Banca Regionale Europea

Banca Regionale Europea was an Italian bank based in Cuneo, Piedmont. The bank was a merger of Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo and Banca del Monte di Lombardia in 1995.

Banca Regionale Europea
Native name
Banca Regionale Europea S.p.A.
Subsidiary
IndustryFinancial services
Fateabsorbed by UBI Banca
Predecessor
Founded1995
DefunctNovember 2016
Headquarters
Cuneo
,
Italy
Area served
Piedmont, Aosta Valley, Liguria, Lombardy and Tuscany
€949,504 (2014)
Total assets €9,448,281,446 (2014)
Total equity €1,295,542,971 (2014)
Owner
UBI Banca(74.76%)
CR Cuneo Foundation(24.90%)
ParentUBI Banca
Capital ratio18.80% (Tier 1)[1]

History

In 2000, the bank joined Group Banca Lombarda e Piemontese. Banca Lombarda held 50.11% shares of BRE at that time, as well as sold all the shares it held at Banca Cassa di Risparmio di Tortona (60%; a bank based in Piedmont), to BRE. In 2006 Banca CR Tortona, was merged into Banca Regionale Europea, as well as Banco di San Giorgio in 2012. The bank also followed the holding company to join UBI Banca Group in 2007 (a merger with Banche Popolari Unite). As of 31 December 2014, out of 1560 branches of UBI Banca, 13% were Banca Regionale Europea (208), behind former sister companies of Group Banca Lombarda, Banco di Brescia 288, and former Banche Popolari Unite companies Banca Popolare di Bergamo (351), Banca Carime (216); as well as tied with Banca Popolare di Ancona (208).

As of 31 December 2014, the former owner of CR Cuneo, CR Cuneo Foundation, still held 24.90% of the shares of Banca Regionale Europea.[2] In 2010 UBI Banca exchanged the shares of Banca Popolare Commercio e Industria and Banca Regionale Europea with the former owner of Banca del Monte di Lombardia. That year UBI Banca reached an ownership ratio of 74.9437%.[3]

As part of the new business plan of the banking group, Banca Regionale Europea was absorbed into the parent company in November 2016.

Sponsorship

The bank was a sponsor of A.S.D. Cuneo Calcio Femminile.[4]

gollark: Thusly, modern runtimes or high performance applications will do stuff asynchronously, where they just wait for arbitrary amounts of events at once in a small threadpool.
gollark: However, this is inefficient. If you want to serve 12904172408718240 concurrent connections, you don't want to have one thread for each, especially if each one isn't used that much.
gollark: You simply do a thing, and wait for it to finish, in your thread.
gollark: That is the normal uncool kind of IO.
gollark: So, synchronous IO.

References

  1. "RELAZIONI E BILANCIO al 31 DICEMBRE 2014" (PDF) (in Italian). Banca Regionale Europea. 19 February 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  2. http://www.fondazionecrc.it/images/documenti-istituzionali/2014-bilancio.pdf
  3. http://www.ubibanca.it/contenuti/RigAlle/1%20Bilancio%20Consolidato5.pdf
  4. "IL CUNEO RINGRAZIA GLI SPONSOR" (Press release) (in Italian). A.S.D. Cuneo Calcio Femminile. 29 May 2016. Retrieved 12 August 2017.


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