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  2. List of banks in Venezuela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_banks_in_Venezuela

    Banco Occidental de Descuento: Privately owned Maracaibo: 1957 [5] 2022 Banco Nacional de Crédito: Publicly traded Caracas: 1977 Fondo Común: Privately owned Caracas: 1963 100% Banco: Privately owned Caracas: 2006 [6] Women's Development Bank: 2001 Sofitasa: San Cristóbal: 1990 Iran-Venezuela Bi-National Bank: Tehran, Iran [7] 2010 [8 ...

  3. Central Bank of Venezuela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Bank_of_Venezuela

    Central Bank of Venezuela Building. The Central Bank of Venezuela (Spanish: Banco Central de Venezuela, BCV) is the central bank of Venezuela.It is responsible for issuing and maintaining the value of the Venezuelan bolívar and is the governing agent of the Venezuelan Clearing House System (including an automated clearing house).

  4. Banco Industrial de Venezuela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banco_Industrial_de_Venezuela

    The BIV was established in 1937 with 60% state and 40% private capital investment. The state gradually gained full control, and in the 1960s and 1970s, the bank was an instrument in the government's import substitution policy of industrialization.

  5. Banesco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banesco

    The bank is part of the Asociación Bancaria de Venezuela (Venezuela's Banking Association). Banesco has 340 branches all over Venezuela, more than 115.000 POS and 1.377 ATMs. [ 1 ] With more than six million clients, Banesco currently is the largest private banking business in Venezuela and the second among all, with a market quota of [null 21 ...

  6. Banco de Venezuela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banco_de_Venezuela

    Banco de Venezuela (abbreviated: BDV) is an international universal bank based in Caracas. It was the market leader in Venezuela until 2007, when it fell to third place, with an 11.3% market share for deposits; its major competitors are Banesco, Banco Mercantil and BBVA Banco Provincial. [1] As of June 2008, it had 285 branches in Venezuela.

  7. Centro Financiero Confinanzas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centro_Financiero_Confinanzas

    Centro Financiero Confinanzas (English: Confinanzas Financial Center), also known as Torre de David (the Tower of David), is an unfinished abandoned skyscraper in Caracas, the capital of Venezuela. It is the third highest skyscraper in the country after the twin towers of Parque Central Complex .

  8. Venezuelan banking crisis of 1994 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venezuelan_banking_crisis...

    The 1994 banking crisis occurred in Venezuela when a number of the banks of Venezuela were taken over by the government. The first to fail, in January 1994, was Banco Latino, the country's second-largest bank ($1.3 billion bailout [1]). Later, two banks accounting for 18% of total deposits (Banco Consolidado and Banco de Venezuela) also failed. [2]

  9. Cabinet of Venezuela - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabinet_of_Venezuela

    The Miraflores Palace is the seat of the Venezuelan government, where the official office of the president of Venezuela is located.. The Cabinet of Ministers of Venezuela (Spanish: Gabinete de Ministros de Venezuela is one of the bodies that make up the Venezuelan executive in that country's presidential system, alongside the Council of Ministers (Spanish: Consejo de Ministros). [1]