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Bank of Finland strong box which moved to Helsinki with the bank when it relocated from Turku Sederholm House [] in Helsinki, the Bank's seat from 1819 to 1824 Government Palace in Helsinki, the Bank's home from 1824 until relocation to its current building in 1883 The Bank's current head office completed in 1883, with statue of J.V. Snellman by sculptor Emil Wikström in front
The Finnish Local Cooperative Bank Group consists of 42 independent co-operative banks, each operating in its own region. The group was established in 1997 to enable the member banks to continue operating independently as the other co-operative bank group in Finland was seen as too centrally administered. [5]
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OP Corporate Bank Plc is the most significant subsidiary of OP Financial Group. [8]OP Corporate Bank's customers are large companies in Finland. It is responsible for the Baltic business, operating as a bank for large companies and conducting financial services in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. [8]
National Workers' Savings Bank (1971-1989) (In Finnish; Suomen Työväen Säästöpankki, in Swedish; Arbetarsparbanken) or STS-Bank (1989-1992) was a Finnish savings bank and commercial bank. Workers' savings banks were syndicalist , social democratic corporations intended to compete with privately owned banks, which could deny credit to ...
S-Bank Plc (Finnish: S-Pankki Oyj, Swedish: S-Banken Abp) is a Finnish retail bank and wealth manager. It is owned by SOK Corporation and the regional co-operatives in the S-Group (Finnish: S-ryhmä), a Finnish retailing cooperative organisation. S-Bank is the first so-called "supermarket bank" in Finland with 776 employees (2022). [1]
Aktia Bank Plc is a Finnish asset manager, bank and life insurer with offices in the Helsinki, Turku, Tampere, Vaasa and Oulu regions. [3] Aktia has three business areas: Banking, Asset Management and Life Insurance. Aktia has three reporting business segments: Banking Business, Asset Management and Group Functions. [4]
The Finnish Banking Crisis of 1990s was a deep systemic crisis of the entire Finnish financial sector that took place mainly in the years 1991–1993, after several years of debt-based economic boom in the late 1980s. Its total taxpayer cost was roughly 8% of the Finnish GNP, making