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AS BlueOrange Bank BlueOrange 12 June 2001 BBG AS blueorangebank.com: AS Expobank Expobank 16 December 1991 Expobank LLC: expobank.eu: AS "Industra Bank" Industra 6 May 1994 J.A. Investment Holding industra.finance: AS "PrivatBank" PrivatBank: 31 July 1992 JSC CB PrivatBank: privatbank.lv: AS "SEB banka" SEB: 29 September 1993 SEB AB: seb.lv
Riga: 1993 Record label P A PNB Banka: Financials Banks Riga: 1992 Bank, defunct 2019 P D Olpha: Health care Pharmaceuticals Olaine: 1972 Pharmaceutical P A Parex Bank: Financials Banks Riga: 1992 Bank P A PrivatBank Latvia: Financials Banks Riga: 2007 Bank, part of PrivatBank (Ukraine) P A RAF-Avia: Consumer services Airlines Riga: 1990 ...
The Bank of Latvia was granted emission rights. The Bank's interim statutes were approved on 19 September 1922, with the decision of the Cabinet of Ministers, and its initial capital was 10 million lats. On 24 April 1923, Saeima approved the Statute of the Bank of Latvia, signed by President Jānis Čakste on 2 July. The bank was headed by a ...
In February 2001, Unibanka stopped listing its shares in the Riga Stock Exchange. SEB became the only shareholder in 2004, and on 11 April 2005, it was renamed to SEB Unibanka, and on 7 April 2008 to SEB banka. [5] Until 2008, the bank's branches were named with a 'Uni-' prefix (e.g. Unilīzings for leasing) and its logo was a stylized Möbius ...
Rietumu Banka is the largest Latvian capital bank and one of the four largest commercial banks operating in the country.. In the TOP101 rating, compiled by the investment bank Prudentia and the Nasdaq Riga Stock Exchange, [1] Rietumu Banka is recognized as the most valuable local company in the financial services sector and ranks fifth among all sectors of local Latvian private companies.
The authorized capital was increased by 7,100,000 LVL, and its total amount became 10,650,000 LVL. Prior to 16 August 2007, the bank was known as AS Banka Paritāte. [1] It had one branch in Italy and 13 branches in Latvia, including branches at Riga, Valmiera, Ventspils, Daugavpils, Liepāja, Rēzekne, Ludza, Cēsis, Valka and Jēkabpils.
On 30 July 2008, in a letter from Financial and Capital Market Commission of Latvia (FCMC) to the Chairman of the Board of Parex Bank titled, "On the results of the risk assessment of the bank," it was stated that an inspection had been carried out for the period from 12 November 2007 to 18 January 2008 and that the test results indicated that ...
Pale colours: Standard time observed all year Dark colours: Summer time observed. Time in Latvia is given by Eastern European Time (EET; UTC+02:00). [1] Daylight saving time, which moves one hour ahead to UTC+03:00 is observed from the last Sunday in March to the last Sunday in October. [2]