enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Brubank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brubank

    Brubank was founded in 2017. Juan Bruchou, CEO of Citibank Argentina, had proposed an entirely digital bank, without branch offices. Brubank obtained license by the Central Bank of Argentina to operate in September 2018. After a first "friends and family" trial, Brubank launched its app on Apple and Android stores. [5]

  3. Banco Santander Argentina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banco_Santander_Argentina

    The bank, maintains deposits of around US$7.7 billion (nearly 7% of the total), and a lending portfolio of US$6.4 billion (8% of the total); the 3.5 million Santander Argentina credit cards (a 13% market share) make it a close second as the largest issuer of these in Argentina, next to Galicia Financial Group. [2]

  4. Grupo Financiero Galicia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grupo_Financiero_Galicia

    Though a sell-off of public shares was averted, given the controversy, the 1998–2002 Argentine great depression led to the loss of nearly half of the bank's deposits between 2001 and 2002, and to its near-insolvency, when its dollar-denominated debt of US$1.8 billion required borrowing on flexible terms from the Central Bank of Argentina ...

  5. Banco Santa Fe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banco_Santa_Fe

    The New Bank of Santa Fe (Spanish: Nuevo Banco de Santa Fe, NBSF) is the most important financial entity in the Santa Fe Province, Argentina and has the largest territorial coverage that reaches 96 percent of the district's inhabitants. It is a commercial bank with national and regional capital (finance).

  6. Bank of the Province of Buenos Aires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_of_the_Province_of...

    The bank today operates 342 branches and is Argentina's second-largest by deposits (holding US$10 billion, or, 8% of the total) and total assets, and the sixth-largest in lending with a US$5 billion loan portfolio (a 6% share). [3]

  7. Banelco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banelco

    Banelco (an acronym for Banca Electrónica Compartida) is an ATM network in Argentina. Established in 1985, it offers several services related to cash flow management, including debit cards, electronic transfers and service payments. Banelco is owned by private banks and operates 6.000 ATMs (one third of the total in the country). [1]

  8. BBVA Argentina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBVA_Argentina

    In 2017, the bank once again relocated its headquarters in the newly built Torre BBVA. [4] In 2019, BBVA unified its brand worldwide and BBVA Francés was renamed BBVA. [5] In 2023, BBVA Argentina had 243 branches (56 of them digital and 24 fully digital), 895 ATMs, and 861 ATSs across the country. [6]

  9. Banco Macro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banco_Macro

    Banco Macro is the second largest domestically-owned private bank in Argentina, and the sixth-largest by deposits and lending.It began operating in 1988 as a bank and has a wide network of branches and ATMs throughout the country, which allows it to provide banking services to a broad customer base.