The Crédit Agricole du Maroc (CAM, Arabic: القرض الفلاحي للمغرب), known from 1961 to 2003 as Caisse Nationale du Crédit Agricole, is a public bank based in Rabat, Morocco.
[1] The CAM traces its origins to the dahir or Royal Decree of 1961 that established a National Agricultural Credit Bank (French: Caisse Nationale du Crédit Agricole, CNCA) inspired by the namesake French institution (est.
The next year, again as in France, regional entities were created under the generic name National Agricultural Credit Bank (French: Caisse Régionale du Crédit Agricole, CRCA).
[2] In 2003, the CNCA was reorganized as a joint-stock company and renamed Crédit Agricole du Maroc,[2] and acquired majority control of the distressed Banque Marocaine pour l'Afrique et l'Orient (BMAO).
[3] In 2017, CAM created Al Akhdar Bank (AAB), an islamic finance afffiliate.