DSK Hyp

The DSK Hyp AG (formerly SEB AG) is the German subsidiary of one of the largest Swedish banks, the Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken (SEB).

DSK Hyp AG
Joint-stock company
Founded2001
HeadquartersFrankfurt, Germany
Number of employees
200
ParentSEB Group 
Websitewww.dskhyp.de

History

In Germany, the bank began its business activities in 1976 with its own subsidiary (Deutsch-Skandinavische Bank, later Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AG). In the year 2000 the SEB group acquired the former Bank für Gemeinwirtschaft (BfG), which was renamed SEB AG in 2001.[1] In the private customer business, the SEB had 174 branches and one million customers in Germany. At the end of January 2011, the SEB sold its private customer business in Germany to the Spanish Santander Consumer Bank.[2] Since then, the bank has concentrated in Germany on its core activities, business with companies and institutional clients. As part of this strategy, the SEB AG sold its subsidiary SEB Asset Management AG at the end of August 2015, including its significant holding SEB Investment GmbH. At the beginning of 2018, the SEB transferred its main business activities – the collaboration with companies, institutional clients and international real estate investors - to a branch (SEB AG Frankfurt Branch) of the Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AG (publ). The SEB's head office in Germany is in Frankfurt am Main,[3] and the bank also has a location in Munich.

On 4 December 2018, SEB AG changed its name to DSK Hyp AG.[4]

Business

In Germany, the company was active in the fields of corporate clients, institutional clients and structured real estate finance. In 2005,[5] it became the first commercial bank to issue mortgage bonds. The former SEB Hypothekenbank was therefore incorporated as a mortgage and bonds bank in the SEB AG. The bonds business of SEB in Germany continues to be operated by the SEB AG.

Solvency

The SEB AG is rated A2 by the Credit rating agency Moody's. Moody's rates SEB AG's public sector bonds and mortgage bonds Aaa. (As of: July 2015)[6][4]

Subsidiaries

  • SEB Leasing GmbH (leasing services)[7]
  • Frankfurter Vermögens Holding GmbH (FVH)[8]
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gollark: Alternatively, cross-origin stuff is allowed but runs with separate cookies, caches, etc. to first-party requests, and comes with a "requested from this origin" header.
gollark: Cross-origin fixes: *no* use of crossdomain resources unless the other thing opts in. This breaks image hotlinking and such, which is annoying, but fixes CSRF entirely.

References

  1. "BfG Bank wird endgültig schwedisch". Handelsblatt. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  2. "SEB completes sale of German retail banking business to Banco Santander". SEB Group. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  3. "SEB AB Frankfurt Branch". DSK Hyp. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  4. "DSK Hyp AG (formerly SEB AG)". The Banks. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  5. "Annual Report 2005" (PDF). SEB Group. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  6. "Rating". DSK Hyp. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  7. "SEB Leasing GmbH". firma-online. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  8. "FVH Frankfurter Vermoegens-Holding GmbH". Bloomberg. Retrieved 16 October 2019.

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