Banking in Israel has its roots in the Zionist movement at the beginning of the 20th century prior to the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948.

History

The World Zionist Organization established the Anglo-Palestine Bank in 1903 (which later was renamed Bank Leumi). The two largest banks control over 60% of banking activity, and the top five control over 90%.

Most of the banks were nationalized when their stocks collapsed in the 1983 bank stock crisis. Since then, the government has sold much of its bank stock holdings but still remains a large stockholder in many of the now privately held banks. The government sold Bank Hapoalim in 1996 and Bank Mizrahi (now merged into Bank Mizrahi-Tefahot) in 1998. The government also sold a major part of its stock in Discount Bank in 2006 and in Leumi Bank in 2005.

Major banks

Banking group Established Number of
Branches
Total Assets
(NIS billion)
Share of
total
banking system
assets
Share of
total
banking system
credit
Share of
total
banking system
deposits
Hapoalim group 1921 374 273.3 30.0 31.3 29.1
Bank Leumi group 1902 232 272.8 29.9 29.9 30.2
Discount Bank group 1935 195 154.8 17.0 14.2 17.7
Mizrahi-Tefahot Bank group 1923 123 86.3 9.5 10.9 9.7
First International Bank group 1975 103 71.9 7.9 7.3 8.4
Source: Israel's Banking System Archived 2008-04-07 at the Wayback Machine Bank of Israel

Supervision and regulation

The Bank of Israel supervises Israeli banks via the Supervisor of Banks. The tasks and authority of the Supervisor of Banks are based on several laws:[1]

  • The Banking Ordinance, 1941, a Mandatory ordinance which has been amended and updated over the years;
  • The Banking (Licensing) Law, 1981;
  • The Banking (Service to Customers) Law, 1981;
  • The Checks Without Cover (bad checks) Law, 1981.

References

  1. Banking Supervision Archived 2007-11-18 at the Wayback Machine Bank of Israel
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