signed by Law for the Banque Générale. The text reads, using modern French spelling: "La Banque promet payer au porteur à vue cinquante écus d'espèces, du poids et titre de ce jour, valeur reçue à Paris le 10 juin 1718" On , the Regency Council approved a motion presented by Noailles to "give Mr Law the power to establish a bank", albeit on a less ambitious scheme than that suggested by Law to comptroller-general
Nicolas Desmarets in Louis XIV's dying days. That same day,
letters patent were issued giving Law's General Bank an
issuance privilege for 20 years, with the right to issue
banknotes denominated in
écus de banque set at 5
French livres per écu. On , a further set of letters patent allowed Law to capitalize his bank by issuing 1,200 shares at 5,000 livres face value. The Banque Générale was thus a private bank, with capacity to finance France's debt but no role in its fiscal revenue collection, whereas Law's proposal to Desmarets had envisioned a public bank endowed with tax-collecting authority. The conditions for share subscription made it possible to pay mostly in government bills accepted at face value, which was highly advantageous to subscribers since these forms of state debt traded at a 60 percent market discount at the time. Law bought 25 percent of the shares, while by some accounts the king owned 380 shares. The bank was initially established at Law's home on
Place Louis-le-Grand (now 15 place Vendôme, part of the
Hôtel Ritz) In the summer of 1716, it moved to the
Hôtel de Mesmes on rue Sainte-Avoye, closer to what was then the commercial and financial hub of Paris around
Les Halles. In April 1717, Law purchased the nearby
Hôtel de Soissons from its then owner the
Prince of Carignan with the intent to relocate the bank there, but that transaction was stalled by Carignan's creditors. ==Banque Royale==