New Bank of India

Summary

New Bank of India was established in 1936, in Lahore by Mulk Raj Kohli, a professor of Economics turned banker. It moved its head office to Amritsar in 1947, and then to New Delhi in 1956. It acquired Didwana Industrial Bank in 1965, Chawla Bank in 1969, and Sahukara Bank in 1971. Earlier New Bank of India had acquired Punjab & Kashmir Bank.

  • Didwana Industrial Bank had been established in 1925 in Didwana.
  • Chawla Bank, which had been established in 1913, had its registered office in Bannu, North Western Frontier Province, and a branch office at Dehra Dun in the United Provinces. Ninety-five percent of its depositors and creditors migrated to India after Partition.
  • Sahukara Bank, est. 1912 in Ludhiana, had branches in Pakistan that it lost at Partition.
  • Lala Gokul Chand Suri founded Punjab & Kashmir Bank in 1912 in Delhi with operations in Rawalpindi.

The Government of India nationalized New Bank of India in 1980. Punjab National Bank acquired New Bank of India in 1993.[1][2] The only other nationalized bank merged with another—except for State Bank of India with its associate banks[3]—was the merger of Bharatiya Mahila Bank with State Bank of India[4] in 2017.

References edit

  1. ^ "PNB Heritage". Punjab National Bank. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
  2. ^ Parmatam Parkash Arya; B. B. Tandon (2003). Economic Reforms in India: From First to Second Generation and Beyond. Deep & Deep Publications. pp. 369–. ISBN 978-81-7629-435-5.
  3. ^ Surojit Gupta & Sidhartha (26 July 2014). "Govt asks IDBI Bank, UBI to plan merger". The Times of India. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
  4. ^ "SBI merger with associate banks, Bharatiya Mahila Bank effective today | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis". dna. 1 April 2017. Retrieved 1 April 2017.