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Mitsubishi Tokyo Financial Group (2001) / The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi (1996) The Bank of Tokyo; Mitsubishi Bank; UFJ Holdings / UFJ Bank (2002) Sanwa Bank (1933) Sanjūyon Bank; Yamaguchi Bank; Kōnoike Bank; Tōkai Bank (1941) Aichi Bank; Nagoya Bank; Itō Bank; Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (2002) The Sumitomo Bank; Sakura Bank (1990 ...
Pages in category "Banks of Japan" The following 37 pages are in this category, out of 37 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. * List of banks in Japan; A.
It publishes a list of the World 1000 Largest Banks every July. [2] The financial data published by the July yearly issue of The Banker are much more extensive compared to the S&P Top 100 banks, but it is not a publication intended for the general public. The KfW bank is manually inserted due to its assets of c. 650 billion. [3]
A city bank is a Japanese term (Japanese: 都市銀行 = "Toshi ginkō" or 都銀 = "Togin") for one of the several mega-banks, with their head offices in Tokyo or Osaka, Japan's two largest cities. These banks have wide networks of branches in major cities all over Japan.
Bank of Yokohama, an example. Hachijuni Bank, an example Kagoshima Bank, another example. A regional bank in a Japanese term (Japanese: 地方銀行 = "Chihō ginkō" or 地銀 = "Chigin") for one of the 50 or so banks with its head office in the capital city of one of the 47 prefectures of Japan, serving mainly its local prefectural customers.
The main elements of Japan's financial system are much the same as those of other major industrialized nations: a commercial banking system, which accepts deposits, extends loans to businesses, and deals in foreign exchange; specialized government-owned financial institutions, which fund various sectors of the domestic economy; securities companies, which provide brokerage services, underwrite ...
In 1971, Dai-ichi Bank and Nippon Kangyo Bank merged to form DKB, which instantly surpassed longtime leader the Fuji Bank as the largest Japanese bank measured by assets and deposit market share. DKB formed the core of the DKB Group (or Dai-Ichi Kangyo Group), the largest Japanese keiretsu in terms of the number of associated companies, and ...
Mitsubishi Bank and the Bank of Tokyo merged in 1996 to form the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, which at that point was the world's largest bank in terms of total assets. [10] The Bank of Tokyo had historically focused on foreign exchange business since its foundation as the Yokohama Specie Bank in 1880, while Mitsubishi Bank had had a stronger focus on domestic corporate and retail banking.