enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Banking in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banking_in_Germany

    Banking in Germany is a highly leveraged industry, as its average leverage ratio (assets divided by net worth) as of 11 October 2008 is 52 to 1 (while, in comparison, that of France is 28 to 1 and that of the United Kingdom is 24 to 1); its short-term liabilities are equal to 60% of the German GDP or 167% of its national debt.

  3. European banking crisis of 1931 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_banking_crisis_of...

    Bank run at the Sparkasse on Mühlendamm, Berlin, 13 July 1931. The European banking crisis of 1931 was a major episode of financial instability that peaked with the collapse of several major banks in Austria and Germany, including Creditanstalt on 11 May 1931, Landesbank der Rheinprovinz on 11 July 1931, and Danat-Bank on 13 July 1931.

  4. Landesbank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landesbank

    Hohenzollerische Landesbank Kreissparkasse Sigmaringen is a local public savings bank, part of the Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe; its earliest predecessor was established in 1834 as Spar- und Leihkasse für das Fürstentum Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, and was renamed Hohenzollerische Landesbank Spar- und Leihkasse in 1930

  5. German Cooperative Financial Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Cooperative...

    Hermann Schulze-Delitzsch (1808–1883) Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen (1818–1888) Wilhelm Haas (1839–1913) In 1843, the first German cooperative bank was created by 50 inhabitants of Öhringen in the Kingdom of Württemberg, who named it the Öhringer Privatspar- und Leihkasse ("private savings and lending bank of Öhringen") – it still exists as the Volksbank Hohenlohe [].

  6. Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe

    The Ersparungsclasse der Allgemeinen Versorgungsanstalt, established in Hamburg in 1778, is widely viewed as the first modern savings bank.Other accounts emphasize the significance of the savings bank of Göttingen, founded in 1801, [3]: 78 which was the first established with a municipal guarantor whereas earlier foundations had been initiated by merchants, clerics or academics (Hamburg later ...

  7. Nationalbank für Deutschland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nationalbank_für_Deutschland

    Former head office of Nationalbank für Deutschland on Berlin's Behrensstrasse. The Nationalbank für Deutschland (lit. ' National Bank for Germany ') was a significant joint-stock bank in Germany, founded in 1881 and merged in 1922 with Darmstädter Bank to form Darmstädter und Nationalbank, in shorthand Danat-Bank. [1]

  8. Reichsbank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reichsbank

    The Reichsbank was established by legislation of the Reichstag of 14 March 1875, and assumed its new role on 1 January 1876 when it succeeded the Bank of Prussia. Meanwhile, between 1873 and 1875 the Bank of Prussia assumed all the assets and liabilities of the Hamburger Bank, which was a major monetary anchor in Northern Germany.

  9. Bank deutscher Länder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_deutscher_Länder

    The Bank deutscher Länder was established in 1948 in the former Frankfurt branch of the Reichsbank, Taunusanlage 4–6, built in 1933 [1] The Bank deutscher Länder (BdL, lit. ' Bank of the German States ') was a central bank established in 1948 to serve West Germany, issuing the Deutsche Mark. It was replaced in 1957 by the Deutsche Bundesbank.