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A District Co-operative Central Bank (DCCB) is a rural cooperative bank operating at the district level in various parts of India. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was established to provide banking to the rural hinterland for the agricultural sector with the branches primarily established in rural and semi-urban areas.
District Cooperative Central Bank - Cooperative Bank network in India Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title DCCB .
DCB Bank Limited is a private sector scheduled commercial bank in India. [2] [3] It is amongst the new generation banks that received the scheduled commercial bank license from the bank regulator, Reserve Bank of India. DCB Bank received the licence on 31 May 1995. [4] A professional management team guided by the Board of Directors runs the Bank.
Name Total Assets (2022) [2] Capital Website American Bank of Investments (ABI) 116,270 mln ALL: abi.al: BKT: 491,470 mln ALL: bkt.com.al: Credins Bank (CB) 297,740 mln ALL
Bank of Albania: Financials Banks Tirana: 1925 Central bank S A Banka Kombëtare Tregtare: Financials Banks Tirana: 1925 Commercial bank, part of Çalık Holding (Turkey) P A Belle Air: Consumer services Airlines Tirana: 2005 Airline, defunct 2013 P D Big Market: Consumer goods Food retailers & wholesalers Tirana: 1999 Largest supermarket chain ...
In 1991, Banka Tregtare Shqiptare (BTSH) was established from the sub-division of the activities of the Albanian State Bank, the main activity of which was managing the foreign trade operations of the state-owned entities with former socialist countries. In 1992, Banka Kombëtare e Shqipërisë (BKSH) was created by a second sub-division of the ...
The bank was founded in 1925 in Rome as the National Bank of Albania (Albanian: Banka Kombëtare e Shqipnis, Italian: Banca Nazionale d’Albania, Albanian acronym BKS or BKSH), replaced in 1945 by the state-owned Albanian State Bank based in Tirana (Albanian: Banka e Shtetit Shqiptar, BSS or BSHSH), before taking its current name in 1992.
King Zog also utilized concessions, with one of the first laws being passed after Ahmet Zog returned to Albania being a coal concession to the Anglo-Persian Oil Company (February 1925), [1] being followed by the creation of the Albanian National Bank where the Italian financial group owned 26% of the capital. [3]