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The Bank of Guatemala (Spanish: Banco de Guatemala) is the central bank of Guatemala. It was established in 1945. Its headquarters 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.
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Banco de la Nación Argentina: 33.42 24 BAC Panama: 32.24 25 Grupo Inbursa: 30.41 26 Intercorp Perú: 29.27 27 Banco Cooperativo Sicredi 28.47 28 Banco Citibank 28.40 29 BBVA Perú: 25.74 30 Bicapital Corp. 24.29 31 Banco Votorantim: 23.03 32 Banco de la República Oriental del Uruguay: 22.00 33 Banco Pichincha: 21.55 34 Banrisul: 21.50 35 BBVA ...
Grupo Financiero Banamex S.A. de C.V. has its origins and is the owner of the Banco Nacional de México or Citibanamex (formerly Banamex). It is the second-largest bank in Mexico. The Banamex Financial Group was purchased by Citigroup in August 2001 for $12.5 billion USD. It continues to operate as a Citigroup subsidiary.
In 2016, Credomatic de México S.A. de C.V., a subsidiary of BAC International Inc., signed a contract to transfer to Banco Invex S.A. its Mexican credit cards business [4] In 2017 the group started to use BAC Credomatic as brand for all their bank and credit card services, using a new modern logo. [citation needed]
The Nacional brand is better known as main sponsor of Ayrton Senna during all his racing career in Formula One (1984-1994). The TV Globo's popular news program Jornal Nacional was originally had the bank as the main sponsor. [1] [2] Ayrton Senna's helmet model from 1988.
In 1993, the government split National Bank into a central bank, Central Bank of São Tomé and Príncipe, and a commercial bank, Banco Internacional de São Tomé e Príncipe. In Cape Verde, BNU's interests became Bank of Cape Verde. In 1993, the government spun off the commercial banking operations into a new bank, Banco Comercial do Atlântico.
In 2002, talks began for the purchase of the bank by a group of Venezuelan investors, completing the acquisition of the bank in February 2003 and changing the name in April of the same year to Banco Nacional. of Credit. [2] By 2003, it had 13 agencies. By mid-2007 the number increased significantly to reach 79 agencies nationwide.