Major Japanese banks pushing into eastern Europe, Russia

Published: 21 October 2005 y., Friday

Major Japanese banks have started expanding their operations to central and eastern Europe and Russia, where banking businesses are expected to grow rapidly.

Japanese banks, now finalizing disposal of their non-performing loans, are shifting their focus back to increasing overseas loans and are positioning those regions as key markets next to China and Asia, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun said.

Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Ltd., the key unit of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., plans to open a branch in Prague, Czech Republic, early next year, the business daily said.

The branch to be engaged in handling loans, deposits and foreign exchange will take over its existing representatives' office there, which is currently collecting information and data, the business daily said.

In June, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. (SMBC), a unit of Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc., set up a special division at its London branch that focuses on loans to Central and Eastern Europe, it said.

The division's roughly 50 employees will travel to Poland, the Czech Republic and other areas to drum up business. Lending will be carried out through the London branch.

Major banks are also seeking business opportunities in Russia. SMBC established a representatives' office in Moscow in August and plans to upgrade it into a local subsidiary, the daily said.

Šaltinis: AFP
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

OTP with Uniform ATM Fee in Europe

From the beginning of 2005, retail customers of OTP Bank holding a debit bank card can, for a unified fee, withdraw cash abroad using automated teller machines operated by the subsidiaries of the credit institution more »

80.5% in Sofia Municipal Bank Up for Sale

The City of Sofia will sell 80.5% of the statute capital of its Municipal Bank, one of Bulgaria's commercial banks with a full banking license more »

Slovakia Evolves Into European Auto Hub

Most major corporations avoided Slovakia even after the end of communism, wary of its authoritarian ruler and economic cronyism more »

German Airline Taps Bulgaria Again

German low-cost airline Bexx Air, whose offices in Sofia were closed down in September for operating without a licence, is trying to go into business under a new name of "Imagine Air" more »

Russia and Belarus reach agreement on indirect taxes

An agreement between the governments of Russia and Belarus on regulations on collecting indirect taxes relating to exports and imports, as well as other business sectors will take effect beginning January 1, 2005 more »

A Legal Challenge

The central bank will mount a legal challenge against the new law expanding the bank’s rate-setting Monetary Council more »

The company's plans

Wizz Air flying high in Polish market, president expects to double traffic more »

The annual Klaipeda port cargo handling capacity

The Port of Klaipeda Handles More Cargos Than Amsterdam more »

A New branch in Stockholm

Latvia’s Parex banka plans branch opening in Stockholm for next spring more »

Emerging market funds increasingly invest in Poland

According to data from Emerging Portfolio Fund Research, at the end of December 2004 Polish shares constituted almost 1% of all assets of the firms investing in emerging markets more »