UniCredit Banca

UniCredit Banca
Subsidiary
Industry Financial services
Fate absorbed by UniCredit
Predecessor 7 retail subsidiaries of UniCredit
Successor retail division of UniCredit
Founded 1 July 2002 (2002-07-01)
Founder UniCredit
Defunct 2010
Headquarters Palazzo Magnani, Bologna, Italy
Number of locations
2346 (2009)
Area served
Northern Italy
Services retail banking
Increase €81.851 million (2009)
Total assets Increase €77.252 billion (2009)
Total equity Increase €1.811 billion (2009)
Owner UniCredit (100%)
Parent UniCredit
Capital ratio 9.80% (Basel II Tier 1)
Website www.unicreditbanca.it Edit this on Wikidata
Footnotes / references
source[1]

UniCredit Banca S.p.A. was the retail banking division of UniCredit Group. On 1 July 2002, Rolo Banca, Banca CRT, Cariverona Banca, Cassamarca, Cassa di Risparmio di Trento e Rovereto and Cassa di Risparmio di Trieste were merged into Credito Italiano S.p.A. (a new subsidiary of UniCredit incorporated in December 1999), with Credito Italiano was renamed into UniCredit Banca S.p.A.. On 1 January 2003 UniCredit Private Banking and UniCredit Banca d'Impresa were spin off from UniCredit Banca

After UniCredit acquired Capitalia Group in an all-share deal in 2007, UniCredit Group gained the brand Banca di Roma and Banco di Sicilia. UniCredit Banca exchanged branches with the two sister companies (as well as absorbed Bipop Carire), making UniCredit Banca was specialized in the northern Italy. 3 branches of former UniCredit Banca were sold to Banca Carige.[2]

In 2010, UniCredit Banca was absorbed by the parent company UniCredit S.p.A., becoming the retail division of the company.

References

  1. "2009 Bilancio" [2009 Annual Report] (PDF). UniCredit Banca (in Italian). UniCredit. 7 June 2010. Retrieved 21 December 2016 via Borsa Italiana.
  2. "Trasferimento del ramo d'azienda consistente in n°38 sportelli dalle banche del Gruppo UniCredit" (PDF) (in Italian). UniCredit / Banca Carige. 2 October 2008. Retrieved 14 April 2016.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.