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Revenue (2023) $10.686 millions DOP. Website. bhd.com.do. Formerly called. BHD Leon. The BHD Bank (also known as Banco Múltiple BHD, S.A [2]) is a private financial and mortgage bank in the Dominican Republic, founded by Samuel Conde and a group of entrepreneurs on July 24, 1972. Since then, it has formed numerous partnerships and acquisitions ...
Banco Adopem. Banco Agrícola De La Republica Dominicana. Banco Pyme Bhd. Banco Ademi. Banco Capital. Banco Confisa. Banco De Desarrollo Idecosa. Banco Empire. Banco Motor Credito.
The Banco León (Léon Bank) was a banking company in the Dominican Republic, which was formally introduced at a ceremony attended by former Dominican President Hipólito Mejía on December 2, 2003. The bank represents a union between the Banco Profesional and Banco Nacional de Credito (Bancredito). The Léon Jimenes family, which controls the ...
At a ceremony celebrated on December 2, 2003, the León family announced the creation of the Banco León, S.A., by a merger between the Banco Nacional de Credito (Bancredito). [2] and Banco Profesional. Later, Banco León merge with Banco BHD becoming Banco Múltiple BHD León, S.A., the second largest bank in the Dominican Republic.
Banco Alfa. Banco BOCOM BBM (China's Bank of Communications as main shareholder) Banco BMG. Banco BV (co-owned by Votorantim Group and Banco do Brasil) Banco Fibra. Banco Industrial do Brasil. Banco Mercantil do Brasil. Banco PAN (formerly Banco Panamericano, now owned by BTG Pactual) Paraná Banco.
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La Línea de la Concepción (Spanish pronunciation: [la ˈlinea ðe la konθeβˈθjon]), often referred to simply as La Línea, is a municipality of Spain belonging to the province of Cádiz, Andalusia. The city lies on the sandy isthmus which is part of the eastern flank of the Bay of Gibraltar, and it limits with the Gibraltar–Spain border ...
On 9 August 1994, Banco de Venezuela became the tenth bank bailed out by the Venezuelan government during the crisis, with the government taking a majority stake for an estimated at US$294m. [6] In total, between January 1994 and August 1995 17 of the country's 49 commercial banks, as well as some subsidiaries, failed - representing 53% of the ...