List of banks in Serbia

Central bank

Commercial banks

As of 1 November 2019, there are 26 licensed commercial banks in Serbia.[1] For each of them, there is a balance sheet total made on 30 September 2019.[2] The number of employees is as of 31 December 2018.

Column Explanation
Bank Bank's name in a simplified form
Capital Majority owner origin
Headquarters Location of bank's headquarters in Serbia
Assets Amount of total assets of bank in million euros in given fiscal year
Equity Amount of equity of bank in million euros in given fiscal year
Ratio Equity to assets ratio percentage
Employees Number of people working at the bank
BankCapitalHeadquartersAssetsEquityRatioEmployees
Addiko BankBelgrade85618621,73592
AIK BankaBelgrade1,76847226,70760
API BankBelgrade851315,2974
Banca IntesaBelgrade5,38789616,633,101
Bank of China SrbijaBelgrade911516,4824
Crédit AgricoleNovi Sad1,02510310,05961
Direktna BankaKragujevac4828417,43479
ExpobankBelgrade1363223,53167
Erste BankNovi Sad1,93826413,621,162
EurobankBelgrade1,48544429,901,499
HalkbankBelgrade57810117,47467
JUBMES bankaBelgrade1613421,12125
Komercijalna bankaBelgrade3,57361817,303,108
MirabankBelgrade531732,0837
Mobi BankaBelgrade1754123,43183
mts bankaBelgrade1022221,57188
NLB bankaBelgrade5707613,33446
Opportunity bankaNovi Sad1513019,87367
OTP banka SrbijaBelgrade2,81242315,041,431
Poštanska štedionicaBelgrade1,72619011,002,077
ProCredit BankBelgrade1,04314013,42386
Raiffeisen BankaBelgrade2,67548918,281,654
Sberbank SrbijaBelgrade1,19421217,76717
Srpska bankaBelgrade1023029,4164
UniCredit Bank SerbiaBelgrade3,89672618,631,301
Vojvođanska bankaNovi Sad1,81727214,972,153
Total33,8815,93017,5023,523

Recent name changes

This is a list of recent name changes of the banks due to change of ownership structure:

  • On 9 May 2014, KBC Banka a.d. Beograd changed its name into Telenor banka a.d. Beograd
  • On 18 May 2015, Dunav banka a.d.Beograd changed its name into mts banka a.d. Beograd
  • On 22 October 2015, Čačanska banka a.d. Čačak changed its name into HALKBANK a.d. Beograd
  • On 8 July 2016, Hypo-Alpe-Adria-Bank a.d. Beograd changed its name into Addiko Bank a.d. Beograd
  • On 8 July 2016, KBM Banka a.d. Kragujevac changed its name into Direktna Banka a.d. Kragujevac
  • On 23 October 2018, VTB Bank changed its name into API Bank a.d. Beograd
  • On 25 April 2019, OTP Banka Srbija a.d. Novi Sad changed its name into Vojvođanska banka a.d. Novi Sad
  • On 25 September 2019, Société Générale Srbija a.d. Beograd changed its name into OTP Banka Srbija a.d. Beograd
  • On 10 October 2019, Telenor banka a.d. Beograd changed its name into Mobi Banka a.d. Beograd

Defunct banks

These are banks that either lost their licence due to the accumulated debts and insolvency, or went into bankruptcy, or merged into another bank:[3]

  • Dafiment banka (May 1993)
  • Jugoskandik (July 1993)
  • BB Slavija banka (October 2001)
  • Beogradska banka (January 2002)
  • Beobanka (January 2002)
  • Jugobanka (January 2002)
  • Investbanka (January 2002)
  • Borska banka (February 2004)
  • Valjevska banka (November 2004)
  • JIK banka (April 2005)
  • Srpska komercijalna banka (December 2005)
  • Control banka (January 2007)
  • Medifarm banka (January 2007)
  • Zepter banka (May 2007)
  • KOMBANKA (June 2007)
  • MONTEX banka (July 2007)
  • Raj banka (November 2007)
  • AIK Banka Senta (January 2008)
  • BC BANK CREDIT (May 2008)
  • GOLD INTERNACIONAL BANK (October 2008)
  • Astra banka (October 2008)
  • YUEKIBANKA (January 2009)
  • Razvojna banka Vojvodine (2010)
  • Agrobanka (May 2012)
  • Nova Agrobanka (October 2012)
  • Privredna banka (October 2013)
  • Univerzal banka (February 2014)
  • Jubanka (December 2017)
  • Jugobanka Jugbanka (April 2018)

Representative offices of foreign banks

As of 9 December 2019, these are the registered representative offices of foreign banks within the National Bank of Serbia:[4]

  • Atlas Banka, Podgorica, Montenegro
  • Citibank, Sioux Falls, USA
  • Commerzbank, Frankfurt, Germany
  • Deutsche Bank, Frankfurt, Germany
  • Euroaxis Bank, Moscow, Russia
  • Eximbank, Budapest, Hungary

See also

References

  1. "List of Banks". nbs.rs. Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  2. "Биланс стања/успеха банака". nbs.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 8 December 2019.
  3. "Banke u stečaju". aod.rs (in Serbian). Agencija za osiguranje depozita. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  4. "Predstavništva stranih banaka". nbs.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 8 December 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.