The major cooperative credit banks (Bcc) in Italy are all from the Centre-North. This is what emerges from the classifications by total assets of "The main Italian companies", 2015 edition of the Mediobanca-R&S research office which is based on last year's balance sheet data.
The Bcc of Rome is confirmed as the first Bcc of Italy with total tangible assets of 10 billion and 526,6 million euros which places it at the level of the Popolari obliged by the recent Renzi reform to transform itself into a joint stock company (if endowed with assets exceeding 8 billion) and was the twenty-sixth Italian bank overall.
Like last year, in second place is the Piedmontese Bcc of Alba, Langhe, Roero and Canavese (5 billion and 197 million in assets), in third place the Emilia-Romagna-based Credito cooperativo Ravennate ed Imolese (3 billion and 179, 2 million9, in fourth place the Tuscan Bcc di Cambiano (3 billion and 118,4 million), which is also the oldest of the mutual banks still operating in Italy, in fifth Emil Banca (2 billion and 844 million).
All of the Centre-North also the next 5 cooperative credit banks: the Lombard Bcc of Pompiano and Franciacorta, Bcc of Brescia and Bcc of Carate Brianza, followed by the Bcc Centropadana and the Chiantibanca.
The first Bcc in the South is the Sicilian Bcc G. Toniolo di San Cataldo (1 billion and 253,7 million of total assets) which is in 37th place among the Italian cooperative credit banks.