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Alpha Bank Residence Thessaloniki. Alpha Bank is a private Greek bank. Its founder was John Kostopoulos [9] Alpha Bank's Network in Greece has 273 branches and 783 ATMs. [10]The Group operates in Greece, United Kingdom, Luxembourg and Cyprus with a network of 287 retail outlets (273 in Greece, 12 in Cyprus, 1 in the United Kingdom, 1 in Luxembourg) and employs 8,487 people in Greece and abroad.
In July, National Bank of Greece acquired 89.9% of the United Bulgarian Bank (UBB). In 2002 NBG merged with ETEBA (National Investment Bank for Industrial Development), but NBG's attempted merger with Alpha Bank fell through. The next year, NBG bought Banca Romaneasca, a Romanian bank, and currently holds 88.7% of all outstanding shares. Banca ...
Egnatia Bank (merged with Marfin Bank to form Marfin Egnatia Bank) Emporiki Bank (absorbed into Alpha Bank) Ergasias Bank (absorbed into EFG Eurobank) FBB - First Business Bank (split into "good" and "bad" bank, good bank assets taken over by National Bank of Greece, all former FBB branches closed) General Bank of Greece (bought by Piraeus Bank)
Commercial Bank of Greece (Greek: Εμπορική Τράπεζα της Ελλάδας) was a Greek bank. Its headquarters was in Athens . On 1 February 2013, Alpha Bank bought Commercial Bank.
Eurobank Ergasias Services and Holdings S.A. [1] Eurobank is a financial organisation that operates in Greece, Cyprus, Luxembourg, Bulgaria and the UK. As of December 2018, the Eurobank Group counts, € 58 billion in assets, 653 customer service locations in Greece and abroad, and 13,162 employees. [12]
The Banknote Museum of Alpha Bank (formerly Banknote Museum of the Ionian Bank) is a museum located in Corfu, Greece. [1] [2] [3] It exhibits an almost complete collection of the Greek currencies from 1822 to present, about 2000 items. [1] [2] [4] It includes the first treasury bonds issued by the newly liberated Greek State in 1822.
The Bank of Greece ( Greek: Τράπεζα της Ελλάδος Trapeza tis Ellados, abbr. ΤτΕ) is the Greek member of the Eurosystem and has been the monetary authority for Greece from 1927 to 2000, issuing the drachma. Since 2014, it has also been Greece's national competent authority within European Banking Supervision. [3]
Regulators found weaknesses in "living wills" submitted by four of the country’s largest banks detailing how the lenders would wind themselves down if something catastrophic were to happen.