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MUFG Bank, Canada Branch 245 Citibank Canada 260 Mega International Commercial Bank Canada 269 JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (Toronto Branch) 270 Bank of China (Canada) 308 Vancity Community Investment Bank [i] 309 First Nations Bank of Canada: 310 CTBC Bank (Canada) 315 President's Choice Bank [j] 320 Canadian Tire Bank: 338 ICICI Bank Canada: 340
Merged into the Bank of Nova Scotia. [173] United Empire Bank of Canada: 1906 1911 Founded as the Pacific Bank of Canada before renaming in 1906. Merged into the Union Bank of Canada. [174] Unity Bank of Canada: 1972 1977 Failed and merged into the Provincial Bank of Canada. [175] Western and Pacific Bank of Canada 1982 1988
All PC Financial bank accounts had the same bank number as CIBC (010), and were located under one transit/branch number (30800). Clients performed their banking transactions on the Internet, at a PC- or CIBC-branded ATM, by telephone, or in person at pavilions located inside Loblaw-affiliated stores.
During the 1960s, the Bank of Nova Scotia became the first Canadian bank to appoint women as bank managers, with the first appointed on September 11, 1961. [10] In the next year, the bank expanded into Asia with the opening of a Representative Office in Japan. [11] In 1975, the Bank of Nova Scotia adopted Scotiabank as its
The bank was founded by ING Group in April 1997 as ING Bank of Canada (operating as ING Direct). [1] In November 2012, it was acquired by Scotiabank. [ 4 ] The new name for the bank was revealed in November 2013, and the Tangerine branding was rolled out beginning in April 2014.
In 1998, the Bank of Montreal proposed a merger with the Royal Bank of Canada around the same time that CIBC proposed to combine with the Toronto-Dominion Bank. [23] The banks argued that these mergers would enable them to compete globally with other financial institutions. [33] This would have left Canada with only three major national banks.
The Government of Canada's Translation Bureau recommends using hyphens between groups; e.g. 250-555-0199. [2] Using the format specified by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in Recommendation E.164 for telephone numbers, a Canadian number is written as +1NPANXXXXXX, with no spaces, hyphens, or other characters; e.g. +12505550199.
Transit number may refer to: ABA routing transit number , a bank code used in the United States Transit number, the branch identification portion of a Canadian bank routing number