The Crédit Foncier (English: landed credit) initially made loans to
communes. The movement was initiated by
Louis Wolowski and
Count Xavier Branicki, and sanctioned by Emperor
Napoleon III in 1852 in an attempt to modernize the medieval French banking system and expand French investment outside Europe. Its name became the "Banque Foncière of
Paris". Similar institutions at
Nevers and
Marseille were amalgamated into one under the title of "Crédit Foncier de France". The amount of the loan could not exceed half of the value of the property pledged or hypothecated, and that the repayment of the loan was by an
annuity, which included the interest and part of the principal, terminable at a certain date. The Crédit Foncier had a monopoly on mortgages. In 1995, the bank reported a loss of 10.8 billion
francs, and in 1996, the French government gave Credit Foncier a
bailout to prevent it from collapsing, fearing the resulting financial downturn. After the bailout, the French government began planning to dissolve the bank, with
Finance Minister Jean Arthuis seeking to sell its core housing loans businesses to
Credit Immobilier et Hotelier (CIB) and wind down all other operations. Initial estimates stated that at least 900 of Credit Foncier's 3,300 employees were to be laid off, but this was later revised upwards to around 1,500 layoffs. Employees of the bank, in protest,
captured the high-ranking executives for several days, until the government decided to negotiate with the employees. ==Former headquarters==