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This is a list of banks in Ethiopia, with summary data for the year 2023 (mostly June). [1] Bank Name Web Site Year Est. No of Branches SWIFT SHF Equity (ETB m)
National Bank of Ethiopia: Financials Banks Addis Ababa: 1906 Central bank. formerly Bank of Abyssinia: S A Oromia International Bank: Financials Banks Addis Ababa: 2008 Private bank P A Selam Bus Line Share Company: Consumer services Travel & tourism Addis Ababa: 1996 Passenger transport P A Sky Bus Transport System: Consumer services Travel ...
At some point after the creation of the State Bank of Ethiopia it reopened the transit office, which in time became a branch. CBE in 1969. In 1963, the Ethiopian government split the State Bank of Ethiopia into two banks, the National Bank of Ethiopia (the central bank), and the Commercial Bank of Ethiopia (CBE). [8]
[2] [3] In 1963, a new banking law allows split into the National and Commercial Bank of Ethiopia. The law included other commercial banks to operate, including foreign banks operated 51% owned by Ethiopians. The biggest of these was the Addis Ababa Bank, owned by 40% owned by British owned Grindlays Bank, and had 26 branches by 1975.
Pages in category "Banks of Ethiopia" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Awash International Bank (Amharic: አዋሽ ኢንተርናሽናል ባንክ) is a commercial bank in Ethiopia that was established in 1994 by 486 founding shareholders with a paid-up capital of birr 24.2 million and started banking operations on 13 February 1995. As of end of June 2020 the number of shareholders and its paid-up capital ...
Enat Bank (Amharic: እናት ባንክ) is a private commercial bank in Ethiopia. Founded in 2008 by nine female business promotors, the bank envisaged to maximize and promote female capability in economic inclusion. The bank is composed of 7,000 shareholders who have interest for investing the bank and most of 60% composed of female.
15 March – The Commercial Bank of Ethiopia (CBE) encounters a systematic glitch on its service involving the withdrawal of more than 40 million dollars. CBE officials suspect that the glitch was caused by economic and political reasons [ 5 ] and the money was easily transferred to students in Dilla and Jimma University .