credit : logofolder.blogspot.com
Logo Collection : Bank Mandiri, headquartered in Jakarta, is the largest bank in Indonesia in term of assets, loans and deposits. Total assets as of Q3 2012 were IDR 588.4 trillion (or USD 59.8 billion). It also has Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) of 16,08% (including market risk), Return on Asset (RoA) of 3.45%, and Return on Equity (RoE) of 22.18%. As of September 2012, Bank Mandiri is the first largest bank in Indonesia by total assets.
Bank Mandiri is the result of the merger made by Indonesian Government from four older government-owned banks that had failed in 1998. Those four banks were Bank Bumi Daya (BBD), Bank Dagang Negara (BDN), Bank Expor Impor (Exim), and Bank Pembangunan Indonesia (Bapindo). During the amalgamation and reorganization, the government reduced the number of branches by 194 and the number of personnel from 26,600 to 17,620.
1951: Bank Industri Negara (BIN) was established to finance priority sectors, such as plantations, industry and mining.
1959: The Indonesia government nationalized Nationale Handelsbank’s operations in Indonesia and from them created Bank Umum Negara.
1960: The Indonesia government nationalized the Indonesian operations of two more Dutch banks. It used Nederlandsche Handel-Maatschappij’s operations to create Bank Ekspor Impor Indonesia. Escomptobank became Bank Dagang Negara. The government also established the state-owned Bank Pembangunan Indonesia (Bapindo) and merged BIN into it. Bapindo specialized in medium and long-term financing of manufacturing, tourism and transportation.
1964: The Indonesia government nationalized Chartered Bank’s operations in Indonesia and merged them into Bank Umum Negara. Chartered Bank, a British overseas bank, had first entered Indonesia in 1863 when it opened an agency in Batavia.
1965: The Indonesia government brought Bank Umum Negara into the Bank Negara Indonesia group, renaming it Bank Negara Indonesia Unit IV (BNI IV). Similarly, Bank Ekspor Impor Indonesia became Bank Negara Indonesia Unit II (BNI II).
1968: The Indonesian government again reorganized some banks. BNI IV became an independent bank with the name Bank Bumi Daya. The government split BNI II into two parts, with the BNI Unit II Export-Import Division becoming BankExim, which specialized in trade finance.
1986: Bapindo expanded into general commercial banking.
1999: The government merged Bank Bumi Daya, Bank Dagang Negara, Bank Ekspor Impor Indonesia and Bank Pembangunan Indonesia to create Bank Mandiri.