Search results
Results from the Health.Zone Content Network
Banco Santander Argentina (formerly Banco Río de la Plata and then Banco Santander Río) is a commercial bank and financial services company and affiliate of the Santander, Cantabria (Spain) based Santander Group. Based in Buenos Aires, its banking operations are the third largest in Argentina, as well as the largest among all privately owned ...
Banco Santander S.A. trading as Santander Group (UK: / ˌsæntənˈdɛər, - tæn -/ SAN-tən-DAIR, -tan-, US: / ˌsɑːntɑːnˈdɛər / SAHN-tahn-DAIR, [2][3] Spanish: [ˈbaŋko santanˈdeɾ]), is a Spanish multinational financial services company based in Madrid and Santander in Spain. Additionally, Santander maintains a presence in most ...
Banco de la Nación Argentina: 33.42 24 BAC Panama: 32.24 25 Grupo Inbursa: 30.41 26 Intercorp Perú: 29.27 27 Banco Cooperativo Sicredi 28.47 28 Banco Citibank 28.40 29 BBVA Perú: 25.74 30 Bicapital Corp. 24.29 31 Banco Votorantim: 23.03 32 Banco de la República Oriental del Uruguay: 22.00 33 Banco Pichincha: 21.55 34 Banrisul: 21.50 35 BBVA ...
Banco BOCOM BBM (China's Bank of Communications as main shareholder) Banco BMG. Banco BV (co-owned by Votorantim Group and Banco do Brasil) Banco Fibra. Banco Industrial do Brasil. Banco Mercantil do Brasil. Banco PAN (formerly Banco Panamericano, now owned by BTG Pactual) Paraná Banco. Banco Paulista.
The Bank of the Argentine Nation was founded on 18 October 1891 by President Carlos Pellegrini, with the purpose of stabilizing the nation's finances following the Panic of 1890; its first director was Vicente Lorenzo Casares. In its early decades it became a leading financing source for agricultural smallholders, and later for commercial and ...
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. Grupo Macro has 7,925 employees, 1,772 ATMs ...
Banking penetration remains low and banking costs high. The Argentine banking sector is currently dominated by state-owned banks, with the largest being the Banco de la Nación Argentina. In 2005, for the first time since the 2001 collapse, the banking system made a profit, according to a Central Bank report released in February 2006.
Banco Santander created Openbank in 1995, and launched a website for it in 1996. In 2000, after buying the Argentine portal Patagon.com for $540 million, Openbank changed its name to Patagon Internet Bank S.A., [2] a financial portal that combined traditional banking with digital features such as chatrooms and internet forums.