Austria’s Erste sticks to point of mixing diversity and business

  • 📰 FT
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 24 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 13%
  • Publisher: 51%

España Noticias Noticias

España Últimas Noticias,España Titulares

‘House bank of the left’ operates against a difficult political and social backdrop

On October 4 1819, Erste Austrian Savings Bank was signed into life with a deed written in a parsonage in Leopoldstadt — Vienna’s traditional workers and Jewish quarter. Erste Group, as the bank is now known, is proud enough of what the deed said to quote from it to this day: “No age, no gender, no class, no nation is excluded from the advantages that the savings bank offers to every investee.

It helps, though, that about a quarter of Erste’s shares are held by a linked network of co-operative institutions in Austria, the single largest of which is the Erste Bank Foundation: a non-profit that funds an array of charitable causes on the bank’s behalf. “As a core shareholder of Erste Group, Erste Foundation secures the independent future of one of the largest financial services providers in central, eastern and south eastern Europe,” the foundation says.

Hemos resumido esta noticia para que puedas leerla rápidamente. Si estás interesado en la noticia, puedes leer el texto completo aquí. Leer más:

 /  🏆 113. in ES
 

Gracias por tu comentario. Tu comentario será publicado después de ser revisado.

España Últimas Noticias, España Titulares