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

Are Amazon, Yahoo stocks bargains?

It "may be time to buy" shares of the Web companies. more »

38-page study: Don_t Tear Redmond Apart

Breaking up Microsoft would harm entire US economy. more »

An online chat guru - unmasked

Get good investment advice from a chat room. more »

Compaq defends Microsoft

Exec says Microsoft accepted inclusion of Netscape browser on Windows desktop. more »

Taking the Pulse of the Media

A new technology designed to help PR work better. more »

Antitrust Round Two: Intel

The legal issue is the degree to which law limits company_s discretion in licensing its intellectual property. more »

EU strengthens piracy laws

The authors, performers, producers, and broadcasters have the right to authorize more »

High-tech alliance to sound off on Internet

The plans to develop a wireless package for providing voice, data and messaging services. more »

Video follies show browser removal is tough

Microsoft engineers were unable to duplicate a key demonstration. more »