Azov-Don Commercial Bank

The Azov-Don Commercial Bank or Azovsko-Donskoi Commercial Bank (Russian: Азовско-Донской коммерческий банк), often referred to simply as the Azov-Don Bank, was one of the largest joint-stock commercial banks in the late Russian Empire. It was founded in 1871 in the city of Taganrog on the shores of the Sea of Azov, to which its name refers as well as the Don River. In 1903, it relocated its head office to Saint Petersburg. In late 1917 following the Russian Revolution, like all other commercial banks in Russia, it was absorbed into the State Bank with no compensation to its shareholders.[1]

Former head office of the bank, Bol'shaya Morskaya Ulitsa 3-5 in Saint Petersburg

Overview edit

 
Advert of the short-lived Saint-Petersburg-Azov Commercial Bank, 1899
 
Azov-Don Bank advert with list of branches, 1907

The bank's initial share capital amounted to 5 million roubles in 1871, and grew quickly despite an episode of serious financial distress in 1883. In the mid-1890s it became Russia's largest regional bank (i.e. not headquartered in either Saint Petersburg or Moscow),[2] and by the start of the 20th century, it was the Russian Empire's sixth-largest private-sector bank by assets.[3]: 43  By then, its network was still concentrated in what is now Southern Russia, Eastern Ukraine and Crimea, and the South Caucasus.

In the late 1880s, the Azov-Don Bank sponsored the creation of a separate affiliate in Saint Petersburg, branded the Saint-Petersburg-Azov Commercial Bank [ru] and led by financier Yakov S. Polyakov [ru]. That venture briefly flourished and erected an opulent head office on Nevsky Prospect, but collapsed in the financial crisis that hit Russia in 1899-1902, selling its head office in 1901 to the newly established Banque du Nord. Following the Saint-Petersburg-Azov Bank's insolvency in 1903, the management of the Azov-Don Bank moved to Saint Petersburg. Originally located at 26 Nevsky Prospect, the bank acquired buildings at 3 and 5 Bolshaya Morskaya Street to construct its own head office building [ru] according to the project by architect Fyodor Lidval in two stages, 1907-09 (with an iconic colossal portico) and 1912-13 (extension).[2]

In 1905-1906, French banks bought ten thousand shares in the Azov-Don Bank.[4]: 16  Along with financing trade, the bank took control over troubled enterprises and reorganised them into new joint-stock companies. By 1907, it had 38 branches in Armavir, Georgiyevsk, Grozny, Maykop, Novorossiysk, Pyatigorsk, Rostov-on-Don, Samara, Stavropol, Taganrog (the former head office), Tsaritsin (later Volgograd), Vladikavkaz, Voronezh, Yekaterinodar (later Krasnodar), and Yeysk in present-day Russia; Alexandrovsk (later Zaporizhzhia), Bakhmut, Berdiansk, Feodosia, Henichesk, Luhansk, Kerch, Kharkiv, Kryvyi Rih, Mariupol, Melitopol, Nikopol, Simferopol, Sloviansk, Sumy, Yalta, Yekaterinoslav (later Dnipro), and Yuzovka (later Donetsk) in present-day Ukraine; Łódź and Warsaw in present-day Poland; Kutaisi and Tbilisi in Georgia; and Elizavetpol (later Ganja) in Azerbaijan. Its shares were listed on the Berlin Stock Exchange in 1910 and on the Paris Stock Exchange in 1911.[2] In 1912 it acquired a large stake in the newly created Paris-based Banque des pays du Nord [sv], with Boris Kamenka being appointed to the latter's board.[5]

By 1917, the Azov-Don Bank controlled over 90 companies, and its network had expanded to 73 branches throughout the Empire. Its position was especially strong in ferrous and non-ferrous metallurgy, coal industry, and production of building materials.[2] It was nationalized shortly after the October Revolution by a decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in December 1917.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ George Garvy (1977). "The Origins and Evolution of the Soviet Banking System: An Historical Perspective" (PDF). Money, Financial Flows, and Credit in the Soviet Union. National Bureau of Economic Research.
  2. ^ a b c d "Azovsko-Donskoy Commercial Bank". Saint Petersburg Encyclopedia.
  3. ^ Nikita Lychakov (2018), Government-made bank distress: Industrialisation policies and the Russian financial crisis of 1899-1902 (PDF), Belfast: Queen's University Centre for Economic History
  4. ^ Brumfield, William Craft; Anan’ich, Boris V.; Petrov, Yuri A. (2001). Commerce in Russian Urban Culture, 1861–1914. Baltimore: Woodrow Wilson Center Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-6750-7.
  5. ^ Cameron, Rondo; Bovykin, V. I. (1992). International Banking 1870-1914. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-534512-4.
  6. ^ "Россия и мир: экономическая конъюнктура 1911–1914 гг". Исторический факультет. Исторический факультет Московского государственного университета имени М.В.Ломоносова. Retrieved 26 April 2020.