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This is a list of recent (in last five years) name changes of currently active banks due to change of ownership structure: On 10 October 2019, Telenor banka a.d. Beograd changed its name into Mobi Banka a.d. Beograd
In 2001, a deal to merge Swedbank (then FSB) with SEB failed as the European Commission thought that the merged company would have had too dominant a position in the Swedish banking market. Today, Swedbank has 7 million private customers and 555 000 corporate customers. Swedbank is the largest bank in both Estonia and Latvia. [7]
Air Bank []; Banka Creditas []; Česká exportní banka []; Česká spořitelna; Československá obchodní banka; ČSOB Stavební spořitelna []; Fio banka ...
The bank was established in 1991, under the name "Asna banka". [3] In 26 June 1997, it changed its name to "Trust banka a.d.". In August 19, 2003, the Austrian Volksbank arrived at the Serbian market, by registering a subsidiary named "Volksbank Beograd".
In March 2016, Expobank CZ a.s. repurchased EAST Portfolio, s.r.o. in which it acquired a 100% stake from the German LBBW. In March 2017 Expobank CZ a.s. was the first Czech bank to enter the Serbian market, [11] where it became the sole shareholder of Marfin Bank a.d. Beograd. Marfin Bank subsequently changed its business name to Expobank ...
Sberbank Europe AG was established in 2012 after Sberbank acquired Volksbank International AG (VBI) and rebranded it Sberbank Europe. The deal involved all VBI assets – banks in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Serbia, Slovenia, Ukraine and Slovakia, apart from Volksbank Romania.
.cz, Czech top-level domain. CZ.NIC, Czech Network Information Center (domain operator). CSIRT.CZ, Cyber Security Response Team operated by CZ.NIC. Neutral Internet Exchange of the Czech Republic (NIX.CZ)
These are – Swedbank, Revolut, SEB bankas, Luminor, and Šiaulių bankas. Majority of the market historically has been dominated by branches of the Scandinavian majors. [2] The largest banks and financial institutions in Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia are largely the same and mostly dominated by same Swedish companies. [3] [4] [5]