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SMBC has been an early adopter of AI in its banking operation. It is the first Japanese bank to use IBM Watson since 2014 to support operators at its call center. [8] AmiVoice, a voice recognition solution provided by SMBC, transforms inquiries into text on a real-time basis as a speech recognition system, while IBM Watson gives customers responses taken from service manuals and Q&As, thereby ...
Japan Post (Nihon Yūsei Kōsha (日本郵政公社)), restructured to Japan Post Bank in 2007.; Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Finance Corporation (AFC; Nōrin Gyogyō Kin'yū Kōko (農林漁業金融公庫)), merged to JFC in 2008.
The Metropolitan Bank & Trust Company [a] (Hokkien Chinese: 首都銀行; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Siú-to͘ Gûn-hâng), trading as Metrobank, is a Filipino bank that as of 2022, was the third largest bank in the Philippines in terms of total assets. [4] [5] It offers various financial services, from regular banking to insurance.
MUFG Bank Sumitomo Mitsui Bank Mizuho Bank Resona Bank. A city bank is a Japanese term (Japanese: 都市銀行 = "Toshi ginkō" or 都銀 = "Togin") for one of the several mega-banks, with their head offices in Tokyo or Osaka, Japan's two largest cities. These banks have wide networks of branches in major cities all over Japan.
Sumitomo is in a joint venture with the Japan Transport Engineering Company (J-TREC) for the production of a total of 51 commuter train sets (408 cars) in two separate contracts for the Philippine National Railways North–South Commuter Railway [15] [16] and the production of 30 8-car train sets (240 train cars) for the Metro Manila Subway.
The Chuo Trust & Banking Co., Ltd. was established in May 1962 with a capital of 2.5 billion yen and support from Tokai Bank, Dai-Ichi Bank, the Industrial Bank of Japan and other financial institutions. It took over Tokai and Dai-Ichi's trust businesses as well as the stock transfer agency business of Japan Securities Agents, Ltd.
Mitsubishi Bank and the Bank of Tokyo merged in 1996 to form the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, which at that point was the world's largest bank in terms of total assets. [10] The Bank of Tokyo had historically focused on foreign exchange business since its foundation as the Yokohama Specie Bank in 1880, while Mitsubishi Bank had had a stronger focus on domestic corporate and retail banking.
Krung Thai Bank (No.2 bank and Government Enterprise in Thailand) Land & Houses Bank; Siam Commercial Bank (No. 3 bank in Thailand) Standard Chartered Bank (Thai) TMBThanachart Bank (No. 5 bank in Thailand, formerly Thai Military Bank and "TMB Bank") Tisco Bank; United Overseas Bank (Thai) (Formed by the merger of Bank of Asia and UOB Radanasin)