Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
ABN AMRO was the main sponsor of Dutch football club AFC Ajax of Amsterdam from 1991 to 2008. The sponsor logo was at the time the only one in the world to be printed vertically down the right hand side of the front of the shirt. As of 2014, ABN AMRO is one of the strategic industry partners with Duisenberg School of Finance. [46]
The firm, now renamed ABN Amro Hoare Govett, recovered from those early loses, gaining Glaxo in 1995 from S.G. Warburg, [56] and started the purchase back of its former Asian business, now called HG Asia, firstly acquiring a 20% share in 1994, followed by a further 40% in 1996.
Banco Real branch, in Belo Horizonte. Banco Real was a Brazilian bank, owned by Spain's Banco Santander. ABN AMRO had owned the bank but in October 2007, a consortium led by Royal Bank of Scotland that also included Banco Santander and Belgium's Fortis, acquired ABN AMRO and proceeded to dismember it.
6.5 Defunct banks now part of ABN Amro Group. 6.6 Defunct banks now part of De Volksbank. 7 See also. 8 External links. 9 References. Toggle the table of contents.
Bank Dagang Negara, formerly Escomptobank, also predecessor to ABN AMRO; Bank Pembangunan Indonesia (Bapindo), state-owned since establishment; Bank Rakyat Indonesia was known as 1845: "Purwokertoan Assistance and Savings Bank for Native Aristocrats" (Dutch: De Purwokertosche Hulp- en Spaarbank der Inlandsche Hoofden).
Category for topics relating to the financial services company ABN AMRO Group. Subcategories. This category has only the following subcategory. ...
ING Group is the largest with 40% of current accounts, followed by Rabobank (30%), ABN AMRO (20%), and others (10%). [19] The Rabobank Group currently consists of the following divisions: [citation needed] Rabobank Nederland – the facilitary and staff organisation that serves the local banks. It currently performs the following core activities:
The AMsterdamsche en ROtterdamsche Bank (AMRO Bank, lit. ' Bank of Amsterdam and Rotterdam ') was a major Dutch bank that was created in 1964 by the merger of the Amsterdamsche Bank (est. 1871) and the Rotterdamsche Bank (est. 1863). [1] In 1991, it merged with Algemene Bank Nederland (ABN) to form ABN AMRO.