Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lloyds Bank Canada was a wholly owned Canadian subsidiary of Lloyds Bank Plc of the United Kingdom from 1986 to 1990. Its headquarters were in Toronto, and it had 53 branches throughout Canada. It functioned as a member of the Lloyds Bank Group, whose overseas domestic banking interests also included the National Bank of New Zealand.
Lloyds Bank Canada: 1986 1990 Became Hongkong Bank of Canada, now known as HSBC Bank Canada in 1990. Macdonald and Company 1859 1864 Failed. [131] The Maritime Bank of the Dominion of Canada 1872 1887 Failed. [132] Mercantile Bank of Canada 1953 1985 Merged into the National Bank of Canada. Mechanics Bank of Montreal 1865 1879 Failed. [133]
Lloyds Bank California acquired First State Bank of Northern California in 1976, and, in 1986, its 88 branches and US$3 billion in assets, were divested to Japanese-owned Golden State Sanwa Bank for $263 million in cash. [12] Lloyds Bank Canada was formed in 1986, when the bank purchased the Continental Bank of Canada.
The bank and its remaining 55 branches were then acquired by Lloyds Bank Plc of the United Kingdom and became "Lloyds Bank Canada" in 1986. [6] Continental Bank continued to exist as a chartered bank until 1996 because of a dispute with Revenue Canada. [7] Lloyds Bank sold its Canadian operations to HongKong Bank of Canada in 1990, which became ...
It acquired Lloyds Bank Canada on May 29, 1990, thereby adding another $4.4 billion in assets and 53 branches. Lloyds Bank had acquired Continental Bank of Canada in 1986. Continental Bank began in 1973 as Niagara Finance Company, later became IAC Limited, and then Continental Bank. An HSBC Bank Canada branch in Richmond Hill, Ontario, 2014
Aeropostale Canada – subsidiary of the United States-based retailer Aeropostale, closed all 41 stores in Canada in 2016 A&A Records – founded in Toronto at the end of WWII, it was the dominant record chain store in Canada until being superseded by Sam the Record Man in the 1960s; it became defunct in 1993
1958 Bank of London and South America, an associate of Lloyds Bank, and Bank of Montreal established Bank of London and Montreal as a 50-50 JV with headquarters in Nassau in the Bahamas. BOLSA contributed its branches in the West Indies and northern South America, and Bank of Montreal contributed capital. 1959 BOLAM established a branch in Jamaica.
Sir John Robin Ibbs, KBE (21 April 1926 – 27 July 2014) was an English business executive, government advisor and Royal Navy officer. He was Chairman of Lloyds Bank from 1993 to 1997 and of Lloyds TSB Group PLC from 1995 to 1997 and also served as Margaret Thatcher’s part time adviser from 1983–1988.