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KeyBank is an American regional bank headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, and the 25th largest bank in the United States. Organized under the publicly traded KeyCorp , KeyBank was formed from the 1994 merger of the Cleveland-based Society Corporation, which operated Society National Bank, and the Albany-headquartered KeyCorp.
KeyBank Center is a multipurpose indoor arena located in Buffalo, New York, United States. Originally known as Marine Midland Arena , the venue has since been named HSBC Arena and First Niagara Center .
KeyBank Tower is a skyscraper in Dayton, Ohio, United States. Its address at 10 West 2nd Street was the first official name of the structure. The building was once named MeadWestvaco Tower until KeyBank gained naming rights to the tower in 2008. [ 2 ]
Key Bank: First Niagara Financial: $4.1 Billion KeyBank: 2017 Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce: The PrivateBank: CIBC Bank USA: $17.7 Billion CIBC Bank USA: 2019 BB&T: SunTrust Banks: Truist Financial: $66 billion Truist Financial: 2021 PNC Financial Services: BBVA USA: PNC Financial Services: $11.6 billion [45] PNC Financial Services: 2022 ...
Beth Elaine Mooney [1] (born 1955) is an American financial executive who is the first woman to be CEO of a top-20 U.S. bank. On May 1, 2011 [2] KeyCorp named Mooney its chairwoman and chief executive officer of the Cleveland, Ohio-based bank. [3]
Key Bank Center, formerly the Puget Sound National Bank Building, is a 16-floor high-rise in Tacoma, Washington. When completed as the National Realty Building in 1911, the 71 m (233 ft) tower was the tallest building in the state of Washington until surpassed by Seattle 's Smith Tower in 1914.
Key Bank Tower (also known as the Everett Mutual Tower) is a 203-foot (62 m) tall high-rise office building in downtown Everett, Washington. It has been the tallest building in Everett (measured to the architectural tip) since its completion in 1994. [ 1 ]
Robert B. "Yank" Heisler Jr. (July 4, 1949 – April 11, 2017) was the retired chairman of KeyBank, the 12th largest bank in the United States by total assets, the retired chief executive officer of McDonald Financial Group, and was the dean of the Kent State University College of Business Administration and Graduate School of Management until 2011. [1]