Crisis Banking in the East
Aldershot. 1996
The Chartered Mercantile Bank is one of the constituent banks of the huge Hongkong and Shanghai bank. This study charts its first 40 years as one of the pioneering banks of the Far East. Based upon meticulous research using a particularly rich set of banking archives, the book describes the complex political and financial circumstances on the subcontinent during the bank’s early years and introduces the personalities in the Indian business and London banking worlds who guided the infant institution. It provides an inside view of the workings of an Eastern bank – the nature of its business, methods of payment and exchange, recruitment and career patterns of staff, and includes valuable material on the role of European bankers in an eastern setting.
Table of contents
- The Birth of Eastern Banking
- The Foundation of Mercantile Bank
- Early Success and a Charter, 1854-58
- Expansion, Boom and Crisis, 1858-65
- Survival and stagnation, 1866-70
- Bad Banking, the Silver Crisis and New Leadership, 1871-84
- The Officers, local Staff, Management and Directors
- London Head Office: Its Business and Overseas Infrastructure
- The mechanics of the Bank’s Business, 1854-93
- The Last Years of the Chartered Mercantile Bank
- Liquidation and Reconstruction, 1892-93