Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
FinTS (Financial Transaction Services), formerly known as HBCI (Home Banking Computer Interface), is a bank-independent protocol for online banking, developed and used by German banks. HBCI was originally designed by Germany's three banking "pillar" networks, namely the Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe , German Cooperative Financial Group , and ...
Allied Irish Banks, Frankfurt; Banco Santander, Mönchengladbach; Barclays Bank, Hamburg; BNP Paribas, Frankfurt; Crédit Lyonnais, Frankfurt; DHB Bank, Düsseldorf ...
The Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe ("Savings Banks Financial Group") is a network of public banks that together form the largest financial services group in Germany by assets. Its name refers to local government-controlled savings banks that are known in German as Sparkasse, plural Sparkassen. [2] Its activity is overwhelmingly located in Germany.
Financial and Consumer Services Commission of New Brunswick (FCNB) ; Financial Services Regulatory Authority of Ontario (FSRA) ; British Columbia Financial Services Authority (BCFSA) India: GIFT International Financial Services Centre: International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) Kazakhstan: Astana International Financial Centre
The German Cooperative Financial Group (German: Genossenschaftliche FinanzGruppe Volksbanken Raiffeisenbanken, sometimes referred to in English as "Volksbanken Raiffeisenbanken Cooperative Financial Network") is a major cooperative banking network in Germany that includes local banks named Volksbanken ("people's banks") and Raiffeisenbanken ("Raiffeisen banks"), the latter in tribute to 19th ...
In 2009, as a regulatory response to the revealed vulnerability of the banking sector in the financial crisis of 2007–08, and attempting to come up with a solution to solve the "too big to fail" interdependence between G-SIFIs and the economy of sovereign states, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) started to develop a method to identify G-SIFIs to which a set of stricter requirements would ...
A public bank is a bank, a financial institution, in which a state, municipality, or public actors are the owners.It is an enterprise under government control. [1] Prominent among current public banking models are the Bank of North Dakota, the Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe in Germany, and many nations' postal bank systems.
Banking in Germany is a highly leveraged industry, as its average leverage ratio (assets divided by net worth) as of 11 October 2008 is 52 to 1 (while, in comparison, that of France is 28 to 1 and that of the United Kingdom is 24 to 1); its short-term liabilities are equal to 60% of the German GDP or 167% of its national debt.