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Standard Federal Bank was a Troy, Michigan-based bank serving Michigan and Northern Indiana in the United States which was acquired by Bank of America on 5 May 2008. [1]In 2005, Standard Federal was the largest bank in Michigan based on number of retail branches (265), ATMs (more than 1,000) and deposits (US 23.3B, 15.06% market share); it ranked second in assets.
It became the Michigan National Bank Tower in 1954, and held that name until 2001 when Standard Federal Bank purchased Michigan National Bank. At the request of Standard Federal, the owners of the tower removed the historic neon 'Michigan National' sign in that year. After four-and-a-half years without a name, the Boji family, a father and son ...
Fifth Third Bank: 2001 Standard Federal Bank: Michigan National Bank: Standard Federal Bank: Bank of America: 2001 FleetBoston Financial Corp. Summit Bancorp: FleetBoston Financial Corp. Bank of America: 2002 Citigroup: Golden State Bancorp: Citigroup: $5.8 billion Citigroup: 2002 Washington Mutual: Dime Bancorp, Inc. Washington Mutual ...
The list excludes the following three banks listed amongst the 100 largest by the Federal Reserve but not the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council because they are not holding companies: Zions Bancorporation ($87 billion in assets), Cadence Bank ($48 billion in assets) and Bank OZK ($36 billion in assets). [2]
Standard Federal Bank; T. Talmer Bancorp; TCF Financial Corporation; U. Union Trust and Savings Bank (Michigan) University Bank This page ...
Three Rivers was a $1 billion commercial bank with 25 offices in the metropolitan Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania area. [14] July 11, 2001: Standard Federal Bank: Standard Federal Bank sold ten northwest Ohio offices. Sky now has 205 financial centers and has #2 market share in Wood and Lucas counties. [15] June 7, 1999: Mahoning National Bancorp
In a merger of co-owned banks, the LaSalle Bank N.A. name was adopted in 1999. It was the largest bank headquartered in Chicago with US$72.2 billion in assets and US$46.8 billion in deposits. LaSalle Bank maintained 146 retail locations and 450 ATMs throughout Chicago and its neighboring suburbs.
The bank closed 37 branches in 2013 and another 33 in 2016. [11] In some locations, it replaced the full-service branches with ATMs. [12] In August 2019, the bank merged into Chemical Financial Corporation, which assumed the TCF name. [13] It was founded as Chemical State Savings Bank in 1917. [14]