Banking in Greece
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Banking in Greece is an industry that has an average leverage ratio (assets/net worth) 16 to 1, and short-term liabilities equal to 35% of the Greek GDP or 38% of the Greek national debt, as of 11 October 2008.[1]On 29 June Greek banks, stayed shut and will remain so to impose capital control. Trading in Greek stocks and bonds halted as well.[2][3]
Contents
Central Bank
Commercial banks
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- Aegean Baltic Bank
- Alpha Bank
- Attica Bank
- Eurobank Ergasias
- National Bank of Greece
- Piraeus Bank
- New TT Hellenic Postbank
Greek branches of international banks
- BNP Paribas Securities
- HSBC
- Investment Bank of Greece
- UniCredit
- Bank Saderat Iran (Athens Branch website)
- Ziraat Bank (2 branches, one in Athens and one in Komotini)
Defunct banks
- ATEbank
- Bank of Cyprus
- Citibank
- Emporiki Bank
- First Business Bank
- Geniki Bank
- Hellenic Bank
- Marfin Egnatia Bank
- Millennium Bank
- PROBANK
- Proton Bank
- TBank
See also
References
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External links
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ cnn.com: « Greece shuts banks in bid to prevent collapse »"
- ↑ bbc.com: « Greek debt crisis: Banks to stay shut, capital controls imposed »"