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The majority of Serbian banks previously licensed by the National Bank of Serbia to operate in Kosovo have been shut down. These banks previously operated in the official currency of Serbia, the Serbian dinar. [2]
Poštanska štedionica (meaning "Post's savings service") was founded on 26 June 1921 in Palilula, Belgrade when the law of postal savings service was implemented. By 1926 it had become the main financial savings institution in Kingdom of Yugoslavia, with branches in all postal offices in the entire county.
Banka Poštanska štedionica Banja Luka a.d. or simply Banka Poštanska štedionica is a commercial bank in Bosnia and Herzegovina.. It is headquartered in Banja Luka, as state-owned subsidiary of the Serbian bank from Poštanska štedionica a.d. Beograd.
The Hungarian OTP Bank Group entered the Serbian banking market under the name "OTP banka Srbija" on 21 May 2007, being formed through the merger of three Serbian banks: Niška Banka a.d. Niš, Zepter banka a.d. Beograd and Kulska banka a.d. Novi Sad.
The bank was founded in 1864 as Novosadska banka.In August 2005, Austrian Erste Bank took over the bank's majority share (83.3%) from the Serbian government for €73.2 million.
Former head office of the City Savings Bank on Ban Jelačić Square in Zagreb, designed by Ignjat Fischer and completed in 1925. The City Savings Bank (Croatian: Gradska štedionica) was a significant bank headquartered in Zagreb, created in 1913, reorganized after World War II and eventually merged into the National Bank of Yugoslavia in 1952.
The First Croatian Savings Bank was created on March 4, 1846, in Zagreb, on the basis of Imperial Austrian legislation of 1844 that facilitated the establishment of savings banks.
ZIKS consists of 4 distinct organizational units, 3 of which make up the Spuž prison complex, 9 kilometres (6 mi) northwest of central Podgorica.The Spuž complex was erected in the 1950s, replacing several smaller prisons within Podgorica city proper.