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HSBC's Mexico headquarters are at Torre HSBC on the Paseo de la Reforma near the Angel of Independence in Colonia Cuauhtémoc, Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City. [ 1 ] In July 2012, the US Senate accused HSBC of breaching safeguards that should have stopped the laundering of money from Mexico.
It is located opposite the Angel of Independence, and is home to the around 2,800 HSBC Mexico staff. Construction was completed in 2006, at a cost of around US$ 150 million. There are 23 office floors and 12 parking levels in the 136-metre-high (446 ft) tower, which is one of the tallest in Mexico City.
The provision for CLABE standardization was issued by the Asociación de Bancos de México (ABM) (Mexican Bank Association) in conjunction with the Banco de México (Mexico's Central Bank). It ensures that the inter-bank fund transfers, payroll deposits, or automatic service charges are made to the correct accounts.
In 2004, HSBC USA sold two upstate New York branches to Gloversville-based City National Bank & Trust Co. [6] HSBC did not have enough nearby branches to give it economies of scale. In July 2011, the company sold its branches in upstate New York to First Niagara Financial Group for $1 billion, effectively selling-off the core of the old Marine ...
HSBC ceased banking operations in Nicaragua in 2009, [169] Georgia in 2011, [170] Slovakia in 2012, [171] and Palestine in 2015. [172] HSBC disposed of its 70.1% stake in the Dar Es Salaam Investment Bank, a bank based in Iraq, in 2013. [173] HSBC Bank (Turkey) transferred its operations in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus to ALBANK in ...
Bital was first known as Banco del Atlantico during the 1980s and later was changed to Bital. It was the last Mexican bank [1] whose balance sheet was still struggling from the 1995 Mexican peso crisis. In 2002, HSBC Holdings PLC agreed to acquire Bital at an agreed price of $1.20 a share, thus Bital was valued at $1.14 Billion. [2]
Retirement Funds Administrators (AFORE) (Spanish: Administradoras de Fondos para el Retiro) are companies authorized to manage Mexican individual retirement accounts as authorized by the Ministry of Finance and Public Credit of Mexico. They are structured as companies that manage these funds under strict regulations.
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