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As a transaction bank, the Deutsche WertpapierService Bank AG (dwpbank) handles the securities processing for financial institutions from the savings bank and cooperative sector, but also from the private and commercial banking sector in Germany. dwpbank currently manages around 5.34 million securities accounts. [2]
The credit cycle is the expansion and contraction of access to credit over time. [1] Some economists, including Barry Eichengreen, Hyman Minsky, and other Post-Keynesian economists, and members of the Austrian school, regard credit cycles as the fundamental process driving the business cycle.
The DWS Group (Formerly: Deutsche Asset Management) commonly referred to as DWS, is a German asset management company. It previously operated as part of Deutsche Bank until 2018 where it became a separate entity through an initial public offering on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.
This is a list of countries and regions by global financial assets, the total privately owned assets by residents payable in currency, stocks, and bonds.This table is ...
Union Asset Management Holding AG (German pronunciation: [uˌni̯oːn ɪnˈvɛstmɛnt] ⓘ) is the investment arm of the DZ Bank Group and part of the cooperative financial services network. It was founded in 1956 and is headquartered in Frankfurt .
KfW Bank: Full Ownership German government: following assets amounting to a worth of $70.6Bn Deutsche Telekom: 31,9% Germany over KfW Deutsche Post: 25.5% Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action: Assets including DHL and Deutsche Postbank are therefore also partially owned by the government Hypo Real Estate: Full Ownership SoFFin
The German public banking sector (German: Öffentliches Kreditwesen) represents a significant share of the broader banking sector in Germany. Unlike in most other Western and Central European countries, German public-sector banks have been present since the early phases of formalization of banking entities in the early modern period and have ...
Banking in Germany is a highly leveraged industry, as its average leverage ratio (assets divided by net worth) as of 11 October 2008 is 52 to 1 (while, in comparison, that of France is 28 to 1 and that of the United Kingdom is 24 to 1); its short-term liabilities are equal to 60% of the German GDP or 167% of its national debt.