In 1929, the President of the Management Board of Pocztowa Kasa Oszczędności, Henryk Gruber, observed that there was a demand for a bank that could provide financial services to the eight million Poles living outside the country. Starting from these assumptions, on 17 March 1929,[7] the Ministry of Finance established Bank Polska Kasa Opieki Spółka Akcyjna.[8] On 29 October of the same year, the Warsaw District Court entered Bank Polska Kasa Opieki SA in the commercial register. The company's shareholders were Pocztowa Kasa Oszczędności, Bank Gospodarstwa Krajowego and Państwowy Bank Rolny. The first branches were opened in France, Argentina, and the United States, and in Tel Aviv (now Israel). By 1939 Pekao had branches in the capitals of most countries where Polish emigres had settled.[9]
People's Republic of Poland
After the end of World War II and the beginning of the Soviet domination in Poland, the bank took care of international financial operations conducted by the authorities of the newly established Polish People's Republic. With the bank's help, the Poles who live abroad could support their families behind the Iron Curtain. In 1968, the Minister of Finance authorized the establishment of foreign currency accounts for individuals working abroad in Bank Pekao. Pekao lost only in 1989 with the onset of economic reforms that swept into Poland and the communist bloc.[10]
In the 1970s, currency accounts in Pekao were divided into three categories: Account A for people paying currencies with documented origin,[11] B accounts for payments with undocumented origin, and C accounts for foreigners. The funds from B accounts could not be legally exported abroad, but in 1976 the rights of A and B accounts were leveled.[11] In 1974, the bank had around 91,000 registered accounts. At the end of the 1980s, the total value of foreign currency accounts was US$3.3 billion.[12]
Much earlier, in 1960, the bank began issuing its own vouchers, "Bon Towarowy PeKaO", denominated in US dollars. Initially, for these vouchers (as well as directly for convertible currencies deposited in domestic and foreign bank representations), it was possible to buy both foreign and deficit domestic goods in the foreign sales network operated directly by Bank Pekao.[13] The offer of the bank for individual clients included a variety of goods covering, among others, groceries (including "Krakus" ham and Western chewing gum), alcohol, cosmetics, textiles, household appliances, bicycles, motorcycles, cars, trucks, tractors, agricultural machinery, fuel, building materials, installation and sanitary equipment, and also apartments and furniture. This retail network was created with the establishment of the Pewex "internal export" company in 1972 out of the bank's structures.[11]
Third Polish Republic (1989–present)
On 3 August 1999, Pekao became a member of the UniCredit company.[14]
In December 2016, Polish state-owned PZU, together with the Polish Development Fund, acquired Bank Pekao – Poland's second-largest bank, previously owned by Italian bank UniCredit—by buying a 32.8% stake in the bank for the amount of PLN 10.6 billion (EUR 2.6 billion).[15]
In September 2018 Bank Pekao opened a representative office in London with the aim to facilitate cooperation between Poland and the UK and to stay close to their clients and investors. Bank Pekao also plans on opening several other offices across Europe.[16]
At the end of 2020, Bank Pekao announced its acquisition of Idea Bank