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Bank of America: 1997 Washington Mutual: Great Western Financial CorporationGreat Western Bank: Washington Mutual: $6.8 billion JPMorgan Chase: 1997 First Union Corporation: Signet Banking Corporation First Union Corporation: Wells Fargo: 1997 National City Corp. First of America Bank National City Corp. PNC Financial Services: 1997 Banc One ...
Stock in the capital stock savings bank was first offered for sale on March 11, 1983. [29] By 1989, its assets had doubled. [2] In November 1994, WaMu reorganized as a holding company, Washington Mutual, Inc. It separated the non-banking units from its primary banking unit, Washington Mutual Savings Bank, which was simultaneously renamed ...
The bank was acquired by Washington Mutual in 1997 for $6.8 billion. Great Western Bank was held by Great Western Financial Corporation ("GWFC"), a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Delaware that was traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the stock symbol "GWF". [5]
By September 12, 1917, it was operating under the name Washington Mutual Savings Bank. [3] In mid 2008 WaMu suffered a massive run where customers pulled out $16.7 billion in deposits in a ten-day span. On the night of September 25th the Office of Thrift Supervision seized WaMu Bank and placed it into the receivership of the FDIC.
Commercial bank [31] [32] October 8, 2008: Glitnir: Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority: Commercial bank [33] [34] October 9, 2008: Kaupthing Bank E: Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority ING Direct United Kingdom: Commercial bank € 1.14 × 10 ^ 9 [35] [36] October 9, 2008: Bankwest (subsidiary of HBOS) Commonwealth Bank: Bank £ 1. ...
Agency infighting and regulators' repeated disregard of shoddy lending practices allowed Washington Mutual Bank, a $300 billion thrift and the sixth largest U.S. depository institution before it ...
Washington Mutual Inc (at time of acquisition) JPMorgan Chase (since 2008) Providian Financial Corporation was an American financial services company founded in 1997, which became one of the leading credit card issuers in the United States before it was sold to Washington Mutual for approximately US$ 6.5 billion in October 2005.
Within a day of their $25 billion merger’s falling apart in court, Kroger and Albertsons were each planning to move forward with share repurchases to boost their stock prices and reward investors.