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Contact us; Contribute Help; ... Bank of Singapore; O. OCBC Bank (Hong Kong) OCBC Building (Penang) OCBC Centre; OCBC Indonesia
Former OCBC Bank in South Bridge Road, Singapore.. On 31 October 1932, three banks – Chinese Commercial Bank (1912), Ho Hong Bank (1917), and Oversea-Chinese Bank (1919) – merged and consolidated their strengths to form Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation under the leadership of Hoklos Tan Ean Kiam (co-founder and managing director of Oversea-Chinese Bank) [15] [16] and Lee Kong Chian, who ...
OCBC Centre is a 197.7 m (649 ft), 52-storey skyscraper in Singapore. Serving as the current headquarters of OCBC Bank , the building was completed in 1976 and was the second-tallest building in the country, and South East Asia , at that time. [ 4 ]
NETS operates Singapore's national debit scheme enabling customers of DBS Bank, POSB, HSBC, Maybank, OCBC Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, CIMB and UOB to make payments using their physical/contactless ATM cards or mobile devices at more than 120,000 acceptance points in Singapore including major retailers, food courts, hawker centres, convenience stores and supermarkets.
OCBC may refer to: OCBC Bank (Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation), a bank based in Singapore OCBC Centre, the headquarters of OCBC Bank in Singapore; Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative, a medical marijuana cooperative based in Oakland, California
Developed by OCBC Properties Pte Ltd, a company owned by OCBC Bank,"OCBC eyes more retail projects". Business Times (Singapore) . 4 December 1995. </ref> at a cost of $20 million, [ 1 ] it opened on 1 August 1972 [ 1 ] on the former site of the Pavilion Theatre . [ 3 ]
Bank of Singapore is the private banking arm and a wholly owned subsidiary of Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation (OCBC), Southeast Asia’s second largest bank. Formerly known as ING Asia Private Bank , it was acquired by OCBC in 2009 from ING Group for US$ 1.46 billion. [ 3 ]
Commercial banks in Singapore may undertake universal banking, such as the taking of deposits and the provision of cheque services and lending, as well any other business authorised by the Monetary Authority of Singapore, including financial advisory services, insurance brokering and capital market services, as long as they are permitted under section 30 of the Banking Act.