P&O Bank

P&O Banking Corporation, was a bank established in 1920, by P&O to develop its private banking business.

In 1927 it was sold to Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China and amalgamated into to the global operations of Chartered Bank.

History

In 1920 P&O, established the P&O Bank to develop the shipping company's private banking business. Its director was Alexander Kemp Wright also of the Royal Bank of Scotland.[1]

Inchacape incorporated the bank on 3 May 1920 with an issued capital of £2 million. Shareholders included Lloyds Bank and National Provincial Bank. P&O Bank opened for business in London in June, the following month, and simultaneously in Calcutta, Bombay and Madras. More branches overseas followed. In 1920, P&O Bank established a branch in Colombo, Ceylon, which it followed by establishing branches in Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Canton.

In 1920 it also acquired Allahabad Bank in India. However, P&O Bank ran Allahabad Bank separately.

However, P&O Bank was unable to wean the customers of the shipping business away from their existing banking relationships. In a search of income it ended up booking riskier business, with the result that it was plagued with bad debts.

In 1927, Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China acquired a 75% shareholding in P&O Bank and later acquired the remaining shares, P&O Bank never having established a viable banking business. For a while, Chartered continued to run the two banks, P&O and Allahabad, separately. In 1937 Chartered merged in P&O Bank, but not Allahabad; the government of India nationalized Allahabad on 19 July 1969.

When Chartered closed the branch in Colombo, the Bank of Ceylon was able to take on almost the entire staff.

Citations and references

Citations

References

References

  1. Alexander Kemp Wright NatWest Group^