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Bank of Communications, Frankfurt; Bank Sepah, Frankfurt; Citibank Privatkunden, Düsseldorf (since December 2008 part of French Crédit Mutuel bank); Citigroup Global Markets Deutschland (Corporate Bank), Frankfurt
By 1930 Commerz- und Privatbank was Germany's fourth-largest joint-stock bank by total deposits with 1.5 billion Reichsmarks, behind Deutsche Bank & Disconto-Gesellschaft (4.8 billion), Danat-Bank (2.4 billion), and Dresdner Bank (2.3 billion) and ahead of Reichs-Kredit-Gesellschaft (619 million) and Berliner Handels-Gesellschaft (412 million).
The German Cooperative Financial Group (German: Genossenschaftliche FinanzGruppe Volksbanken Raiffeisenbanken, sometimes referred to in English as "Volksbanken Raiffeisenbanken Cooperative Financial Network") is a major cooperative banking network in Germany that includes local banks named Volksbanken ("people's banks") and Raiffeisenbanken ("Raiffeisen banks"), the latter in tribute to 19th ...
This is a list of co-operative banks in Germany according to the information provided by the Bundesverband der Deutschen Volksbanken und Raiffeisenbanken (BVR) umbrella organisation. By late 2008, there were 1,197 co-operative banks in Germany with total assets of €668 billion. German co-operative banks are members of regional organisations.
Helaba, short for Landesbank Hessen-Thüringen, is a commercial bank with core regions in Hesse and Thuringia, Germany offering financial services to companies, banks, institutional investors and the public sector, both within Germany and internationally. At the same time, it is the central clearing institution and service provider for 40 ...
Some of the bank’s branches are open on Sundays with typical Sunday hours being 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. ET. There’s also a customer service phone line that can be reached on Sundays from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Banks still have a long way to go to make up for all the locations they shuttered. The number of US branches was 69,684 at the end of 2023, down from 82,461 in 2012.
In 1926 the Kundenkreditbank (KKB) in East Prussian Königsberg was the first bank in Germany which offered loans to private consumers. [1] In the same year the American The National City Bank of New York, which came out of the City Bank of New York founded in 1812, opened a branch in Berlin at Unter den Linden Boulevard in the course of its international expansion.