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The outside of a Japan Post Bank branch in Akita, Japan. In 2019, Japan Post Bank was managing ¥205 trillion of assets. It oversaw approximately 120 million customer accounts, who had access to services in almost 24,000 branches across Japan, most of which are contracted post offices officially belonging to the Japan Post Service. [2]
Yucho (ゆうちょ, Yūcho) is an interbank network in Japan, owned and operated by the postal savings division of Japan Post Bank. It counts some 26,519 ATMs, of which 23,500 are at post offices and 2,869 are away from post offices. The number of ATMs correspond to about one for every post office in Japan, excluding a few post offices that ...
Japan Post (Nihon Yūsei Kōsha (日本郵政公社)), restructured to Japan Post Bank in 2007. Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Finance Corporation (AFC; Nōrin Gyogyō Kin'yū Kōko (農林漁業金融公庫)), merged to JFC in 2008.
At the end of 2019, the government had a 57% ownership stake in Japan Post Holdings, [24] which still owns 90% of Japan Post Bank and Japan Post Insurance. [25] [26] In April 2021, Japan Post Holdings agreed to sell part of its unprofitable Australian logistics company Toll Holdings for only 7.8 million Australian dollars. [27]
Japan Post Office head office building. Japan Post (日本郵政公社, Nippon Yūsei Kōsha) was a Japanese statutory corporation that existed from 2003 to 2007, offering postal and package delivery services, banking services, and life insurance.
Online banking, also known as internet banking, virtual banking, web banking or home banking, is a system that enables customers of a bank or other financial institution to conduct a range of financial transactions through the financial institution's website or mobile app. Since the early 2000s this has become the most common way that customers ...
Major networks include BANCS (urban bank) and YUCHO (Japan Post Bank). Minor networks include ACS (local bank), SOCS (trust bank), LONGS (long term bank), SCS (secondary local bank), SINKIN-NETCASH (Shinkin bank), SANCS (credit union), ROCS (Labour Bank), and JABANK-NET (Norinchukin Bank). Inter-network banking funds transfer is case-by-case.
In terms of international banking, bank transfer is the most popular and best way to send money to the outside of Japan. This process can be done both at a bank and online as well. Japan's customs department must be notified in case of a transaction over 1 million Japanese Yen is being processed. [14]