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Allied Irish Banks' logo (1990–2016) Allied Irish Banks' former crest. On 9 September 2010 AIB reached agreement to sell a 66% stake in BZ-WBK to Santander for €3.1 billion, the balance of the shares to be sold on the open market. [20] Any purchase over 66% would have forced Santander to make an offer to buy the entire company. [21]
AIB's net interest margin fell to 2.47 percent from 2.58 percent in 2017, but was still higher than the 2.20 recorded by main rival Bank of Ireland, which this week warned it would face further ...
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar ... This is a list of publicly traded companies that offer their shareholders the option to be paid with scrip dividends ...
Bank Zachodni WBK in Tychy, 2009. In March 1995, the Irish group Allied Irish Banks (AIB) acquired 16.2% of shares in Wielkopolski Bank Kredytowy from the State Treasury. In the following years, the group acquired more WBK shares to buy the control stake (80%) in Bank Zachodni in 1999.
AIB (NI) (formerly known as First Trust Bank) is a commercial bank in Northern Ireland that is part of Allied Irish Banks's UK subsidiary AIB Group (UK) plc. It is one of the Big Four banks in Ireland. The bank was created in 1991 when TSB Northern Ireland merged with the AIB Group's other interests.
The robbery was the biggest in the history of Ireland, during which the girlfriend of an employee, her mother and her mother's five-year-old granddaughter were held hostage at gunpoint. Gardaí arrested six men the next day, and recovered €1.8 million. A spokesperson for the bank said: "Bank of Ireland's priority is for the safety and well ...
On 10 October 2009, the Irish Times reported that Bank of Ireland and AIB could need to raise a combined €9bn as a result of write-downs associated with the transfer of assets to NAMA. [55] The article quotes a Merrion Capital report that estimates that AIB and BoI's equity Tier 1 Capital ratios would fall to 3.3% and 3.5% in 2010/11.
AIB Group (UK) p.l.c. is a subsidiary of Allied Irish Banks. It is registered in Northern Ireland. [1] Regulated by the Financial Services Authority, it serves as the legal entity for the United Kingdom banking division of the group. It trades under two names: Allied Irish Bank (GB) in Great Britain, where it is primarily a business bank.