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Permata Bank (or Bank Permata) is a bank in Indonesia, headquartered in the capital city Jakarta. It has officially become a BUKU IV bank after receiving confirmation from the Financial Services Authority (OJK) on 20 January 2021. Serving nearly four million customers in 62 cities of Indonesia, it has 304 branch offices and two mobile branches.
Name of Bank Founded Majority Owner Notes Bank Syariah Indonesia: 3 July 1969 Government of Indonesia: Foreign exchange bank Regional sharia banks Bank Aceh Syariah: 7 September 1957 Aceh Government Non-foreign exchange bank Bank BJB Syariah: 15 January 2010 Bank BJB Bank BRK Syariah: 15 August 1961 Riau dan Riau Islands Government Foreign ...
SWIFT cooperates with international organizations to define standards for message format and content. SWIFT is also a registration authority (RA) for the following ISO standards: [20] ISO 9362: 1994 Banking – Banking telecommunication messages – Bank identifier codes
The SWIFT code for its primary office is DEUTDEFF: DEUT identifies Deutsche Bank; DE is the country code for Germany; FF is the code for Frankfurt; Deutsche Bank uses an extended code of 11 characters and has assigned branches or processing areas individual extended codes. This allows the payment to be directed to a specific office.
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SWIFT messages consist of five blocks of data including three headers, message content, and a trailer. Message types are crucial to identifying content. All SWIFT messages include the literal "MT" (message type/text [2]). This is followed by a three-digit number that denotes the message category, group and type. Consider the following two examples.
Payment card numbers are composed of 8 to 19 digits, [1] The leading six or eight digits are the issuer identification number (IIN) sometimes referred to as the bank identification number (BIN). [ 2 ] : 33 [ 3 ] The remaining numbers, except the last digit, are the individual account identification number.
The (national) bank codes differ from the international Bank Identifier Code (BIC/ISO 9362, a normalized code - also known as Business Identifier Code, Bank International Code and SWIFT code). Those countries which use International Bank Account Numbers (IBAN) have mostly integrated the bank code into the prefix of specifying IBAN account numbers.