The Trade Bank of Iraq plans to expand abroad and almost double of the number of its branches in Iraq next year to benefit from an anticipated oil boom, its chairman told Reuters.
The state-run bank is also eyeing financing deals in the energy sector as OPEC member Iraq moves ahead with plans to boost oil production through a series of deals with oil majors and rebuilds its battered economy, Hussein Al-Uzri said.
"Business is picking up," he said in an interview on Thursday on the sidelines of an oil and gas conference in the southern oil hub of Basra.
"We expect that by end of next year we should cover all of Iraq plus we will have three branches outside of Iraq," he said.
The bank, which has 15 branches in Iraq now, plans to open another eight or nine branches next year and to have a foothold in Beirut, London and Istanbul to feed the appetite of investors eyeing Iraq.
Baghdad has signed a series of deals with international oil companies in the past year to boost its crude output capacity to Saudi Arabia’s levels of 12 million barrels per day from around 2.5 million bpd now.
The electricity-starved country also plans to increase its power generation capacity by building new plants and adding new turbines to existing plants.