Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The majority of Serbian banks previously licensed by the National Bank of Serbia to operate in Kosovo have been shut down. These banks previously operated in the official currency of Serbia, the Serbian dinar. [2] Komercijalna Banka ad Beograd is now licensed through the Central Bank of Kosovo. [1]
This page was last edited on 10 January 2019, at 13:40 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
A District Co-operative Central Bank (DCCB) is a rural cooperative bank operating at the district level in various parts of India. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was established to provide banking to the rural hinterland for the agricultural sector with the branches primarily established in rural and semi-urban areas.
The following are the objectives of the Central Bank of Kosovo, as listed in "Objectives," Article 7, Chapter III of the Law No. 03/L-209 [5]The primary objective of the Central Bank shall be to foster and to maintain a stable financial system, including a safe, sound and efficient payment system.
DCB Bank Limited is a private sector scheduled commercial bank in India. [2] [3] It is amongst the new generation banks that received the scheduled commercial bank license from the bank regulator, Reserve Bank of India. DCB Bank received the licence on 31 May 1995. [4] A professional management team guided by the Board of Directors runs the Bank.
The central hub of the network is considered to be the Central Bank of Kosovo (CBK) which is a successor of the Banking Payments and Authority of Kosovo established in June 2008. It is an independent legal entity and reports directly to the Kosovo Assembly .
This is a list of recent (in last five years) name changes of currently active banks due to change of ownership structure: On 10 October 2019, Telenor banka a.d. Beograd changed its name into Mobi Banka a.d. Beograd
Kosovo is the subject of a long-running political and territorial dispute between the Serbian (and previously, the Yugoslav) government versus Kosovo's largely ethnic-Albanian population. Resolution 1244 permitted the United Nations to establish and oversee the development of "provisional, democratic self-governing institutions" in Kosovo.