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First Interstate Bancorp was a bank holding company based in the United States.Headquartered in Los Angeles, it was the nation's eighth largest banking company. [1]Although First Interstate Bancorp was taken over by Wells Fargo in 1996, the name (along with the company logo) has continued to be used in the banking world by First Interstate BancSystem, who has been using the name under a ...
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) may assume deposits of banks or allow other banks to assume them. The largest banks to be acquired have been the Merrill Lynch acquisition by Bank of America, the Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual acquisitions by JPMorgan Chase, and the Countrywide Financial acquisition also by Bank of America.
The Interstate Recognition of Notarizations (IRON) Act of 2010 would have required “any Federal or State court to recognize any notarization made by a notary public licensed by a State other than the State where the court is located when such notarization occurs in or affects interstate commerce.” [27] The bill, written by U.S. Rep. Robert ...
Century 21 Real Estate; The Children's Place; Chubb Corp. Church and Dwight; Coach USA; Commerce Bancorp; Comodo Group; Cooper Chemical Company; Curtiss-Wright; Cytec Industries; DRS Technologies; Emerson Radio; Foodtown; Foster Wheeler Corporation
Great American Bank was an American savings and loan association based in San Diego. [1] It was founded in 1885 as San Diego Building and Loan Association, the first savings and loan in Southern California. [2] Until the 1980s, it operated as San Diego Federal Savings and Loan Association. Federal regulators seized and disbanded the bank in 1991.
Docusign Tower, previously the Wells Fargo Center, is a skyscraper in Seattle, in the U.S. state of Washington.Originally named First Interstate Center when completed in 1983, the 47-story, 574-foot (175 m) tower is now the ninth-tallest building in the city, and has 24 elevators and 941,000 square feet (87,400 m 2) of rentable space. [5]
Superior opened in 1988 under conditions created by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, which made generous arrangements for the takeover of several failed thrifts.The bank was a 50-50 partnership between the Pritzkers (the elder Jay, Penny and Thomas) and real estate investor Alvin Dworman, who ran Superior from his New York office after Jay Pritzker's death in 1997.
It was originally built for the National Bank of Washington, [4] which was acquired in 1970 by Pacific National Bank (later First Interstate Bank of Washington), [5] in turn acquired in 1996 by Wells Fargo. [6] It was known as the Wells Fargo Center until 2016, when it lost its naming rights. [7]