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First Bank of Nigeria is a multinational bank and financial services company with headquarters in Lagos, Nigeria. [1] First Bank was founded in 1894, by Sir Alfred Jones, but is currently owned by First HoldCo PLC, which in itself has diversified ownership with over 1.3 million shareholders.
Elder Urum Kalu "UK" Eke, Mfr (born 20 November 1964) is a Nigerian businessman and banker who served as the Group Managing Director of FBN Holdings Plc until his retirement in December 2021. [1] Prior to this appointment he was an executive director with First Bank of Nigeria Limited.
FCMB Bank (UK) Limited, owned by First City Monument Bank of Nigeria Zenith Bank (UK), owned by Zenith Bank of Nigeria Bank of Ireland UK, owned by Bank of Ireland of the Republic of Ireland ; one of the leading banks in Northern Ireland , and present in Great Britain to a lesser extent
First Bank of Nigeria, a Nigerian bank with branches in Ghana, South Africa, Guinea, Gambia, Sierra Leone, DRC, UAE, United States, UK, France, China, etc. First National Bank (disambiguation), a name used by various banks worldwide; First Interstate Bank (disambiguation), a name used by various banks worldwide
On 26 July 2007, GTBank became the very first Subsaharan bank and first Nigerian joint stock company to be listed on London Stock Exchange and Deutsche Börse. The IPO raised US$750,000,000. [9] In the same year, they successfully placed Nigeria's first private Eurobond issue on the international capital markets. [10]
Fidelity Bank Plc; First Bank Nigeria Ltd, part of First Bank of Nigeria Group; First City Monument Bank Plc; Globus Bank Ltd; Guaranty Trust Bank Plc, part of GTCO Group; Keystone Bank Ltd; Nova Commercial Bank Ltd; Optimus Bank; Parallex Bank Ltd; Polaris Bank Plc; Premium Trust Bank; Providus Bank Ltd; Signature Bank Ltd; Stanbic IBTC Bank Plc
The Anglo-Egyptian Bank and the National Bank of South Africa gave birth to Barclays Bank in Nigeria. In 1948, the British and French Bank for Commerce and Industry started operations in Nigeria, which metamorphosed into the United Bank for Africa. [3] The first domestic bank In Nigeria was established in 1929 and called the Industrial and ...
After the end of the Nigerian Civil War, Nigeria's military government sought to increase local control of the retail-banking sector. Standard Chartered Bank's investment in Standard Bank Nigeria fell to 38%, and the bank changed its name to First Bank of Nigeria in 1979. Standard Chartered sold its remaining shares in First Bank of Nigeria in ...