OTP with Uniform ATM Fee in Europe

Published: 9 January 2005 y., Sunday
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. The members of the OTP Bank Group operate in Hungary, Slovakia and Bulgaria, with a total of more than 1,800 ATM machines. The fee for withdrawing cash from the automated teller machines abroad was, until the end of last year, 3 euro + 1%, irrespective of where the withdrawal was made. With the introduction of the new tariff, customers can, with the retail debit cards issued by OTP Bank and supplied with the international logo, withdraw cash for a uniform fee corresponding to 1 euro, from the automated teller machines of the Slovakian and Bulgarian banks of the credit institution. The bank converts the fee at the current sell rate for the currency. The new possibility concerns more than 3.4 million bankcard-holder clients of OTP Bank. In May 2003 OTP Bank, the largest of almost 40 players on Hungary's banking market, signed an agreement for the purchase of the shares of Bulgaria's DSK, worth BGN 93,984,000. OTP was named a preferred buyer for DSK bank after it offered EUR 311 M for 100% stake, outbidding Erste Bank of Austria. It subsequently commenced a EUR 300 M investment program in its newly established Bulgarian subsidiary.
Šaltinis: novinite.com
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

Foreign Direct Investment Approaching EUR 4 billion

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in Lithuania totaled EUR 3.98 billion as of April 1, 2003 more »

The plans to expand over Eastern Europe

Coffeeheaven, a chain of coffee and sandwich shops operating in Poland, is looking to expand in to the Czech Republic and Hungary more »

The sale

Skanska sells construction operations in Latvia more »

Anti-trust Ministry okays Russia's largest merger

Four months after Russia’s oil giant YUKOS announced its plans to merge with smaller rival Sibneft, the Ministry for Anti-monopoly Policy gave its formal approval to the deal on Thursday more »

CME demands CET 21 payment

Media investor seeks $275 million in case against TV Nova owner more »

Unnecessary notifications

Banks could be forced to alert customers of cybertheft more »

Export Rise To Germany In 03

Russia's largest brewer, OAO Baltika Brewery , Monday forecast its exports to Germany in 2003 will exceed the 1.25 million liters exported in 2002 more »

Czech Telecom Extends Investment in Teradyne's 4TEL II

Extends Coverage to Whole Network Including Prague Region more »

European Power Prices Surge to Record Amid Heat Wave

Electricity prices in France, the U.K. and the Netherlands surged to records more »

Ukraine to start sending oil to Poland in autumn

The Ukrtransnafta company announced plans on Thursday to begin to pump oil from Odessa to Brody and then carry it on by rail to refineries in southern Poland more »