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HypoVereinsbank's subsidiary, Bank Austria (aka UniCredit Bank Austria), was the direct parent company of UniCredit Bank Czech Republic and Slovakia until September 2016. In September 2016 UniCredit S.p.A., the ultimate parent company, acquired the whole Central and Eastern Europe division from subsidiary Bank Austria.
UniCredit Bank is a Romanian bank and member of UniCredit Group. It has a network of 8,500 branches in 17 European countries, and a presence in another 50 ...
UniCredit Bank Serbia (Serbian: UniCredit Bank Srbija a.d. Beograd) is a bank founded in 2001, headquartered in Belgrade, Serbia. It is part of the Italian banking group UniCredit, which owns 100% stake in the bank. [2] As of 31 December 2019, the bank has a network of 72 branch offices in Serbia. [1]
Intesa Sanpaolo S.p.A. is an Italian international banking group. It is Italy's largest bank by total assets and the world's 27th largest. [6] It was formed through the merger of Banca Intesa and Sanpaolo IMI in 2007, but has a corporate identity stretching back to its first foundation as Istituto Bancario San Paolo di Torino in 1583.
DZ Bank AG (German pronunciation: [deː ˈt͡sɛt baŋk aːɡeː] ⓘ) is the second largest bank in Germany by asset size and the central institution for around 700 cooperative banks and their around 7,200 branch offices. [3]
The bank's first chairman was the prominent industrialist Eugène Schneider, followed by Edward Charles Blount. By 1870, the bank had 47 branches throughout France, including 15 in Paris. It set up a permanent office in London in 1871. [8] At the beginning, the bank used its own resources almost entirely for both financial and banking operations.
The purchase by Italy's No. 2 bank of the stake in Germany's No. 2 lender makes UniCredit one of Commerzbank's largest shareholders and follows speculation in recent years that the Italian lender ...
In 2009, as a regulatory response to the revealed vulnerability of the banking sector in the financial crisis of 2007–08, and attempting to come up with a solution to solve the "too big to fail" interdependence between G-SIFIs and the economy of sovereign states, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) started to develop a method to identify G-SIFIs to which a set of stricter requirements would ...