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The Bank of Guatemala (Spanish: Banco de Guatemala) is the central bank of Guatemala. It was established in 1945. It is one of the most recognized Brutalist themed architectural structures. Designed by architects José Montes Córdova and Raúl Minondo, the iconic bank stands within the heart of the city's civic center.
Banco de A. Edwards; merged with Banco de Chile. [5] BBVA (Chile) ; merged with Scotiabank Chile. [6] Banco Desarrollo de Scotiabank ; merged with Scotiabank Chile. [7] Banco de Santiago ; merged with Banco Santander, [8] some assets sold to Paris. [9] Banco Sud Americano; bought by Scotiabank Chile. Banco Paris; closed in 2016. [10]
From an alternative language: This is a redirect from a page name in Spanish to a page name in English.These words may directly translate or they may be related words, names or phrases.
BAC Credomatic is a financial group in Central America, with operations in Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua (where it was founded and former headquarters in the city of Managua), Costa Rica (current headquarters), Panama, Grand Cayman, The Bahamas, and the United States.
On February 27, 2009, CODETEL launched Claro TV, a digital TV service based on Microsoft Mediaroom for urban areas and Direct To Home Satellite for rural areas. [7] On January 20, 2011, Oscar Peña, the company's president, announced the company's brands would be unified and would become Claro as a part of a global unification across Latin America, where América Móvil's services are under ...
Claro (formerly CTE Telecom) is a mobile and fixed phone, broadband and television service provider in El Salvador.. Formerly controlled by parent company CTE Telecom in El Salvador [1] (owned by América Móvil of Mexico), the company started its wireless service as "Personal" around 1999, and later added "ALÓ" with the motto "Facil y Rapido" (Spanish for "Easy and Fast ").
The coins currently in circulation are disc-shaped and include Guatemala's national coat of arms on the obverse. [2] The coins, and their reverse designs are: 1 centavo: Friar Bartolomé de las Casas [2] 5 centavos: the tree of liberty and the motto "LIBRE CREZCA FECUNDO (Grow free and fecund)" [2] 10 centavos: a monolith from Quiriguá [2]
Banco del Café (English: Bank of the Coffee), commonly known as Bancafé, was a bank in Guatemala that collapsed because of bad loans and panicked withdrawals set off by an investigation by Guatemala's Superintendencia de Bancos in 2006. This eventually brought the bank down.