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Central Bank of Ecuador Banco Central del Ecuador Headquarters: Quito: Established: August 10, 1927; 97 years ago () Ownership: 100% state ownership [1] Key people: Guillermo Avellán Solines: Central bank of: Ecuador: Currency: None 1: Reserves: 8,458.7 million USD (December 2022) Website: www.bce.fin.ec: 1 Previously Ecuadorian sucre (ECS ...
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The history of BBVA began in 1857 in Bilbao, a city located in the Basque part of northern Spain, when the Board of Trade promoted the creation of Banco de Bilbao as an issuing and discount bank. [9] Banco de Vizcaya was founded in 1901 and carried out its first operations in Bilbao. Little by little, it spread throughout the country. [9]
Banco Santander; BBVA; CaixaBank; Banco Sabadell; There were formerly a "big six" (los seis grandes) composed of three banks that are now part of BBVA (Banco de Bilbao, Banco de Vizcaya, and state-owned Banco Argentaria) and three now combined as Santander (Banco Central, Banco Hispanoamericano, and Banco de Santander).
Filanbanco (closed in 2001, when it was Ecuador's biggest bank) [4] Banco Comercial y Agrícola de Guayaquil [5] (closed in 1925) Banco de la Previsora (closed in 1999) Banco de Préstamos (closed in 1998) [6] Banco del Progreso (closed in 1999) [7] Banco Territorial (closed in 2013) [8] Unibanco (merged with Banco Solidario in 2013) [9]
BBVA México [a] is the largest Mexican financial institution (2024), having about 30.4% of the market. [2] Founded in 1932 as Banco de Comercio (Bancomer), and rebranded from 2000 to 2019 as BBVA Bancomer, [3] its main stockholder is the Spanish bank BBVA. [4] Its headquarters are located at the Torre BBVA México on Paseo de la Reforma in ...
The Kemmerer Financial Mission (Comisión de Expertos Financieros) arrived in 1926, and its report was the basis for the monetary reform of March 4, 1927, which created El Banco Central del Ecuador and put the sucre on the gold exchange standard, [1] with devaluation (58.8%) to 300.933 mg Au (equivalent to US$0.20).
The first sucre-denominated banknotes were issued by private banks. The Banco Central del Ecuador (Spanish: Banco Central del Ecuador Sociedad Anonima) issued provisional notes for 80 centavos and 4 sucres between 1885 and 1887 due to a conversion rate of 5 pesos = 4 sucres for the earlier notes of this bank. Regular notes were issued until ...