Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
ANZ Fiji traces its presence in Fiji back to 1873 through an acquisition. Investors from Auckland established the Fiji Banking and Commercial Trading Company Limited in 1873. However, the bank's owners sold it in 1876 to the Bank of New Zealand ; ANZ Group acquired BNZ’s operations in 1990 after 114 years of Bank of New Zealand ownership. [1]
The HFC Bank Stadium (formerly known as ANZ Stadium) [1] is a multi-purpose stadium in Suva, Fiji. HFC Stadium is used primarily for rugby league, rugby union and football matches, and features a track as well as a pitch suitable for worldwide competition. [2] The stadium has a capacity of 15,446, with 4,026 seats on grandstand and 420 in VIP ...
Suva Football Club is a Fijian football club that competes in the Fiji Premier League, the top flight of professional Fijian football. The club is based in Suva. Their home stadium is ANZ National Stadium. [1] [2]
ANZ Bank. Suncorp; Commonwealth Bank. Bankwest; Macquarie Bank; National Australia Bank; ... HFC (Fiji) Westpac (Fiji) Bank of Baroda; BRED Bank (Fiji) Kiribati ...
ANZ's arm in New Zealand is operated through a subsidiary company, ANZ National Bank, from 2003 to 2012, when it changed by ANZ Bank New Zealand upon merging the ANZ and National Bank brands. In March 2005, it formed a strategic alliance with Vietnam's Sacombank involving an acquisition of 10% of Sacombank's share capital .
Fiji: 16–14 American Samoa: ANZ National Stadium, Suva: Unknown 9 November 1994 Fiji: 21–20: Australian Aborigines: ANZ National Stadium, Suva: Unknown 12 November 1994 Tonga: 24–11 Fiji: ANZ National Stadium, Suva: Unknown 8 October 1995 Fiji: 52–6 South Africa: 1995 World Cup: Cougar Park, Keighley: 4,845 11 October 1995 England: 46 ...
It was held at ANZ Stadium in Suva, Fiji. [1] [2] Samoa won the Oceania Sevens Championship by defeating Fiji 31-17. [3] [4] Cook Islands and American Samoa, as the two highest finishers excluding core teams Fiji, Australia and Samoa, qualified for the 2013 Hong Kong Sevens and the opportunity later to qualify for the 2013–14 IRB Sevens World ...
It served as the regional qualifier for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Sevens and was held at ANZ Stadium in Suva, Fiji on 7–9 November. [1] A competition for deaf teams was also included as part of the 2019 Oceania Sevens. [2] Australia won the main men's tournament to claim their fourth Oceania Championship, defeating Fiji by 22–7 in the final.