Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Banorte was founded in 1992 in the city of Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico and is the primary subsidiary of Grupo Financiero Banorte, one of Mexico's largest and oldest financial institutions, which has been present in Mexico since 1899. The "Banorte" trademark is a well-known mark in Mexico. The web domain name "banorte.com" was created in 1998.
History. Headquarters of Mercantil Banco. On 23 March 1925 a group of 98 Venezuelan businessmen founded the bank with the name of "Banco Neerlando Venezolano" in an economy determined by the agricultural activity being the major component of national income (coffee, cacao and cotton). The Bank began its operations on 3 April 1925.
Banco Hispano Americano (BHA) was a private Spanish bank that operated during most of the 20th century, becoming one of the most important financial institutions in the country. The activities of the Hispano Americano were not limited to the financial sector and it also had a prominent presence in the industrial sector through various investments.
Banco Nacional Mexicano (merged with Banco Mercantil Mexicano to form Banco Nacional de México, 1884) Banco Sofimex. Banco Unión (failed and bought by Banorte) Banco Viltaza (sold to Inbursa) Bancreser (later Bancrecer) Banpaís (bought by Asemex) Banpeco (bought by BNCI) Banoro. Banrural.
The next year it acquired some of the assets of the Mercantile Bank of the Americas (est. 1915), including Mercantile's entire interest in the National Bank of Nicaragua, Banco Mercantil de Costa Rica, Banco Mercantil Americano del Peru, Banco Mercantil Americano de Caracas, and Banco Mercantil Americano de Colombia.
www.bmsc.com.bo. Banco Mercantil Santa Cruz S.A. doing business as Mercantil Santa Cruz (abbreviated as BMSC) is a Bolivian bank and financial services company with headquarters in La Paz. As of 2015, Banco Mercantil Santa Cruz is the largest bank in Bolivia by assets. [3] It is a full-service corporation that provides a wide range of financial ...
The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) was instrumental in restructuring Nicaragua's technically bankrupt banking sector. [1] In December 1991, the IDB approved a US$3 million technical cooperation grant to restructure the Central Bank, and in March 1992, it approved a US$3 million loan to a new commercial bank, the Mercantile Bank (Banco Mercantil). [1]
From a page move: This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed).This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name.