Betekenis van:
bank holding company

bank holding company
Zelfstandig naamwoord
    • a holding company owning or controlling one or more banks

    Hyperoniemen

    Hyponiemen


    Voorbeeldzinnen

    1. This holding company is owned 88 % by the Hesselbach family and 12 % by the German publicly owned bank Nord/LB.
    2. Wholly owned by Bank Melli Investment Co. Holding Company to manage all cement companies owned by BMIIC
    3. The KBC Group NV (hereinafter ‘KBC’) is the holding company of KBC Bank NV, KBC Verzekeringen NV and KBL European Private Bankers (hereinafter ‘KBL EPB’).
    4. ING is composed of ING Groep N.V. (‘ING Group’), the mother holding company that controls 100 % of ING Bank N.V. and ING Verzekeringen N.V., and two sub-holding companies controlling banking and insurance subsidiaries respectively.
    5. The resolution expressed the basic intention to merge the Land’s bank holdings and WBK into one holding company (later BGB), provided that WBK's promotional activities could continue and that the assumption of sovereign tasks and the tax exemption were guaranteed.
    6. Germany stated that the relevant date with respect to any limitation period applicable to recovery was 16 June 1992 when the Berlin Land Government adopted a resolution establishing a Berlin bank holding company.
    7. The basic resolution on WBK's transfer had been adopted on 16 June 1992, i.e. more than ten years before the decision initiating the investigation procedure was served on 4 July 2002. The resolution expressed the basic intention to merge the Land’s bank holdings and WBK into one holding company (later BGB), provided that WBK's promotional activities could continue and that the assumption of sovereign tasks and the tax exemption were guaranteed.
    8. Concerning, secondly, the assertion that the aid is not limited to the minimum inasmuch as FagorBrandt could obtain financing from its shareholders, the French authorities point out that MCC is a cooperative movement, not a holding company. In this cooperative movement, each cooperative, including Fagor and the bank Caja Laboral, is autonomous, and depends on the decisions of its own worker-cooperators, who are its owners.
    9. Germany submitted among other things an opinion drawn up by the consortium lead bank, KfW, on 1 June 2003 in which the latter assessed the value of the collateral additionally provided for the EUR 112 million loan. In the EUR 112 million loan contract, MobilCom undertook among other things to pledge all the shares in all the subsidiaries and associated companies of MobilCom AG and MobilCom Holding GmbH, including the freenet.de AG holding, and to transfer all claims against Millenium GmbH and against the former manager Gerhard Schmid amounting to EUR 71 million. All the usual banking collateral that was available in the company was also to be transferred.
    10. The State aid which Germany granted to MobilCom AG and MobilCom Holding GmbH in the form of the 80 % deficiency guarantee that was assumed by the Federal Government and the Land of Schleswig‐Holstein on 20 November 2002 for the EUR 112 million loan granted to the company by the consortium of banks with the Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau as lead bank is compatible with the common market pursuant to Article 87(3)(c) of the EC Treaty provided that Germany complies with the condition set out in Article 2 of this Decision.