The bank said magistrates were "examining whether the bank acted appropriately between 2006-07 in relation to certain clients of the bank who had French tax reporting requirements, as well as in relation to the way the bank offered its services in the country."
In France, being placed under formal investigation is the nearest equivalent to being charged, and occurs when an examining magistrate decides there is a case to be answered.
The bank said it had been asked to deposit a bail bond of 50 million euros (USD 62 million), and would "continue to cooperate with the French authorities to the fullest extent possible".
A judicial source told AFP earlier this year that the bank was suspected of "benefiting from the gains of tax fraud" and "laundering funds of an illicit origin by allowing thousands of clients to hide them".
More From This Section
The source said the bank had used numerous trusts and shell companies to help wealthy clients conceal their assets.
The same subsidiary was charged this week in Brussels with fraud and money-laundering worth hundreds of millions of euros, mainly for helping diamond dealers in the industry's international hub of Antwerp evade Belgian taxes.