BOV planning to open Brussels office

Bank of Valletta, is planning to open a representative office in Brussels later this year.

BOV chief executive Charles Borg said the new office would compliment the operations of the bank's EU Business Development arm, which seeks to position the bank as "the key intermediary for the local business community to avail itself of EU funding opportunities".

In a statement, the bank said its Brussels office would help it to assist enterprises identify Brussels-based EU funding programmes "and guide them in developing their project idea accordingly".
In addition to helping Maltese enterprises to tap into EU funded programmes and initiatives, the new office is also expected to strengthen the bank's existing links with EU institutions and agencies, including the European Investment Fund and the European Investment Bank, BOV said.

Borg said BOV had been encouraged to open the Brussels outpost by an earlier initiative, the Joint European Resources for Micro to Medium Enterprises Initiative (JEREMIE), which was launched in 2011 to improve access to financing for small and medium-sized enterprises in Europe, as part of a European Commission scheme known as the 2020 Strategy.

BOV won the bid to manage the programme for Malta, and as of the end of September, had approved €11.4m worth of loans, with €25m worth of leads in the pipeline.

"Following the positive experience gained through the JEREMIE initiative, with over 40% of the fund already allocated in the first 11 months of this three-year programme, the bank through its Brussels representative office will be seeking to consolidate further its position as the Maltese financial institution specialising in EU funded financing instruments while, at the same time, assisting our enterprises to tap into Brussels-based EU funding programmes," Borg said.

Leveraging EU membership

Last September the Bank of Valletta posted a pre-tax profit of €64.4m, 35% below the previous year's €98.9m, weighed, according to its annual report, by the uncertainty in the financial markets, particularly in the second half of the year.

The results were also impacted by a €15m payout relating to a settlement with investors in a property fund, the management company of which the bank partially owned.