Company type | Public |
---|---|
TASE: POLI | |
Industry | Banking, financial services |
Founded | 1921 |
Headquarters | , |
Key people | Dov Kotler, CEO Oded Eran, Chairman of the Board |
Products | Credit cards, consumer banking, corporate banking, finance and insurance, investment banking, mortgage loans, private banking, private equity, savings, securities, asset management |
Revenue | US$10.8 billion (2021)[1] |
US$684.6 million (2016) | |
Total assets | US$168.1 billion (2021)[1] |
Owner | Shari Arison (15.74%) |
Number of employees | 8,708 (2021)[1] |
Website | bankhapoalim |
Bank Hapoalim (Hebrew: בנק הפועלים lit. The Workers' Bank) is one of the largest banks in Israel, established in 1921. The bank offers a broad range of financial services to retail, corporate, and institutional customers, with a focus on retail banking services.[2] It operates a network of more than 250 branches and offices in Israel and abroad. Bank Hapoalim is a prominent player in the Israeli banking sector, with a significant market share.
The company is traded in the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange under the symbol POLI, and is part of the Tel Aviv 35 Index. Reuven Krupik was appointed Chairman of the Board in 2020, and Yadin Antebi was appointed CEO in August 2024, succeeding former CEO Dov Kotler.
History
The bank was established in 1921 by the Histadrut, the Israeli trade union congress (lit. "General Federation of Laborers in the Land of Israel") and the Zionist Organisation.
The bank was owned by the Histadrut until 1983, when it was nationalized following the Bank Stock Crisis. The bank was held by the Israeli government until 1996 when it was sold to a group of investors led by Ted Arison.
The bank has a significant presence in global financial markets. In Israel, it has over 600 ATMs (automated teller machines), 250 bank branches, 7 regional business centers, 22 business branches and industry desks for major corporate customers. The bank's stock is traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange.
At the end of 2015, the bank had 11,930 employees worldwide. Up until 2018, Arison Holdings, led by Shari Arison, owned approximately 20% of Bank Hapoalim’s shares.[3] In late 2018, Arison announced the gradual sale of her holdings, concluding this process in September 2022 when shares worth over one billion shekels were sold, leaving the bank without a controlling shareholder.
In 2021, the bank reported a net profit of 915 million shekels ($267 million) in Q4 2020, compared to a net loss of 629 million shekels in Q4 2019. The bank's credit portfolio continued to grow, and it entered the digital wallet sector and made deals with banks in Bahrain and the UAE as a part of the Abraham Accords.[4]
Net profit for 2023 totaled NIS 7,360 million, compared with NIS 6,532 million in 2022. The main driver of the increase is 19.3% growth in income, which was driven by rate hikes and the growth in activity,[5] and despite a NIS 1.9 million credit loss provision booked in 2023.[6]
Global presence
The bank has operated several international subsidiaries: In the City of London and Poalim Asset Management (UK) Limited; in the United States (New York City, California, and Miami) and in Canada; BHI Private Banking, Switzerland Bank Hapoalim (Switzerland) Ltd., Zürich, Geneva, Luxembourg, South America, and the Cayman Islands. In recent years, the bank's international presence has significantly reduced,[7] and by 2023, only the New York branch remained operational.
2018-2022 plan
Bank Hapoalim reached an agreement that canceled the labor dispute called by the Histadrut labour federation in December. The January 2020 deal, according to the regulatory filing by the bank in Tel Aviv, suggests to raise worker wages by an average of 3.7% from 2018 to 2022, bank employees will also get a one-time grant of 210 million shekels ($60.6 million), whereas the bank also plans to reduce its workforce by over 900 jobs through an early retirement plan.[8]
Controversies and criticism
Tax evasion and money laundering
On 30 April 2020, the bank was found to be complicit in tax evasion and money laundering relating to FIFA and bidding for the World Cup. It was ordered to pay fine of $874.3 million after pleading guilty to the first charge, which involved helping US taxpayers to stash some $7.6 billion in more than 5,500 secret Swiss and Israeli bank accounts. It was the second-largest recovery by the US Department of Justice since it began investigating the facilitation of US tax evasion by foreign banks in 2008.[9]
It was ordered to pay $30 million in forfeitures and fines in relation to the second charge, which pertained to helping launder more than $20 million in bribes and kickbacks for officials involved in the corruption scandal that embroiled football's world governing body FIFA in 2015.[9] Internal Revenue Service criminal investigation chief Don Fort said, "There is no excuse for a foreign financial institution to unlawfully assist wealthy Americans in flouting their responsibilities to pay their taxes. With today's guilty plea, Bank Hapoalim is taking responsibility for their role in deliberately breaking the law and undermining the integrity of this nation's tax system."
Assistant attorney general Brian Benczkowski stated that "for nearly five years, Bank Hapoalim employees used the US financial system to launder tens of millions of dollars in bribe payments to corrupt soccer officials in multiple countries", while William Sweeney, assistant director of the FBI's New York field office, said that "Bank Hapoalim admits executives looked the other way, and allowed illicit activity to continue even when employees discovered the scheme and reported it."[9]
Involvement in Israeli settlements
In January 2014, Danske Bank and the Dutch pension fund PGGM blacklisted Bank Hapoalim for its involvement in the financing of settlements in the Palestinian territories.[10]
In October 2017, Danish pension firm Sampension banned investment in Hapoalim alongside three other companies operating in illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank, including Bank Leumi, Israeli telecoms firm Bezeq and German firm Heidelberg Cement.[11]
On 12 February 2020, the United Nations published a database of 112 companies helping to further Israeli settlement activity in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, as well as in the occupied Golan Heights.[12] These settlements are considered illegal under international law.[13] Bank Hapoalim was listed on the database on account of its "provision of services and utilities supporting the maintenance and existence of settlements" and "banking and financial operations helping to develop, expand or maintain settlements and their activities" in these occupied territories.[14]
On 5 July 2021, Norway's largest pension fund KLP said it would divest from Bank Hapoalim together with 15 other business entities implicated in the UN report for their links to Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.[15]
Bank logos
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The bank's logo during the 1990s
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The bank's logo from 1998 - September 2001
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The bank's logo from September 2001 - January 2018
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The bank's logo since January 2018
See also
References
- ^ a b c "Bank Hapoalim". Forbes. 2021-05-13.
- ^ "Israel's Largest Bank, Bank Hapoalim, Admits to Conspiring with U.S. Taxpayers to Hide Assets and Income in Offshore Accounts". www.justice.gov. 2020-04-30. Retrieved 2023-03-09.
- ^ אבישר ורוז׳נסקי, עירית וירדן (24 July 2024). "הפרידה מהפועלים הפגישה את שרי אריסון עם 7.2 מיליארד שקל". כלכליסט.
- ^ "Israel's Bank Hapoalim moves to fourth quarter profit, sees economic uncertainty". Reuters. 2021-03-11. Retrieved 2023-03-09.
- ^ "Bank Hapoalim reports record NIS 6.5 billion net profit in 2022". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 2023-03-09.
- ^ "Bank Hapoalim Announces Fourth Quarter 2023 and Annual Results" (PDF). Bank Hapoalim. 3 July 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
- ^ ניסן, יוסי (3 March 2017). "בנק הפועלים סוגר את הפעילות בשווייץ; העלות: 110 מיליון שקלים". Globes.
- ^ "Israel's Bank Hapoalim reaches new wage deal, to cut 900 jobs by 2022". January 8, 2020 – via www.reuters.com.
- ^ a b c "Israel's Bank Hapoalim Pays $900 Mn Over Tax Evasion, FIFA Cases". AFP. 30 April 2020. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
- ^ Ravid, Barak (February 2014). "Denmark's Largest Bank Blacklists Israel's Hapoalim Over Settlement Construction". Haaretz.
- ^ "Danish pension fund bans four firms over West Bank settlement activity". Jerusalem Post.
- ^ "UN rights office issues report on business activities related to settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory". Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. 12 February 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
- ^ "UN Security Council Resolution 2334, 2016 (S/RES/2334(2016))". United Nations Security Council. 23 December 2016. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
- ^ "Database of all business enterprises involved in certain activities relating to Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem and the West Bank (A/HRC/43/71)". UN OCHA. 12 Feb 2020. Retrieved 2021-09-12.
- ^ Fouche, Gwladys; Jessop, Simon (5 July 2021). "Nordic fund KLP excludes 16 companies over links to Israeli settlements in West Bank". Reuters. Retrieved 2021-09-13.
External links
- International website
- Israeli website (in Hebrew)