The total assets of Hungary's bank sector jumped 24% to Ft 11 trillion in H1 compared to the same period last year
Published:
22 September 2003 y., Monday
The total assets of Hungary's bank sector jumped 24% to Ft 11 trillion in H1 compared to the same period last year, a report by the Hungarian Banking Association revealed.
The gross value of the banks' aggregate loan portfolio leaped 33% to Ft 6.839 trillion in the same period. Corporate lending rose 9%, retail lending swelled 83%, while the volume of home loans extended by banks tripled in the first half of the year, the HBA reported.
Šaltinis:
bbj.hu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Business to get a break under streamlined EU VAT rules.
more »
Thales UK`s naval business has yesterday signed a major sub-contract with Finning (UK) Ltd for the supply of propulsion engines and machinery for its new Lithuanian warship reactivation programme.
more »
The EU Budget 2009 provides more money for growth, the environment, jobs, research and food aid for developing countries.
more »
On day one of the World Economic Forum in Davos, the mood of this traditionally bullish event -- pure gloom.
more »
In December 2008 against December 2007 the turnover of retail trade enterprises decreased by 8.8 per cent.
more »
Mexican financial institution Banco Santander has awarded Wincor Nixdorf AG a contract to service all 4,000 of its ATMs installed in Mexico.
more »
Wincor Nixdorf AG spent much of its time at this year's Wincor World demonstrating how Wincor Nixdorf can support financial institutions and retailers through innovation.
more »
South Korea may be feeling the chill wind of recession but the country's lucrative gambling industry is cashing in.
more »
Modest revenue growth despite difficult economy; announces cost management initiatives.
more »
Tens of thousands of export firms on China's seaboard have closed due to falling demand in major European and North American markets.
more »