Search results
Results from the Health.Zone Content Network
The Central Bank of Uruguay was established on July 6, 1967 as an autonomous state entity (Spanish: Ente Autónomo), with the passing of the 196th article of the Constitution of 1967. [2]
[2] [3] Today, Banco Credicoop is Argentina's eleventh-largest bank by total assets and ninth-largest by deposits (US$2.8 billion); [4] Nearly all of this is accounted for by its over 670,000 members, and Credicoop maintains 244 branches. [5] The institution is organized as a credit union, and operates as a non-profit cooperative. Each member ...
Bank Merged with / Acquired by Lloyds TSB: Banque Heritage Uruguay [3] [4] ABN AMRO: Banco Santander Uruguay [5] Banco Surinvest: Banque Heritage Uruguay [6] Crédit Uruguay Banco (formerly Banco Acac) Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria Uruguay [7] Discount Bank (Latin America) Scotiabank Uruguay [8] Nuevo Banco Comercial: Scotiabank Uruguay
The BN was created January 27, 1966, by Law 16000, approved by the Peruvian congress and was signed into law by the then-president Fernando Belaúnde Terry.Its predecessors date to 1905, when José Pardo created the Caja de Depósitos y Consignaciones or Bank of Deposits and Consignments.
This started a period known as the Anarchy of the Year XX, when Argentina lacked any type of head of state. There was a new attempt to organize a central government in 1826. A new congress wrote a new constitution and elected Bernardino Rivadavia as President in the process. [2] Rivadavia was the first President of Argentina.
The National Bank of Angola (Portuguese: Banco Nacional de Angola) is the central bank of Angola.It is state-owned and the Government of Angola is the sole shareholder. The bank is based in Luanda, and was created in 1926, but traces its ancestry back to 1865.
The president of Argentina (Spanish: Presidente de Argentina; officially known as the president of the Argentine Nation [2] ...
Eduardo Sergio Elsztain (born January 26, 1960) [1] is a prominent Argentine businessman who is his country's largest real-estate developer. [2] According to The Jerusalem Post, Elsztain "stands atop Argentina's largest business empire, the country's leader in real estate and agriculture, which he built with his own two hands."