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Nordea Bank Polska was established first as "Bank Komunalny" in 1992, the Nordea Group became a strategic investor in 1999. By the end of 2001, Bank Komunalny was fully consolidated into Nordea. It had identified itself as a modern bank offering banking services via the Internet , telephone , free-of-charge personalized SMS ’s, WAP , and a ...
This page was last edited on 19 August 2008, at 15:01 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may ...
Christiania Bank had also been impacted severely during the banking crisis in the early 1990s, with Nordea acquiring the bank from the Norwegian Government Bank Investment Fund with a 35% share. [19] [25] Nordea expanded into Poland, the Baltics and Russia in the early 2000s, with 2% of total revenues from the Poland and Baltics region. [26]
Christian Clausen (born 6 March 1955) is a Danish banker, and the former CEO of Nordea Bank, a role he had from 2007 to October 2015. He is the chairman and director of the European Banking Federation and the Swedish Bankers’ Association.
Christiania Bank og Kreditkasse, branded domestically as Kreditkassen or K-Bank and internationally as Christiania Bank+ was a Norwegian bank that existed between 1848 and 2000 when it merged with MeritaNordbanken and became Nordea. The bank had its headquarters in Oslo and was Norway's second largest bank at the time of the merger.
The Nordea branch in Lithuania operated as Nordea Bank Lietuva. The main office was located in Vilnius and other offices in Kaunas, Klaipėda, Panevėžys and Šiauliai. Altogether, Nordea Bank Lietuva employed 340 people. [2] On the basis of the Baltic operations of Nordea and DNB, Luminor Bank was created in August 2017. [3] The merger was ...
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Rotunda PKO in Warsaw PKO Rotunda in 1981. PKO Rotunda is a rotunda-type building owned by the PKO BP bank in the center of Warsaw, Poland.Designed from 1960–1969 by chief architect Jerzy Jakubowicz, it was the site of a gas explosion in February 1979, which killed 49 people.