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Access Bank Botswana Limited (formerly BancABC), part of Access Bank Group; Bank Gaborone Limited; Bank of Baroda (Botswana) Limited, part of Bank of Baroda Group; BBS Bank Limited; First Capital Bank Limited, part of First Capital Bank Group; First National Bank of Botswana Limited; Stanbic Bank Botswana Limited, part of Standard Bank Group
First National Bank of Botswana is a Botswana-based company engaged in the banking sector. The Bank, through Pick n Pay franchise, offers sales and service channels called FNBB Kiosk. The Bank, through Pick n Pay franchise, offers sales and service channels called FNBB Kiosk.
Capital Bank (Botswana) [9] First National Bank of Botswana [10] ... First City Monumnet Bank ; ... Capitalmetriq Swift Micro finance BankMFB;
Bank of the City of Buenos Aires, ... Gaborone, Botswana; First National Bank of Omaha, New York, United States; ... Intesa Sanpaolo Bank Ireland, Dublin, ...
The headquarters and main branch of the bank are located at First Capital House, 2nd Commercial Road, in Gaborone, the capital and largest city in Botswana. The geographical coordinates of the bank's headquarters are: 24°38'56.0"S, 25°54'14.0"E (Latitude:-24.648889; Longitude:25.903889). [4]
The first two digits of the sort code identify the bank (90-xx-xx = [Bank of Ireland], 98-xx-xx = [Ulster Bank], for example) and the last 4 identify the branch. There is an exception with 99-xx-xx - these codes are used for international banks Irish Clearing ACs, and some Post Office accounts.
The previous edition is ISO 9362:2009 (dated 2009-10-01). The SWIFT code is 8 or 11 characters, made up of: 4 letters: institution code or bank code. 2 letters: ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code (exceptionally, SWIFT has assigned the code XK to Republic of Kosovo, which does not have an ISO 3166-1 country code) 2 letters or digits: location code
FNB is the oldest bank in South Africa. It traces its origins back to the Eastern triocrees Province Bank, which was formed in Grahamstown in 1838. At that time the bank financed the wool export boom in the district. By 1874, the bank had four branches – at Grahamstown, Middelburg, Cradock and Queenstown.