partner from 1890), Albert Lombard (partner from 1908), Albert's first cousin Jean Lombard (partner from 1913), and Émile's son Edmond Odier (partner from 1919) took over the management of the bank.[38] In 1921, Lombard, Odier & Cie assumed ownership of the bank Lenoir, Julliard & Cie which was created in 1795.[39] In 1929 and at the beginning of the 1930s, the Swiss financial sector was affected by the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression, which impacted the whole of Europe. Several Swiss banks recapitalised or had to close, such as the Banque de Genève (1931) and the Comptoir d’Escompte de Genève (1934).[40] Affected by its exposure to American markets, but eager to show that it would not be brought down by difficulties, Lombard, Odier & Cie changed its statutes in 1933 to become a general partnership, which held the group of acting partners responsible with their own personal assets in case of collapse.[41] Nevertheless, the bank avoided this situation, and even absorbed Hentsch, Forget & Cie in 1934.[42] In 1937, with the death of Edmond Odier, his wife Francine Odier-Dunant became a non-executive partner of the firm so that it could keep its registered company name and its status. She kept this position until her son Marcel Odier succeeded her in 1948.[38]

At the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, the bank Lombard, Odier & Cie had 75 collaborators, 38 of which were conscripted by the Swiss army. In 1940, Georges Lombard became a partner but was also conscripted.[43] In 1941, the bank took ownership of SAGED,[42] bringing with Jean E. Bonna (great-grandson of Frédéric Bonna) and several others as partners for the bank Lombard, Odier & Cie. As in the previous world war, the bank managed its way through this time thanks to the country's neutrality, which meant that Swiss banks were entrusted with the role as place of refuge for foreign and national capital.[44]

After the Second World War, business grew again: the bank's archives estimate that in 1950 its private clients’ assets reached nearly a billion Swiss francs and mostly came from Switzerland, France and Belgium.[45] Under the management of Marcel Odier, the bank became international, opening its first branch in Montreal in 1951, and established its first investment funding in Canadian real estate aimed at its private clients.[34] In 1957, Thierry Barbey became a partner at the bank, and in 1961 his first cousin Yves Oltramare reached the same status. They then created a financial analysis branch in the bank, and guided Lombard, Odier & Cie towards a new venture in managing investment funds, aimed at a client base of institutional investors which had just begun to emerge (pension organisations and insurance companies among others).[46] In doing so, Lombard, Odier & Cie regularly began to introduce funds in which institutional investors could invest money for them to manage. With the arrival of Jean-François Chaponnière, Alain Patry, and Fernand Oltramare as partners in 1964, then of Laurent Dominici and Pierre Keller in 1970, the bank continued developing its base of international institutional clients, and opened divisions in America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia.[46] In 1983, Lombard, Odier & Cie introduced a fund called "SCI/TECH" aimed at institutional clients, in collaboration with Merrill Lynch Asset Management and Nomura Capital Management. The fund raised 835 million dollars after when it was launched, making it the biggest fundraiser in the history of investment funding at the time.[47] At the end of the 1990s, Lombard, Odier & Cie had around 800 employees, 600 of which were in Geneva, and 200 in foreign offices.[48] The firm merged with Darier, Hentsch & Cie in the summer of 2002.

Darier, Hentsch & Cie edit

 
Letter to Henri Hentsch from Madame de Staël, inquiring about promissory notes negotiable in the United States (1811)

Henri Hentsch turned to financing the French Empire from the year 1800. The bank Henri Hentsch & Cie most notably organised the transfer of funds to Italy, where the Empire was expanding.[49] Thanks to its operations, Henri Hentsch had developed good relationships with the French upper class.[17] In 1812, he founded the bank Henri Hentsch, Blanc & Cie in Paris,[16] then settled in the French capital the following year, delegating the management of the Genevan bank to his three sons.[13][49] In 1826, he founded a second Parisian bank, Hentsch, Lecointe, Desarts & Cie.[50] After his death on 14 August 1835, his sons had already been for some time partners at the bank Hentsch & Cie in Geneva, but they did not take on managing the firms that their father had founded in Paris.[50] In 1854, one of Henri Hentsch's grandsons, Jean-Alexis Henri Hentsch (aged 36) left for the Western United States, after twelve years as the head of the family bank in Geneva. The management of the bank was entrusted to his brother. Jean-Alexis Henri Hentsch eventually settled down in San Francisco, at the time of the Gold rush. He opened a bank there, which he named Hentsch & Cie. The business was a success. He was named honorary consul of Switzerland in San Francisco in 1859, and then returned to Geneva in 1873, where he founded the Swiss American Bank, which would then become the parent company of the bank Hentsch & Cie in San Francisco (unrelated to what is now the Lombard Odier group).[51]

 
Édouard Hentsch (1829–1892)

In 1854, Édouard Hentsch (the grandson of Henri Hentsch) resumed managing of the bank Mathieu, Hentsch & Cie in Paris.[52] He enjoyed a high-ranking career in finance, later becoming the president of the bank Comptoir national d'escompte de Paris, and then the Banque de l'Indochine, before founding the Swiss railways bank (Banque des Chemins de fer suisses).[52] He died in 1892, bankrupted by the crash of the copper trade in 1889, which caused the bank Comptoir national d’escompte de Paris to struggle with increasingly high repayments on his personal fortune.[53] Away from this turmoil, the bank Hentsch & Cie continued its operations in Geneva and was passed down the family for several generations. In the 1950s, under the management of Léonard Hentsch, the bank Hentsch & Cie became a pioneer in the distribution of investment funds in Switzerland.[54]

In 1837, Jean-François Chaponnière founded the bank Chaponnière & Cie in Geneva, which then became the bank Darier, Chaponnière & Cie in 1876, during the time when Jules Darier-Rey became a partner. This then became Darier & Cie in 1880.[14] The bank specialised in commercial business and the transport sector.[55] Before becoming a partner at the bank, in 1872 Jules Darier-Rey co-founded the first life insurance company in Geneva, La Genevoise,[56] with James Odier. As with the bank Hentsch & Cie, Darier & Cie was passed down through the family for several generations. One of the first merger projects between Hentsch & Cie and Darier & Cie was planned in 1971 by the Hentsch bank, but did not succeed then.[54] The merger finally happened on 1 January 1991, producing the bank Darier, Hentsch & Cie.[14][54] The newspaper Le Temps claimed that "those who knew the project well spoke just as much about it as an absorption of Hentsch by Darier, as they did a merger between equals".[54]

Historical collaborations (1840–1933) edit

 
Lombard Odier HQ at 4 boulevard du Théâtre in Geneva (1918)

Throughout their independent existence, the banks Lombard, Odier & Cie, Hentsch & Cie, and Darier & Cie were led to collaborate several times. In 1840, at a time when the Industrial Revolution needed large scale funding but wasn't able to be insured by a single financial firm, the banks Lombard, Odier & Cie, Hentsch & Cie, Candolle Turrettini & Cie, and Louis Pictet & Cie partnered together to form the 'Quatuor', which invested particularly in European railways, in the mines in the Loire Valley region of France, and even in Piedmont loans.[57] In 1872, Quatuor merged with Omnium, another private banking association in Geneva founded in 1849, regrouping Paccard, Ador & Cie, P.F. Bonna & Cie, as well as Ph. Roget & Fils. Together, these firms partnered with the new Banque de Paris et des Pays-Bas to create the Finance Association of Geneva, with the aim of collecting enough capital to conduct financial operations in Switzerland and abroad.[32][40] Following this, the Financial Union of Geneva was created in 1890, coming out of the merger of the Financial Association of Geneva, and the railways bank La Banque Nouvelle des Chemins de Fer.[44] The financial union, starting out with CHF 12 million in capital, consolidated twelve private banks including Hentsch & Cie, Lombard, Odier & Cie and Darier & Cie. It also played an important role in the world of Genevan finance from 1890 to 1933, in funding large infrastructure projects in Europe and the US.[40][44][58] According to Bauer and Mottet (1986), this collaboration between Genevan private banks would be at the heart of their sustainability.[59]

Lombard Odier Group edit

In the summer of 2002, Lombard, Odier & Cie merged with Darier, Hentsch & Cie, creating the partnership Lombard, Odier, Darier, Hentsch & Cie.[60] The merger resulted in one of the most significant private banks in Switzerland, totalling 20 branches abroad, 2,000 employees, and EUR 95 billion in managed assets.[60] The merger was accompanied by a cost and workforce reduction plan, at a difficult time made even harsher by the fall of the stock market following the eruption of the dot-com bubble.[60]

In 2006, Lombard, Odier, Darier, Hentsch & Cie joined the Henokiens, an association which brings together family-owned businesses with over 200 years of history.[61] The descendants of the four historical families, Thierry Lombard, Patrick Odier, Pierre Darier and Christophe Hentsch were included in the bank's partners until the departure of Pierre Darier in 2010. Some time later, the firm simplified its corporate name and became the Compagnie Lombard, Odier & Cie.[8]

In December 2013, Lombard Odier enrolled into the voluntary programme for open negotiations run by the United States Department of Justice, to regularise cases of tax noncompliance by American taxpayers within its client base.[62] On 31 December 2015, the Lombard Odier bank announced that it had come to an agreement with the DOJ, which consisted of a US$99.8 million payout to settle the disputes linked to tax noncompliance.[63]

The firm changed its legal structure on 1 January 2014, becoming a private company limited by shares, abandoning its status as a partnership, which held the partners responsible for their own personal assets indefinitely.[64] This change of status also meant that the bank was henceforth obliged to publish its half-year and annual accounts.[64] The banks Pictet, Mirabaud and Gonet simultaneously or shortly after adopted the same status, responding to the needs for transparency, regulatory demands, and limitation of risks, following the closure of the private bank Wegelin & Co. as part of a dispute with the United States Department of Justice.[64][65] After losing its status as a partnership, the Lombard Odier Group considered itself obliged to leave the Association of Swiss Private Bankers, which dictated that its members hold this status.[66]

Thierry Lombard retired at the end of 2014,[67] and his son Alexis Lombard left the firm in April 2016, joining the board of directors of Landolt & Cie in Lausanne.[68]

In December 2016, the Swiss Public Ministry launched a criminal enquiry into the activities of the private bank Lombard, Odier & Cie for suspected money laundering within the social circle of Gulnara Karimova, the daughter of the former Uzbek president. It was claimed that the bank did not take "all reasonable and necessary organisational measures", as the Swiss penal code requires.[69] The bank stated that it had reported these money laundering activities to the authorities.[69]

On 31 December 2016, Anne-Marie de Weck, associate manager of the bank since 2002, retired, but continued to sit on the administrative board).[70]Annika Falkengren, ex-Executive Director of Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB), succeeded her a few months later, and joined as a managing partner of the firm in July 2017.[71] In parallel, the Group announced the arrival of Denis Pittet as managing partner.[71]

As of 1 January 2023, the Group had six managing partners.[72]

Operations edit

Wealth management edit

The Lombard Odier Group's historic activity lies in wealth management for a private client base (a private banking operation). This operation covers most notably the provision of asset management advice, financial investment advice, tax advice, and estate planning. The wealth management operations are mostly overseen in Geneva, at the Lombard, Odier & Cie SA bank, as one of the companies held by the holding company of the Lombard Odier Group. According to the figures from the 2022 mid-year report, the operations from private banking accounted for 188 billion Swiss francs in outstanding assets from their Swiss and international clientele.[73]

Asset management edit

Lombard Odier is just as present in the field of asset management; it has several branches, the leading of which being the management corporation Lombard Odier Asset Management (Europe) Limited, based in London.[74] This firm makes use of the Lombard Odier Investment Managers (Lombard Odier IM) brand, by which the Group is known in the international sphere of asset management.[75] This operation mainly involves the management of investment funds placed into shares and bonds, which is added to by investment from hedge funds.[76] These funds are also accessible for clients of the private bank Lombard, Odier & Cie SA, as well as for an international client base of institutional investors and financial advisers outside of the Lombard Odier Group.[76] The firm is also active in the field of socially responsible investment, most notably in putting forward a range of "impact investing" capital.[77][78]

Since 2015, the management company Lombard Odier IM has been active in the area of ETF (exchange-traded funds), following its partnership with ETF Securities.[78] The first ETFs from Lombard Odier were launched in April 2015, to replicate the results of indexes on the bond market (government bonds, enterprise bonds, and developing countries bonds).[79][80]

In 2018, Lombard Odier IM was one of the first management companies to get through a settlement process managed by a private blockchain for the purchase of securities on the bond market.[81] In 2022, the bank managed CHF 63 billion in its asset management branches.[73]

Banking IT services edit

Since 2014, the Lombard Odier Group has been offering back and middle office IT services to other banking firms, through a tool dubbed "G2".[82] This tool allowed users to manage their client base and buy and sell securities on the market.[83] Initially offered to six external institutions, "G2 Pro" turned to another dozen banks as clients.[82] The banking IT operations were trialed in 2016 at a separate company owned by the holding company for the Lombard Odier Group.[83] The bank Lombard, Odier & Cie SA is itself a client of the organisation, in the same way as the external firms that it is able to equip.[83] In 2022, this branch of the Lombard Odier Group managed CHF 58 billion from third-party clients.[73]

Branches and international presence edit

Switzerland edit

The head office of Hentsch & Cie was located in Geneva from its foundation in 1796. The location of the headquarters has, however, moved over the centuries. In 1858, the Hentsch & Cie moved into the rue de la Corraterie in Maison Gallatin (built in 1708).[84][85] This remains as the oldest head office of the Lombard Odier Group in Geneva. Lombard, Odier & Cie had moved to the neighbouring house the year before.[86] Between 1921 and 1924, the buildings belonging to the banks Hentsch & Cie and Lombard, Odier & Cie situated on the rue de la Corraterie were both rebuilt to allow for extra floors. In 1957, Lombard, Odier & Cie acquired the neighbouring building at 9 rue de la Corraterie. Before this space was inhabited by the bank's staff, it was entirely rebuilt in line with the plans made by the architect Antoine de Saussure.[87] In 1990, all the administrative services for Lombard, Odier & Cie were brought together at a property located in Lancy.[88] Over the years, Lombard, Odier & Cie slowly expanded over the street, buying adjacent houses from its competitors.[89]

For 2024, Lombard Odier plans to build a new head office in Bellevue, in the Canton of Geneva: the building has been designed by the architectural firm Herzog & de Meuron.[73][90] The building will have the capacity to gather together all the staff of the bank, who have been spread across five different sites within Geneva.[91] A part of the original building, la Maison Gallatin will be kept, renovated, and dedicated to event organisation.[92]

The Lombard Odier Group also has several branches and representative offices throughout Switzerland. The bank has been present in Lausanne since 1882, in Vevey and Zurich since 1989, and in Fribourg since 2008.[93]

Europe edit

The Lombard Odier Group owns several European subsidiaries which were combined into one branch which opened in Luxembourg in 2011.[94] The group of subsidiaries of the Lombard Odier in Europe were therefore considered in the legal and financial plan as branches of its Luxembourgish bank.[94]

The Lombard Odier Group has had a London branch since 1973,[95] today leading the asset management operations for the Group. The London branch was historically dedicated to the institutional management operations for Lombard, Odier & Cie, and therefore held the corporate name Lombard, Odier International Portfolio Management Ltd (LOIPM). This firm managed in particular the portfolios of institutional investors in the US and Middle East. Still under British jurisdiction, the group was also present in Gibraltar from 1987.[95]

In France, Lombard Odier has been established in Paris since 2001, with the opening of the Lombard Odier Gestion building, which became LODH Gestion the following year, as Lombard, Odier & Cie merged with Darier, Hentsch & Cie.[96][97] The aim of the branch was to expand into a French institutional client base, and to further the distribution of investment funds from the Lombard Odier brand.[96] In 2004, the French branch obtained a management mandate for the Pensions Reserve Fund (FRR), then partnered with ADI to launch the firm GéA in France, specialising in hedge funds.[98] The partnership ended in October 2008, and Lombard Odier launched its own office specialising in hedge funds, complementing its specialist offices for bondholder investments, asset allocation and socially responsible investing.[98]

The Lombard Odier Group has been present in Brussels since 2004, in Madrid and Frankfurt since 2007, and in Milan since 2016.[95][99]

Americas edit

The Lombard Odier Group has been present in North America since 1951, when Lombard, Odier & Cie opened its first international abroad, in Montreal, Canada. This branch, initially created under the name Secfin Company Ltd, now bears the name Lombard Odier Securities (Canada) Inc.[34] The Group has been present In the US since 1972, when Lombard, Odier & Cie launched a subsidiary named Lombard, Odier Inc., which has now become Lombard Odier Asset Management (USA) Corp. Upon launching, the only aim of Lombard, Odier Inc. was to relay information from the American side to Geneva, but quickly expanded to secure seats at the Boston (1969) and New York Stock Exchanges (1979).[100]

The Lombard Odier Group has also been present in Bermuda since 1992 and Nassau since 1979.[100][101] As for Latin America, the Group has been present in Panama City since 2013.[95]

Asia, Middle East, and Africa edit

In Asia, Lombard Odier has been active in Hong Kong since 1987, Tokyo since 1992, and Singapore since 2017. The Group has also had a cooperation agreement in place with Industrial Bank in China since 2014.[102]

Lastly, the Group has had offices in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, as well as Tel Aviv and Johannesburg.[95]

Philanthropy edit

The tradition of banking families engaging in philanthropic or humanitarian causes originates in the 19th century. Alexandre Lombard in his time participated in a supporting committee aiming to raise money to help those injured in the Second Italian War of Independence. This came in response to the appeal from Henry Dunant, an initiative which would lead to the founding of the Red Cross in 1863.[103] His son, Alexis Lombard, was a member of the administration committee at the General Hospice of Geneva for 38 years, assuming presidency of the institution eleven times between 1876 and 1900.[35] In 1910 and 1918, the banks Lombard, Odier & Cie and Hentsch & Cie were both among the first Swiss companies to secure a retirement plan for their employees through pension funds, which would be absorbed by Swiss retirement provision in 1947, which had just been established.[104]

The Lombard Odier Group has two philanthropic foundations: the Lombard Odier Foundation, a business foundation funded by donations from the Lombard Odier Group, and the Philanthropia Foundation, targeted at donations from private banking clients.[105]

The Lombard Odier Foundation distributes between 1 and 1.5 million Swiss francs a year, mostly to projects in areas of education and humanitarian works.[105] The foundation has been chaired by Patrick Odier since 2016.[106] In 2020, the foundation endowed the Lombard Odier associate professorship in Sustainable Finance at Oxford University stating, "The multi-year partnership will create the first endowed professorship of sustainable finance at any major global research university".[107] The first holder of the position is Dr. Ben Caldecott.[108]

The Philanthropia foundation, created in 2008, invites clients of the bank to make donations for philanthropic work in five main areas: humanitarian and social, education and training, medical and scientific research, environment and sustainable development, and art and culture.[109][110] To mark its 10th anniversary in 2018, the foundation announced that it had received a total sum of donations totalling CHF 116 million, and had given away every year an average of 10% of its assets to some 100 organisations (for a total of CHF 59 million, 15 million of which went to organisations for cancer research and prevention).[109] The Philanthropia foundation has been chaired by Denis Pittet since 2016.[106]

See also edit

References edit

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  5. ^ Wicki, Florian (2019-04-18). "Private Banking Switzerland: Winners and Losers of 2018". finews.com. Retrieved 2019-08-07.
  6. ^ Ralph Atkins and Laura Noonan (December 11, 2017). "The decline of the Swiss private bank". Financial Times. Retrieved 2019-08-07.
  7. ^ "Banque Lombard Odier & Cie SA". ABPS (in French). Retrieved 2019-03-13.
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  9. ^ a b c d Senarclens, Jean de. "Lombard". Historical Dictionary of Switzerland (in French). Retrieved 2019-03-13.
  10. ^ Gerhard R., Schäpper (1997). Le banquier privé suisse et ses défis à venir. Vereinigung schweizerischer Privatbankiers. [Genève 11 (case postale 5639, 1211)]: Association des banquiers privés suisses. p. 19. ISBN 2970014815. OCLC 83478135.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  11. ^ a b c DW, Daniela Vaj /. "Odier". Historical Dictionary of Switzerland (in French). Retrieved 2019-03-13.
  12. ^ a b c d Senarclens, Jean de. "Darier". Historical Dictionary of Switzerland (in French). Retrieved 2019-03-13.
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  59. ^ "the group of Genevan private banks resisted the malice of the times better than other cities in Switzerland. Indeed, these firms knew to unite at the right time, in order to participate fervently (by means of the Financial Union) in the issuance transactions and granting of loans in Switzerland and abroad. Furthermore, it allowed them to create and give a boost to a series of investment companies (holding companies, investment trusts, etc.), the securities of which gave a long-term boost to the Genevan stock market." Les Grandes heures des banquiers suisses : vers une histoire de la banque helvétique du XVe siècle à nos jours. Bauer, Hans, 1901-, Mottet, Louis H. Neuchâtel: Delachaux & Niestlé. 1986. p. 86. ISBN 2603005979. OCLC 16919738.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
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External links edit

  • Official website

bank, lombard, odier, lombard, odier, group, independent, swiss, banking, group, based, geneva, operations, organised, into, three, divisions, private, banking, wealth, management, asset, management, back, middle, office, services, other, financial, institutio. The Lombard Odier Group is an independent Swiss banking group based in Geneva Its operations are organised into three divisions private banking wealth management asset management and IT and back and middle office services for other financial institutions In 2022 the bank had total client assets of CHF 300 billion 2 which makes it one of the biggest players in the Swiss private banking sector 5 6 Bank Lombard Odier amp Co LtdTypeCorporate partnership societe en commandite par actions IndustryPrivate bankingPredecessorLombard Odier amp Cie Darier Hentsch amp Cie Founded2002 11 January 1796 1876 FounderHenri Hentsch Jean Gedeon LombardHeadquartersGeneva SwitzerlandKey peopleHubert Keller Frederic Rochat Denis Pittet Annika Falkengren Alexandre Zeller and Jean Pascal Porcherot 1 AUMCHF 300 billion 2022 2 Number of employees2 720 2022 3 Capital ratio30 2 RatingFitch AA 4 Websitewww lombardodier comThe group was formed in the summer of 2002 as Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch amp Cie by the merger of Lombard Odier amp Cie and Darier Hentsch amp Cie As the latter was originally founded in 1796 the group has a claim to being the oldest private bank in Geneva 7 The company name was simplified to Lombard Odier Group in 2010 although the firm continues to include on its official logo the names of the four founding partners Since 2014 the bank has held the status of Limited Liability Company LLC The Lombard Odier Group is a legal holding company under Swiss law bearing the name Lombard Odier Company SCmA since 2016 8 This holding company owns all firms belonging to the group most notably the bank Lombard Odier amp Cie SA and Lombard Odier Asset Management Europe Limited in London which forms the asset management branch of the group Lombard Odier Investment Managers LOIM is the name the group is known by in the international field of asset management Outside of Switzerland the group has branches in Europe the Americas Asia and the Middle East Including its network of collaborators the group has around 2 720 employees worldwide in 2022 Contents 1 History 1 1 The founding families 1 2 Origins of the bank 1796 1800 1 3 Lombard Odier amp Cie 1 4 Darier Hentsch amp Cie 1 5 Historical collaborations 1840 1933 1 6 Lombard Odier Group 2 Operations 2 1 Wealth management 2 2 Asset management 2 3 Banking IT services 3 Branches and international presence 3 1 Switzerland 3 2 Europe 3 3 Americas 3 4 Asia Middle East and Africa 4 Philanthropy 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe founding families edit The Lombard family from Lombardi arrived in Geneva in 1573 from Tortorella Kingdom of Naples fleeing religious persecution under viceroy Antoine Perrenot de Granvelle 9 10 The two sons of Theodoro Lombardi Cesar and Marc Antoine Lombard performed dressage and were involved in the horse trade They received the title of burgesses of Geneva in 1589 for their services in the fight against the duke of Savoie 9 Jean Gedeon Lombard a 6th generation descendant of Cesar Lombard became associated with the bank Hentsch Lombard amp Cie in 1798 marking the entry of the Lombard family into the field of Genevan banking 9 The Odier family is first documented as being in Geneva circa 1714 the same time when Antoine Odier received his title as Genevan burgess 11 The family came from Pont en Royans in France 11 Members of the family held positions as politicians doctors artists engineers and then bankers Charles Odier became associated with the bank Lombard Bonna amp Cie in 1830 which then became Lombard Odier amp Cie 11 The Darier family arrived in Geneva in 1738 from the Dauphine region in France 12 Louis Darier died accidentally shortly after the birth of his son Hugues Darier who became a prominent figure in clockmaking and obtained the title of burgess of Geneva in 1787 12 Jules Darier Rey Hugues grandson became associated with the bank Chaponniere amp Cie in 1873 The firm became Darier Chaponniere amp Cie in 1875 and then Darier amp Cie in 1880 12 Another of Hugues Darier s sons Jean Louis Darier 1766 1825 earlier on contributed to the beginnings of the bank Ferrier Lullin amp Cie in 1795 but this organisation remains without any link to what is now Lombard Odier 12 The Hentsch family arrived in Geneva circa 1758 while Benjamin Gottlob Hentsch a clergyman emigrated from Lower Lusatia to become a tutor in Switzerland 13 His son Henri Hentsch 1761 1835 founded the family bank in 1796 13 Origins of the bank 1796 1800 edit nbsp Henri Hentsch 1761 1835 From 1789 the business and finance trade in Geneva were impacted by the French Revolution 14 15 In 1793 Henri Hentsch was arrested by the Genevan revolutionaries and temporarily exiled to Nyon where he began a silk trading business with an associate Edme Memo 16 17 18 Despite the environment of economic difficulty and increased unemployment 19 Henri Hentsch came back to Geneva to found H Hentsch amp Cie on 11 January 1796 at the age of 35 15 16 17 The firm designated as a house of Silk and Sales traded silk in parallel with its banking activities as a first step This was a classic format at the time but it quickly abandoned trading to concentrate on banking as its sole focus 15 17 The firm allowed traders to take out loans negotiate debts settle bills of exchange and more generally it allowed the trade of precious metals to be conducted and exchange transactions to be carried out All of this occurred at a time when several currencies were in circulation in Geneva 17 On 26 April 1798 the Republic of Geneva was annexed by the French Republic Henri Hentsch s cousin Jean Gedeon Lombard then became a member of the Executive Council of the City of Geneva 16 20 Initially a proctor of Henri Hentsch Jean Gedeon became his partner at the bank on 19 June 1798 16 The firm then took the name Henri Hentsch amp Lombard 16 However not long after this Henri Hentsch and Jean Gedeon Lombard came to a disagreement on the strategy they should take facing the climate of local economic downturn 19 Jean Gedeon Lombard wanted to limit the risks imposed by concentrating on bills of exchange operations which generated fixed commissions while Henri Hentsch renowned for his entrepreneurial and tenacious character saw them moving into the international market particularly for the finance of operations led by the First French Empire 17 The two partners separated amicably on 22 September 1800 and the bank returned to its former name Henri Hentsch amp Cie while Jean Gedeon Lombard partnered with his brother in law Jean Jacques Lullin to create the bank Lombard Lullin amp Cie 15 16 Lombard Odier amp Cie edit nbsp Jean Gedeon Lombard 1763 1848 Lombard Lullin amp Cie were heavily affected by the economic environment during the bank s first few years From 1800 the bankruptcy of the firm Corsanges in Lyon resulted in Jean Gedeon Lombard losing 30 000 francs causing Jean Jacques Lullin to go bankrupt 21 In spite of this the firm was able to continue in business Jean Jacques Lullin left the bank on 31 December 1815 but continued as a limited partner until his death in 1837 22 Therefore from 1816 the firm took the name Jean Gedeon Lombard amp Cie until 1 January 1826 when Jean Gedeon Lombard partnered with Paul Frederic Bonna The bank then took the name Lombard Bonna amp Cie 23 On 31 March 1830 Paul Frederic Bonna left the firm to start his own bank Bonna amp Cie The bank remained active for almost a century before being absorbed into Hentsch amp Cie in 1920 23 In 1830 Jean Gedeon Lombard aged 66 handed over the bank to his eldest son Jean Eloi Lombard 22 He then appointed Charles Odier as associate manager on 1 April 1830 and the bank became Lombard Odier amp Cie 9 24 Charles Odier who was 25 years old at the time had learned the banking profession from the firm Gabriel Odier amp Cie which was managed by his Parisian cousin and held significant assets from the success of the company F Courant amp Odier which he founded in 1826 in Le Havre for importing cotton from the USA 25 Jean Eloi Lombard dedicated himself to local business while Charles Odier concerned himself with international business particularly thanks to contacts that he had maintained from the US 26 Under the management of Jean Eloi Lombard and Charles Odier the bank financed large infrastructure works which characterised the Industrial Revolution In 1834 Lombard Odier amp Cie co financed the construction work at the Canal de Roanne in Digoin a project which turned out to be unprofitable despite the successful completion of the canal The firm then embarked on financing railways and from 1852 to 1872 Charles Odier acted as one of the administrators of the West Switzerland Company 26 In 1834 Alexandre Lombard the third son of Jean Gedeon Lombard aged 24 became a managing partner for the bank 27 He was responsible for steering Lombard Odier amp Cie towards the American market 27 at a time when the American frontier needed both funding and construction for facilities roads railways and canals This approach which was deemed risky due to it coinciding with the end of the American financial crisis of 1837 proved to be a winning strategy ten years later As the political and economic environment in Europe deteriorated following the revolts of 1848 the US experienced great expansion Alexandre Lombard prioritised financing American railway companies The bank issued letters to its clients containing quotes for international stock at a time when these were difficult to access 28 In 1857 the partners from Lombard Odier amp Cie participated in creating the Geneva Stock Exchange 29 On 1 December 1859 the only son of Charles Odier Jacques also known as James 30 Odier became a partner at the bank This followed his trip to the US in 1854 and his marriage to Blanche Lombard in 1856 the daughter of Jean Eloi 31 Jacques Odier continued to grow Lombard Odier amp Cie on American soil 31 In 1870 he joined the executive board for the Genevan branch of what would become the Banque de Paris et des Pays Bas Bank of Paris and the Netherlands 32 33 Along with Jules Darier Rey in 1872 he also co founded the Genevan life insurance company Genevoise Compagnie d Assurance sur la Vie which would later be chaired by his son Emile and then his grandson Edmond 34 Alexis Lombard the son of Jean Eloi Lombard and brother in law of Jacques Odier became a partner in 1866 35 He became a founding member of the Chamber of Commerce of Geneva in 1872 created the Genevan Bank of loans and deposits in 1881 and became a member of the board of the Swiss National Bank after it was created in 1907 34 Jules Verne mentioned Lombard Odier amp Cie in his novel From the Earth to the Moon 1865 In the novel the bank collected donations to finance the scientific expedition Subscription lists were opened in all the principal cities of the Union with a central office at the Baltimore Bank 9 Baltimore Street In addition subscriptions were received at the following banks in the different states of the two continents At Berlin Mendelssohn At Geneva Lombard Odier and Co At Constantinople The Ottoman Bank 36 Alexis Lombard and Jacques Odier remained partners at the bank for half a century continuing to manage the firm through the First World War while their descendants Albert Lombard and Emile Odier were conscripted into the Swiss army 31 Throughout the war business was unstable for the bank nevertheless they made it through this time without facing any major adversities thanks to the strength of the Swiss franc and the country s neutrality which allowed Swiss banks to act as places of refuge in Europe Moreover the bank remained primarily focused on investments in the US which were not directly affected by the conflict At the beginning of the 20th century Lombard Odier amp Cie with only sixteen employees and three office staff was one of the largest private banks in Geneva 37 nbsp The Wall Street Crash of 1929 had wide repercussions in Europe and on Swiss banksAfter the Great War Emile Odier partner from 1890 Albert Lombard partner from 1908 Albert s first cousin Jean Lombard partner from 1913 and Emile s son Edmond Odier partner from 1919 took over the management of the bank 38 In 1921 Lombard Odier amp Cie assumed ownership of the bank Lenoir Julliard amp Cie which was created in 1795 39 In 1929 and at the beginning of the 1930s the Swiss financial sector was affected by the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression which impacted the whole of Europe Several Swiss banks recapitalised or had to close such as the Banque de Geneve 1931 and the Comptoir d Escompte de Geneve 1934 40 Affected by its exposure to American markets but eager to show that it would not be brought down by difficulties Lombard Odier amp Cie changed its statutes in 1933 to become a general partnership which held the group of acting partners responsible with their own personal assets in case of collapse 41 Nevertheless the bank avoided this situation and even absorbed Hentsch Forget amp Cie in 1934 42 In 1937 with the death of Edmond Odier his wife Francine Odier Dunant became a non executive partner of the firm so that it could keep its registered company name and its status She kept this position until her son Marcel Odier succeeded her in 1948 38 At the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 the bank Lombard Odier amp Cie had 75 collaborators 38 of which were conscripted by the Swiss army In 1940 Georges Lombard became a partner but was also conscripted 43 In 1941 the bank took ownership of SAGED 42 bringing with Jean E Bonna great grandson of Frederic Bonna and several others as partners for the bank Lombard Odier amp Cie As in the previous world war the bank managed its way through this time thanks to the country s neutrality which meant that Swiss banks were entrusted with the role as place of refuge for foreign and national capital 44 After the Second World War business grew again the bank s archives estimate that in 1950 its private clients assets reached nearly a billion Swiss francs and mostly came from Switzerland France and Belgium 45 Under the management of Marcel Odier the bank became international opening its first branch in Montreal in 1951 and established its first investment funding in Canadian real estate aimed at its private clients 34 In 1957 Thierry Barbey became a partner at the bank and in 1961 his first cousin Yves Oltramare reached the same status They then created a financial analysis branch in the bank and guided Lombard Odier amp Cie towards a new venture in managing investment funds aimed at a client base of institutional investors which had just begun to emerge pension organisations and insurance companies among others 46 In doing so Lombard Odier amp Cie regularly began to introduce funds in which institutional investors could invest money for them to manage With the arrival of Jean Francois Chaponniere Alain Patry and Fernand Oltramare as partners in 1964 then of Laurent Dominici and Pierre Keller in 1970 the bank continued developing its base of international institutional clients and opened divisions in America Europe the Middle East and Asia 46 In 1983 Lombard Odier amp Cie introduced a fund called SCI TECH aimed at institutional clients in collaboration with Merrill Lynch Asset Management and Nomura Capital Management The fund raised 835 million dollars after when it was launched making it the biggest fundraiser in the history of investment funding at the time 47 At the end of the 1990s Lombard Odier amp Cie had around 800 employees 600 of which were in Geneva and 200 in foreign offices 48 The firm merged with Darier Hentsch amp Cie in the summer of 2002 Darier Hentsch amp Cie edit nbsp Letter to Henri Hentsch from Madame de Stael inquiring about promissory notes negotiable in the United States 1811 Henri Hentsch turned to financing the French Empire from the year 1800 The bank Henri Hentsch amp Cie most notably organised the transfer of funds to Italy where the Empire was expanding 49 Thanks to its operations Henri Hentsch had developed good relationships with the French upper class 17 In 1812 he founded the bank Henri Hentsch Blanc amp Cie in Paris 16 then settled in the French capital the following year delegating the management of the Genevan bank to his three sons 13 49 In 1826 he founded a second Parisian bank Hentsch Lecointe Desarts amp Cie 50 After his death on 14 August 1835 his sons had already been for some time partners at the bank Hentsch amp Cie in Geneva but they did not take on managing the firms that their father had founded in Paris 50 In 1854 one of Henri Hentsch s grandsons Jean Alexis Henri Hentsch aged 36 left for the Western United States after twelve years as the head of the family bank in Geneva The management of the bank was entrusted to his brother Jean Alexis Henri Hentsch eventually settled down in San Francisco at the time of the Gold rush He opened a bank there which he named Hentsch amp Cie The business was a success He was named honorary consul of Switzerland in San Francisco in 1859 and then returned to Geneva in 1873 where he founded the Swiss American Bank which would then become the parent company of the bank Hentsch amp Cie in San Francisco unrelated to what is now the Lombard Odier group 51 nbsp Edouard Hentsch 1829 1892 In 1854 Edouard Hentsch the grandson of Henri Hentsch resumed managing of the bank Mathieu Hentsch amp Cie in Paris 52 He enjoyed a high ranking career in finance later becoming the president of the bank Comptoir national d escompte de Paris and then the Banque de l Indochine before founding the Swiss railways bank Banque des Chemins de fer suisses 52 He died in 1892 bankrupted by the crash of the copper trade in 1889 which caused the bank Comptoir national d escompte de Paris to struggle with increasingly high repayments on his personal fortune 53 Away from this turmoil the bank Hentsch amp Cie continued its operations in Geneva and was passed down the family for several generations In the 1950s under the management of Leonard Hentsch the bank Hentsch amp Cie became a pioneer in the distribution of investment funds in Switzerland 54 In 1837 Jean Francois Chaponniere founded the bank Chaponniere amp Cie in Geneva which then became the bank Darier Chaponniere amp Cie in 1876 during the time when Jules Darier Rey became a partner This then became Darier amp Cie in 1880 14 The bank specialised in commercial business and the transport sector 55 Before becoming a partner at the bank in 1872 Jules Darier Rey co founded the first life insurance company in Geneva La Genevoise 56 with James Odier As with the bank Hentsch amp Cie Darier amp Cie was passed down through the family for several generations One of the first merger projects between Hentsch amp Cie and Darier amp Cie was planned in 1971 by the Hentsch bank but did not succeed then 54 The merger finally happened on 1 January 1991 producing the bank Darier Hentsch amp Cie 14 54 The newspaper Le Temps claimed that those who knew the project well spoke just as much about it as an absorption of Hentsch by Darier as they did a merger between equals 54 Historical collaborations 1840 1933 edit nbsp Lombard Odier HQ at 4 boulevard du Theatre in Geneva 1918 Throughout their independent existence the banks Lombard Odier amp Cie Hentsch amp Cie and Darier amp Cie were led to collaborate several times In 1840 at a time when the Industrial Revolution needed large scale funding but wasn t able to be insured by a single financial firm the banks Lombard Odier amp Cie Hentsch amp Cie Candolle Turrettini amp Cie and Louis Pictet amp Cie partnered together to form the Quatuor which invested particularly in European railways in the mines in the Loire Valley region of France and even in Piedmont loans 57 In 1872 Quatuor merged with Omnium another private banking association in Geneva founded in 1849 regrouping Paccard Ador amp Cie P F Bonna amp Cie as well as Ph Roget amp Fils Together these firms partnered with the new Banque de Paris et des Pays Bas to create the Finance Association of Geneva with the aim of collecting enough capital to conduct financial operations in Switzerland and abroad 32 40 Following this the Financial Union of Geneva was created in 1890 coming out of the merger of the Financial Association of Geneva and the railways bank La Banque Nouvelle des Chemins de Fer 44 The financial union starting out with CHF 12 million in capital consolidated twelve private banks including Hentsch amp Cie Lombard Odier amp Cie and Darier amp Cie It also played an important role in the world of Genevan finance from 1890 to 1933 in funding large infrastructure projects in Europe and the US 40 44 58 According to Bauer and Mottet 1986 this collaboration between Genevan private banks would be at the heart of their sustainability 59 Lombard Odier Group edit In the summer of 2002 Lombard Odier amp Cie merged with Darier Hentsch amp Cie creating the partnership Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch amp Cie 60 The merger resulted in one of the most significant private banks in Switzerland totalling 20 branches abroad 2 000 employees and EUR 95 billion in managed assets 60 The merger was accompanied by a cost and workforce reduction plan at a difficult time made even harsher by the fall of the stock market following the eruption of the dot com bubble 60 In 2006 Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch amp Cie joined the Henokiens an association which brings together family owned businesses with over 200 years of history 61 The descendants of the four historical families Thierry Lombard Patrick Odier Pierre Darier and Christophe Hentsch were included in the bank s partners until the departure of Pierre Darier in 2010 Some time later the firm simplified its corporate name and became the Compagnie Lombard Odier amp Cie 8 In December 2013 Lombard Odier enrolled into the voluntary programme for open negotiations run by the United States Department of Justice to regularise cases of tax noncompliance by American taxpayers within its client base 62 On 31 December 2015 the Lombard Odier bank announced that it had come to an agreement with the DOJ which consisted of a US 99 8 million payout to settle the disputes linked to tax noncompliance 63 The firm changed its legal structure on 1 January 2014 becoming a private company limited by shares abandoning its status as a partnership which held the partners responsible for their own personal assets indefinitely 64 This change of status also meant that the bank was henceforth obliged to publish its half year and annual accounts 64 The banks Pictet Mirabaud and Gonet simultaneously or shortly after adopted the same status responding to the needs for transparency regulatory demands and limitation of risks following the closure of the private bank Wegelin amp Co as part of a dispute with the United States Department of Justice 64 65 After losing its status as a partnership the Lombard Odier Group considered itself obliged to leave the Association of Swiss Private Bankers which dictated that its members hold this status 66 Thierry Lombard retired at the end of 2014 67 and his son Alexis Lombard left the firm in April 2016 joining the board of directors of Landolt amp Cie in Lausanne 68 In December 2016 the Swiss Public Ministry launched a criminal enquiry into the activities of the private bank Lombard Odier amp Cie for suspected money laundering within the social circle of Gulnara Karimova the daughter of the former Uzbek president It was claimed that the bank did not take all reasonable and necessary organisational measures as the Swiss penal code requires 69 The bank stated that it had reported these money laundering activities to the authorities 69 On 31 December 2016 Anne Marie de Weck associate manager of the bank since 2002 retired but continued to sit on the administrative board 70 Annika Falkengren ex Executive Director of Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken SEB succeeded her a few months later and joined as a managing partner of the firm in July 2017 71 In parallel the Group announced the arrival of Denis Pittet as managing partner 71 As of 1 January 2023 the Group had six managing partners 72 Operations editWealth management edit The Lombard Odier Group s historic activity lies in wealth management for a private client base a private banking operation This operation covers most notably the provision of asset management advice financial investment advice tax advice and estate planning The wealth management operations are mostly overseen in Geneva at the Lombard Odier amp Cie SA bank as one of the companies held by the holding company of the Lombard Odier Group According to the figures from the 2022 mid year report the operations from private banking accounted for 188 billion Swiss francs in outstanding assets from their Swiss and international clientele 73 Asset management edit Lombard Odier is just as present in the field of asset management it has several branches the leading of which being the management corporation Lombard Odier Asset Management Europe Limited based in London 74 This firm makes use of the Lombard Odier Investment Managers Lombard Odier IM brand by which the Group is known in the international sphere of asset management 75 This operation mainly involves the management of investment funds placed into shares and bonds which is added to by investment from hedge funds 76 These funds are also accessible for clients of the private bank Lombard Odier amp Cie SA as well as for an international client base of institutional investors and financial advisers outside of the Lombard Odier Group 76 The firm is also active in the field of socially responsible investment most notably in putting forward a range of impact investing capital 77 78 Since 2015 the management company Lombard Odier IM has been active in the area of ETF exchange traded funds following its partnership with ETF Securities 78 The first ETFs from Lombard Odier were launched in April 2015 to replicate the results of indexes on the bond market government bonds enterprise bonds and developing countries bonds 79 80 In 2018 Lombard Odier IM was one of the first management companies to get through a settlement process managed by a private blockchain for the purchase of securities on the bond market 81 In 2022 the bank managed CHF 63 billion in its asset management branches 73 Banking IT services edit Since 2014 the Lombard Odier Group has been offering back and middle office IT services to other banking firms through a tool dubbed G2 82 This tool allowed users to manage their client base and buy and sell securities on the market 83 Initially offered to six external institutions G2 Pro turned to another dozen banks as clients 82 The banking IT operations were trialed in 2016 at a separate company owned by the holding company for the Lombard Odier Group 83 The bank Lombard Odier amp Cie SA is itself a client of the organisation in the same way as the external firms that it is able to equip 83 In 2022 this branch of the Lombard Odier Group managed CHF 58 billion from third party clients 73 Branches and international presence editSwitzerland edit The head office of Hentsch amp Cie was located in Geneva from its foundation in 1796 The location of the headquarters has however moved over the centuries In 1858 the Hentsch amp Cie moved into the rue de la Corraterie in Maison Gallatin built in 1708 84 85 This remains as the oldest head office of the Lombard Odier Group in Geneva Lombard Odier amp Cie had moved to the neighbouring house the year before 86 Between 1921 and 1924 the buildings belonging to the banks Hentsch amp Cie and Lombard Odier amp Cie situated on the rue de la Corraterie were both rebuilt to allow for extra floors In 1957 Lombard Odier amp Cie acquired the neighbouring building at 9 rue de la Corraterie Before this space was inhabited by the bank s staff it was entirely rebuilt in line with the plans made by the architect Antoine de Saussure 87 In 1990 all the administrative services for Lombard Odier amp Cie were brought together at a property located in Lancy 88 Over the years Lombard Odier amp Cie slowly expanded over the street buying adjacent houses from its competitors 89 For 2024 Lombard Odier plans to build a new head office in Bellevue in the Canton of Geneva the building has been designed by the architectural firm Herzog amp de Meuron 73 90 The building will have the capacity to gather together all the staff of the bank who have been spread across five different sites within Geneva 91 A part of the original building la Maison Gallatin will be kept renovated and dedicated to event organisation 92 The Lombard Odier Group also has several branches and representative offices throughout Switzerland The bank has been present in Lausanne since 1882 in Vevey and Zurich since 1989 and in Fribourg since 2008 93 Europe edit The Lombard Odier Group owns several European subsidiaries which were combined into one branch which opened in Luxembourg in 2011 94 The group of subsidiaries of the Lombard Odier in Europe were therefore considered in the legal and financial plan as branches of its Luxembourgish bank 94 The Lombard Odier Group has had a London branch since 1973 95 today leading the asset management operations for the Group The London branch was historically dedicated to the institutional management operations for Lombard Odier amp Cie and therefore held the corporate name Lombard Odier International Portfolio Management Ltd LOIPM This firm managed in particular the portfolios of institutional investors in the US and Middle East Still under British jurisdiction the group was also present in Gibraltar from 1987 95 In France Lombard Odier has been established in Paris since 2001 with the opening of the Lombard Odier Gestion building which became LODH Gestion the following year as Lombard Odier amp Cie merged with Darier Hentsch amp Cie 96 97 The aim of the branch was to expand into a French institutional client base and to further the distribution of investment funds from the Lombard Odier brand 96 In 2004 the French branch obtained a management mandate for the Pensions Reserve Fund FRR then partnered with ADI to launch the firm GeA in France specialising in hedge funds 98 The partnership ended in October 2008 and Lombard Odier launched its own office specialising in hedge funds complementing its specialist offices for bondholder investments asset allocation and socially responsible investing 98 The Lombard Odier Group has been present in Brussels since 2004 in Madrid and Frankfurt since 2007 and in Milan since 2016 95 99 Americas edit The Lombard Odier Group has been present in North America since 1951 when Lombard Odier amp Cie opened its first international abroad in Montreal Canada This branch initially created under the name Secfin Company Ltd now bears the name Lombard Odier Securities Canada Inc 34 The Group has been present In the US since 1972 when Lombard Odier amp Cie launched a subsidiary named Lombard Odier Inc which has now become Lombard Odier Asset Management USA Corp Upon launching the only aim of Lombard Odier Inc was to relay information from the American side to Geneva but quickly expanded to secure seats at the Boston 1969 and New York Stock Exchanges 1979 100 The Lombard Odier Group has also been present in Bermuda since 1992 and Nassau since 1979 100 101 As for Latin America the Group has been present in Panama City since 2013 95 Asia Middle East and Africa edit In Asia Lombard Odier has been active in Hong Kong since 1987 Tokyo since 1992 and Singapore since 2017 The Group has also had a cooperation agreement in place with Industrial Bank in China since 2014 102 Lastly the Group has had offices in Dubai and Abu Dhabi as well as Tel Aviv and Johannesburg 95 Philanthropy editThe tradition of banking families engaging in philanthropic or humanitarian causes originates in the 19th century Alexandre Lombard in his time participated in a supporting committee aiming to raise money to help those injured in the Second Italian War of Independence This came in response to the appeal from Henry Dunant an initiative which would lead to the founding of the Red Cross in 1863 103 His son Alexis Lombard was a member of the administration committee at the General Hospice of Geneva for 38 years assuming presidency of the institution eleven times between 1876 and 1900 35 In 1910 and 1918 the banks Lombard Odier amp Cie and Hentsch amp Cie were both among the first Swiss companies to secure a retirement plan for their employees through pension funds which would be absorbed by Swiss retirement provision in 1947 which had just been established 104 The Lombard Odier Group has two philanthropic foundations the Lombard Odier Foundation a business foundation funded by donations from the Lombard Odier Group and the Philanthropia Foundation targeted at donations from private banking clients 105 The Lombard Odier Foundation distributes between 1 and 1 5 million Swiss francs a year mostly to projects in areas of education and humanitarian works 105 The foundation has been chaired by Patrick Odier since 2016 106 In 2020 the foundation endowed the Lombard Odier associate professorship in Sustainable Finance at Oxford University stating The multi year partnership will create the first endowed professorship of sustainable finance at any major global research university 107 The first holder of the position is Dr Ben Caldecott 108 The Philanthropia foundation created in 2008 invites clients of the bank to make donations for philanthropic work in five main areas humanitarian and social education and training medical and scientific research environment and sustainable development and art and culture 109 110 To mark its 10th anniversary in 2018 the foundation announced that it had received a total sum of donations totalling CHF 116 million and had given away every year an average of 10 of its assets to some 100 organisations for a total of CHF 59 million 15 million of which went to organisations for cancer research and prevention 109 The Philanthropia foundation has been chaired by Denis Pittet since 2016 106 See also edit nbsp Banks portal nbsp Switzerland portalBanking in Switzerland Economy of SwitzerlandReferences edit la maison lombardodier com a b c Lombard Odier Net Profit Down In 2022 www wealthbriefing com Retrieved 2023 03 13 Les taux ne sauvent pas l annee de Lombard Odier Tribune de Geneve in French 2023 03 02 Retrieved 2023 03 13 Fitch affirms Lombard Odier at AA outlook stable www fitchratings com Retrieved 2022 06 23 Wicki Florian 2019 04 18 Private Banking Switzerland Winners and Losers of 2018 finews com Retrieved 2019 08 07 Ralph Atkins and Laura Noonan December 11 2017 The decline of the Swiss private bank Financial Times Retrieved 2019 08 07 Banque Lombard Odier amp Cie SA ABPS in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b AG Easymonitoring Compagnie Lombard Odier SCmA Easymonitoring Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b c d Senarclens Jean de Lombard Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Gerhard R Schapper 1997 Le banquier prive suisse et ses defis a venir Vereinigung schweizerischer Privatbankiers Geneve 11 case postale 5639 1211 Association des banquiers prives suisses p 19 ISBN 2970014815 OCLC 83478135 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link a b c DW Daniela Vaj Odier Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b c d Senarclens Jean de Darier Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b c Senarclens Jean de Hentsch Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b c Gerhard R Schapper 1997 Le banquier prive suisse et ses defis a venir Vereinigung schweizerischer Privatbankiers Geneve Association des banquiers prives suisses p 21 ISBN 2970014815 OCLC 83478135 a b c d Cassis Youssef 2006 Les capitales du capital Geneve Slatikine p 48 ISBN 2051019991 a b c d e f g Senarclens Jean de Hentsch Henri Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b c d e f Les Grandes heures des banquiers suisses vers une histoire de la banque helvetique du XVe siecle a nos jours Bauer Hans Mottet Louis H Neuchatel Delachaux amp Niestle 1986 p 71 ISBN 2603005979 OCLC 16919738 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Bergeron Louis 2013 Banquiers negociants et manufacturiers parisiens du Directoire a l Empire Paris p 18 ISBN 9782713225529 OCLC 949649582 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Mottet Louis 1986 Les Grandes heures des banquiers suisses vers une histoire de la banque helvetique du XVe siecle a nos jours Bauer Hans Neuchatel Delachaux amp Niestle p 76 ISBN 2603005979 OCLC 16919738 Senarclens Jean de Lombard Jean Gedeon Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Raffestin Sven 1997 Une dynastie de banquiers Les Lombard Geneve L Extension p 10 a b Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie p 91 a b Senarclens Jean de Bonna Paul Frederic Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Cassis Youssef 2006 Les capitales du Capital Geneva Slatkine p 54 ISBN 2051019991 Sigerist Stefan 2015 Schweizer in europaischen Seehafen und im spanischen Binnenland biographische Skizzen zu Emigration und Remigration seit der fruhen Neuzeit Bochum Winkler ISBN 9783899112344 OCLC 927491140 a b Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Lombard Odier amp Cie pp 94 98 a b Senarclens Jean de Lombard Alexandre Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie p 111 Lombard Odier Les Henokiens in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Database of Swiss elites in the XXth Century www2 unil ch Retrieved 2019 04 08 a b c Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie pp 105 106 a b Cassis Youssef 2006 Les capitales du Capital Geneve Slatkine p 89 ISBN 2051019991 van Marken Bernard 2013 La banque de credit et de depot des Pays Bas aux origines de la Banque de Paris et des Pays Bas 1863 1872 a b c d Pohl Manfred 1994 Handbook on the history of European banks Freitag Sabine European Association for Banking History Aldershot Hants England E Elgar pp 1104 1105 ISBN 1852789190 OCLC 28547114 a b Senarclens Jean de Lombard Alexis Historical Dictionary of Switzerland in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Verne Jules From the Earth to the Moon Malik Mazbouri 2005 L emergence de la place financiere suisse 1890 1913 itineraire d un grand banquier Lausanne Ed Antipodes p 231 ISBN 2940146535 OCLC 718586054 a b Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie pp 114 118 Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie p 120 a b c Gerhard R Schapper 1997 Le banquier prive suisse et ses defis a venir Vereinigung schweizerischer Privatbankiers Geneve Association des banquiers prives suisses p 22 ISBN 2970014815 OCLC 83478135 Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie p 124 a b Lombard Odier amp Cie 1798 1948 Journal de Geneve 19 June 1948 Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie pp 128 129 a b c Cassis Youssef 2006 Les capitales du Capital Geneve Slatkine p 162 ISBN 2051019991 Pierre Keller 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie III La phase d expansion Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie p 164 a b Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie pp 132 140 High Tech Fever Time 1983 04 11 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 2019 03 13 Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie pp 143 144 a b Bergeron Louis 2013 Banquiers negociants et manufacturiers parisiens du Directoire a l Empire Paris Editions de l Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales p 18 ISBN 9782713225529 OCLC 949649582 a b Sabrina Sigel Hugo Banziger Josephine Verine 2018 Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch London Lombard Odier amp Cie p 72 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bosshart Pfluger Catherine ed 2006 The Swiss experience in San Francisco 150 years of Swiss consular presence in San Francisco 1st ed San Francisco CA Time amp Place ISBN 0977643204 OCLC 75088081 a b Hentsch Robert 1996 Hentsch banquiers a Geneve et a Paris au XIXe siecle Neuilly sur Seine p 129 ISBN 2950968309 OCLC 41142788 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hentsch Robert 1996 Hentsch banquiers a Geneve et a Paris au XIXe siecle Neuilly sur Seine p 302 ISBN 2950968309 OCLC 41142788 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d Jeannerat Ignace 2001 10 17 Dans la lignee Hentsch Benedict fils de Leonard in French ISSN 1423 3967 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Sabrina Sigel Hugo Banziger Josephine Verine 2018 Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch Lombard Odier amp Cie p 92 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Gordon Myles Jamieson 2014 The Genevoise 19th Century Capitalism and the Development of the Swiss Life Insurance Market 1872 1914 University of Geneva Cassis Youssef 2006 Les capitales du capital histoire des places financieres internationales 1780 2005 Geneve Slatkine p 88 ISBN 2051019991 OCLC 300140099 Malik Mazbouri 2005 L emergence de la place financiere suisse 1890 1913 itineraire d un grand banquier Lausanne Ed Antipodes p 230 ISBN 2940146535 OCLC 718586054 the group of Genevan private banks resisted the malice of the times better than other cities in Switzerland Indeed these firms knew to unite at the right time in order to participate fervently by means of the Financial Union in the issuance transactions and granting of loans in Switzerland and abroad Furthermore it allowed them to create and give a boost to a series of investment companies holding companies investment trusts etc the securities of which gave a long term boost to the Genevan stock market Les Grandes heures des banquiers suisses vers une histoire de la banque helvetique du XVe siecle a nos jours Bauer Hans 1901 Mottet Louis H Neuchatel Delachaux amp Niestle 1986 p 86 ISBN 2603005979 OCLC 16919738 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Fusion des banques privees suisses Darier Hentsch et Lombard Odier lesechos fr in French 4 June 2002 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Six generations chez Lombard Odier amp Cie beta letempsarchives ch Retrieved 2019 04 09 Lombard Odier a provisionne le cout des enquetes fiscales americaines Actualites Banque amp Assurance L AGEFI in French 2014 08 29 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Apres Julius Baer Lombard Odier transige aux USA Reuters in French 2015 12 31 Retrieved 2019 03 13 dead link a b c Pictet et Lombard Odier mettent fin a plus de deux siecles de tradition suisse lesechos fr in French 7 February 2013 Retrieved 2019 03 13 En Suisse la banque en famille cede le pas lesechos fr in French 25 July 2016 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Apres plus de 200 ans d existence deux banques suisses font leur revolution in French 2013 02 06 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Thierry Lombard prend sa retraite a 66 ans Temps in French 2015 01 09 ISSN 1423 3967 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Ruche Sebastien 2016 07 29 Le fils de Thierry Lombard arrive a la direction de la banque Landolt Temps in French ISSN 1423 3967 Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b Lombard Odier dans le viseur de la justice TDG in French 2017 02 23 ISSN 1010 2248 Retrieved 2019 03 13 swissinfo 6 December 2001 Woman gains coveted bank role SWI swissinfo ch Retrieved 2019 03 15 a b Payro Ricardo 2017 01 16 Deux nouveaux associes pour Lombard Odier Finance Corner in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 permanent dead link Patrick Odier prend sa retraite Entrer en politique pourrait m attirer 24 heures in French Retrieved 2023 03 13 a b c d Ruche Sebastien 2022 08 25 La masse sous gestion de Lombard Odier recule de 49 milliards au premier semestre Le Temps in French ISSN 1423 3967 Retrieved 2022 08 26 Ruche Sebastien Farine Mathilde 2019 02 14 Alexandre Zeller devra accelerer l innovation chez Lombard Odier Temps in French ISSN 1423 3967 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Lombard Odier a l heure de la revolution bancaire suisse lesechos fr in French 8 February 2017 Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b Lombard Odier Investment Managers thehedgefundjournal com Retrieved 2019 03 13 Finance Next Innovation Lombard Odier Investment Managers etend son offre d impact investing avec un fonds responsable actions internationales Next Finance in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b Lombard Odier IM s allie a Affirmative Investment Management www optionfinance fr in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Lombard Odier mise sur les ETF Actualites Asset Management L AGEFI in French 2015 03 30 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Nous venons de coter nos trois premiers ETF obligataires smart beta a Londres www optionfinance fr in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Lombard Odier IM utilise la blockchain pour une operation obligataire Actualites Fintech L AGEFI in French 2018 01 08 Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b Lombard Odier est devenu fournisseur de services informatiques Temps in French 2014 02 16 ISSN 1423 3967 Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b c Lombard Odier scinde son informatique Actualites Asset Management L AGEFI in French 2015 06 12 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Le cent cinquantenaire de la Maison de Manque Hentsch et Cie Journal de Geneve 4 26 February 1947 Roth Barbara Dufour Jean Jacques Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Retrieved 2019 03 15 La Corraterie des chevaux aux banques Journal de Geneve 16 December 1993 Pierre Keller 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie III La phase d expansion Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie pp 193 194 Immeuble geant pour une banque genevoise Journal de Geneve 31 May 1990 Habitants banquiers et commercants de Geneve marquent leur territoire Le Nouveau Quotidien 16 December 1993 SA Agefi Le cabinet Herzog amp De Meuron construira le nouveau siege de Lombard Odier www agefi com in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 Amenagement a Geneve Lombard Odier devoile son batiment de Bellevue Tribune de Geneve in French Retrieved 2022 09 16 Lombard Odier prevoit la construction d un nouveau siege a Geneve Actualites Banque amp Assurance L AGEFI in French 2017 04 25 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Brodard Olivier Un banquier prive s installe a Fribourg La Liberte in French Retrieved 2019 03 15 a b De succursale a banque Actualites Banque amp Assurance L AGEFI in French 2013 01 17 Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b c d e Sabrina Sigel Hugo Banziger Josephine Verine 2018 Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch London Lombard Odier amp Cie pp 218 219 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Gestion de fortune le suisse Lombard Odier s implante a Paris lesechos fr in French 12 April 2001 Retrieved 2019 03 13 permanent dead link Lombard Odier renforce son equipe dediee aux investisseurs institutionnels a Paris lesechos fr in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 permanent dead link a b Lombard Odier table sur la gestion alternative pour varier sa clientele Actualites Asset Management L AGEFI in French 2010 01 14 Retrieved 2019 03 13 ADI et Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch creent une societe de multigestion alternative lesechos fr in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 permanent dead link a b Pohl Manfred 1994 Handbook on the history of European banks Freitag Sabine European Association for Banking History Aldershot Hants England E Elgar p 1106 ISBN 9781781954218 OCLC 810082812 Robinson Blair Tosheena 23 July 2015 Lombard Odier positions Bahamas as a regional hub The Bahamas Investor Retrieved 2019 03 15 Lombard Odier cible la banque privee en Chine Actualites Banque amp Assurance L AGEFI in French 2014 03 12 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Kirschleger Pierre Yves 2009 L Internationale protestante d Alexandre Lombard dit Lombard Dimanche Chaponniere Jean Francois 1998 Nos deux cent premieres annees partie II Deux siecles de banque Geneve Lombard Odier amp Cie p 123 a b Geneve centre philanthropique Bilan in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 a b Payro Ricardo 2015 12 16 Thierry Lombard prend une participation dans la banque Landolt Finance Corner in French Retrieved 2019 03 13 permanent dead link Oxford University and Lombard Odier launch strategic partnership on Sustainable Investment The Smith School Oxford University Professor Ben Caldecott The Smith School Retrieved 5 December 2020 a b La Fondation Philanthropia fete ses 10 ans Allnews in French 2018 09 27 Retrieved 2019 03 13 Quand les donateurs aident la recherche contre le cancer Temps in French 2018 12 03 ISSN 1423 3967 Retrieved 2019 04 09 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bank Lombard Odier 26 Co amp oldid 1183798363, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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