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Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (2005) / The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ (2006) Mitsubishi Tokyo Financial Group (2001) / The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi (1996) The Bank of Tokyo; Mitsubishi Bank; UFJ Holdings / UFJ Bank (2002) Sanwa Bank (1933) Sanjūyon Bank; Yamaguchi Bank; Kōnoike Bank; Tōkai Bank (1941) Aichi Bank; Nagoya Bank; Itō Bank
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]
Bank of Yokohama, an example. Hachijuni Bank, an example. A regional bank (chihō ginkō 地方銀行 or chigin 地銀) is a Japanese term for one of the 100 banks who are members of the Regional Banks Association of Japan (zenkoku chihōginkō kyōkai 全国地方銀行協会).
Tokyo is the economic center of Japan: most of Japan's printing, broadcasting, telecommunications, banking, insurance, and financial services companies are based there, and many prominent international corporations are either headquartered in Tokyo or have their main Japanese offices there. While it is impossible to list them all, this article ...
The JP Tower (Japanese: JPタワー) is a high rise office building with integrated retail and restaurant facilities located in front of the Marunouchi Exit of Tokyo Station in Chiyoda ward, Tokyo. The building was completed in May 2012 and was opened to the public on March 21, 2013.
The bank is wholly owned by the Japanese government, and its budget and operations are regulated by the JBIC law. It is headquartered in Tokyo and operates in 18 countries with 21 offices. The main purpose of the institution is to promote economic cooperation between Japan and overseas countries by providing resources to foreign investments and ...
At 38 stories the building was the 86th tallest building in Tokyo. [2] It contained 1.4 million sq ft (134,974 m²) of office space, 100% of which was now occupied by Mizuho Bank, the consumer banking arm of the second-largest Japanese financial conglomerate Mizuho Financial Group, while still called the DKB Head Office from time to time.
The Bank of Japan is headquartered in Nihonbashi, Chūō, Tokyo, on the site of a former gold mint (the Kinza) and, not coincidentally, near the famous Ginza district, whose name means "silver mint". The neo-baroque Bank of Japan building in Tokyo was designed by Tatsuno Kingo in 1896.