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  2. cahoot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cahoot

    Website. www .cahoot .com. cahoot is an internet-only division of Santander UK plc, the British subsidiary of the Santander Group. Cahoot was launched in June 2000, as the internet based banking brand of Abbey National plc. Cahoot is based in Belfast, Northern Ireland .

  3. Cater Allen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cater_Allen

    Cater Allen Limited. Cater Allen is a private bank operating in the United Kingdom and is a subsidiary of Santander UK. Tracing its history back to a bank founded in Blackburn in 1816, [1] [2] it was independent for 180 years, before being purchased in 1997 by Abbey National. [3] Cater Allen Offshore was initially run as a separate enterprise ...

  4. Nathan Bostock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathan_Bostock

    Term. September 2014-. Predecessor. Ana Patricia BotĂ­n. Spouse. Married. Children. 2 sons. Nathan Mark Bostock (born October 1960) is a British banker, and was the CEO of Santander UK, until leaving the role in 2022.

  5. Santander Consumer Bank (Deutschland) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santander_Consumer_Bank...

    The Santander Consumer Bank AG is a German Credit Institution in the legal form of a corporation with headquarters in Mönchengladbach. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Spanish Banco Santander S.A. The Santander Group is one of the largest banks in the world with over 133 million customers [2] and presence in more than 40 countries.

  6. Faster Payments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faster_Payments

    Faster Payments. The Faster Payments Service ( FPS) is a United Kingdom banking initiative to reduce payment times between different banks' customer accounts to typically a few seconds, from the three working days that transfers usually take using the long-established BACS system. CHAPS, which was introduced in 1984, provides a limited faster ...

  7. Sort code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sort_code

    The sort code is usually formatted as three pairs of numbers, for example 12-34-56. It identifies both the bank (in the first digit or the first two digits) and the branch where the account is held. [1] Sort codes are encoded into International Bank Account Numbers (IBANs) but are not encoded into Business Identifier Codes (BICs).