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Rabobank New Zealand: 03: 0001–1999 China Construction Bank New Zealand: 05 8884-8889 National Bank of New Zealand [a] now ANZ: 06: 0001–1499 National Australia Bank: 08: 0000–9999 Industrial and Commercial Bank of China: 10 5165—5169 PostBank [a] 11: 5000–8999 ASB: 12: 3000–3999 Trust Bank Southland [a] 13: 4900–4999 Trust Bank ...
Auckland, New Zealand: ANZ Bank New Zealand: 1 April 1987 New Zealand retail banking subsidiary Australia & New Zealand Banking Group: 28.1% (2022) [4] Auckland, New Zealand: ASB Bank: 11 May 1989 New Zealand retail banking subsidiary Commonwealth Bank: 17.2% (2022) [5] Auckland, New Zealand: Westpac New Zealand: 31 October 2006 New Zealand ...
The original Bank of New Zealand logo used for 147 years until 1 October 2008 The General Manager's office of the Bank of New Zealand Queen Street branch in 1894. The Bank of New Zealand was formed as a private company and incorporated by the New Zealand Bank Act 1861, which created the company and authorises it to issue banknotes. [2]
ANZ is one of New Zealand's big four banks, and is the largest bank in New Zealand with approximately 30% of market share as of March 2021. [5] Australia and New Zealand Banking Group bought the National Bank of New Zealand from Lloyds Bank in 2003. [6] The banks operated as separate brands until 2012, when they were unified under the ANZ brand ...
New Zealand [3] Air New Zealand: NZX: AIR: New Zealand [4] Auckland Real Estate Trust NZX: AKL: Allied Farmers NZX: ALF: New Zealand [5] Australia & New Zealand Banking Group: NZX: ANZ: Australia [6] The Asia Pacific Trust NZX: APA: New Zealand [7] Asset Plus NZX: APL: New Zealand [8] ArborGen Holdings NZX: ARB: Argosy Property NZX: ARG: New ...
Kiwibank Limited is a New Zealand state-owned bank and financial services provider. As of 2023, Kiwibank is the fifth-largest bank in New Zealand by assets, and the largest New Zealand-owned bank, with a market share of approximately 9%. [4] In December 2023, the bank's assets totaled about $35 billion. [5]
This page was last edited on 17 January 2025, at 12:09 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Michael Fay and David Richwhite are best known for gaining wealth in a series of loosely regulated privatisation and asset swapping transactions that occurred between 1986 and 1993 - involving their companies European Pacific, Capital Markets and Fay Richwhite and the former state owned operations Bank of New Zealand, Tranz Rail and Telecom New Zealand, and the pension accounts associated to them.