Bank Rakyat Indonesia

PT Bank Rakyat Indonesia (Persero) Tbk.
Company typePublic
IDX: BBRI
IndustryFinancial services, microfinance
Founded16 December 1895;
128 years ago
 (1895-12-16)
Founder
  • Raden Bei Aria Wirjaatmadja (as Purwokertoan Savings and Loan Bank of Native Nobility)
  • Government of Indonesia (as Bank Rakyat Indonesia)
HeadquartersJakarta, Indonesia
Key people
  • Sunarso (President Director)
  • Kartika Wirjoatmodjo (President Commissioner)
RevenueIncrease Rp 121.76 trillion (2019)
Increase Rp 43.431 trillion (2019)
Increase Rp 34.4 trillion (2019)[1]
Total assetsIncrease Rp 1.865,63 trillion (2022)
Total equityIncrease Rp 208.8 trillion (2019)
OwnerGovernment of Indonesia (53.19%)
Number of employees
78.897 (2022)
SubsidiariesPermodalan Nasional Madani
Pegadaian
Bank Raya Indonesia
Bank Syariah Indonesia (17.4%)
BRI Insurance
BRI Life
BRI Remittance
BRI Danareksa Sekuritas[2]
BRI Ventures
Danareksa Investment Management[3]
Websitewww.bri.co.id

PT Bank Rakyat Indonesia (Persero) Tbk (lit. 'Indonesian People's Bank', commonly known as BRI) is one of the largest banks in Indonesia.[4] It specialises in small scale and microfinance[5] style borrowing from and lending to its approximately 30 million retail clients through its over 8,600 branches, units and rural service posts. It also has a comparatively small, but growing, corporate business. As of 2022, it is the second largest bank in Indonesia by asset.[6]

BRI is the oldest bank in Indonesia, tracing back since 1895. It is currently 53% government owned operating company (Persero) and has been government-owned for the entire period since the war of independence (1945 to 1949) to November 2003, when 30% of its shares were sold through an IPO.

History

Logo of BRI between 2000 and 2007, still used occasionally for unofficial purposes

BRI was founded in 1895, during the Dutch colonial period as De Poerwokertosche Hulp en Spaarbank der Inlandsche Hoofden (Help and Savings Bank for Purwokerto's Aristocrats) by Raden Bei Aria Wirjaatmadja in Purwokerto, Central Java.[7] It then underwent its first (of many) name changes to Hulp en Spaarbank der Inlandsche Bestuurs Ambtenaren (Help and Savings Bank for Local Civil Servants).

Going through several name changes, its final name during the colonial period was Algemene Volkscredietbank (People's General Credit Bank, AVB) in 1934. This translates loosely into Indonesian as Bank Rakyat Serikat. At this point, it was one of the largest institutions in the (then) colony.

The bank's operations were affected by the Japanese occupation during the 1942 to 1945 period of World War II, including a further name change to People's Bank (Japanese: 庶民銀行, Hepburn: Shomin Ginkou). After the Indonesian declaration of independence, on 17 August 1945 the bank was officially nationalised by the new government and then renamed Bank Rakyat Indonesia Serikat. BRI gained its current name and limited company status in 1992.[citation needed]

BRI was nearly unique in Indonesia in the East Asian financial crisis of 1997, in that its operations were largely unaffected. This was because it had very little, if any, lending in foreign currencies or to the large corporations that had been borrowing heavily overseas, as most of the other large Indonesian banks had.[citation needed]

Since then, BRI has been concentrating on increasing its core business and improving its risk management practices. As part of the reformasi (reform) process in Indonesia since 1998, the government has been steadily reducing its influence on the Bank's day-to-day operations, culminating in its IPO. It is also seeking to comply with the Basel II accords, as mandated by Bank Indonesia, by 2008.[citation needed]

During the period of 2006–2011, its assets jumped almost 62%. The bank topped the list of the nation's most profitable banks for six years, recording assets of Rp 249.56 trillion (US$28.6 billion) in 2010, up from Rp 154.72 trillion in 2006.[8]

The former logo of BRI, used until December 2020.

Satellite

In April 2014, BRI contracted with Space Systems/Loral and Arianespace to, respectively, build and launch their first satellite, a 3,500 kg (7,700 lb) C-band and Ku-band spacecraft dubbed BRIsat, and on 18 June 2016, Ariane 5 has successfully launched BRIsat as the first satellite owned and operated by a bank in the world to link the bank's geographically isolated branches.[9][10]

References

  1. ^ "BRI books record net profits". The Jakarta Post. 21 March 2011.
  2. ^ "BRI Resmi Akuisisi Mayoritas Saham Danareksa Sekuritas". cnbcindonesia.com. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  3. ^ Mayasari, Selvi (2 December 2022). "BRI Kuasai Danareksa Investment Management" (in Indonesian). Kontan. Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  4. ^ "Indonesia-Investments.com:Bank Rakyat company profile". 25 March 2014.
  5. ^ Ledgerwoodbali, Joanna (1999). Microfinance handbook: an institutional and financial perspective. bali denpasar: World Bank Publications. p. 253. ISBN 978-0-8213-4306-7.
  6. ^ Binekasri, Romys (10 March 2023). "Top 10 Largest Bank Asset in Indonesia". CNBC Indonesia.
  7. ^ Investor Relations: Corporate Profile, Bank Rakyat Indonesia's investor relations site. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  8. ^ "BRI's assets jump 62% in 5 years". The Jakarta Post. 14 April 2011.
  9. ^ de Selding, Peter B. (28 April 2014). "Indonesia Taps SS/L, Arianespace To Build, Launch 3500-kilogram Satellite". SpaceNews. Archived from the original on 9 September 2014.
  10. ^ "Ariane 5 Launched into Space with BRIsat". 19 June 2016.
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