Re: Deposito 4% a 12 meses de Citibank
¿Te parece CITIBANK ESPAÑA, S.A. un banco USA?
¿Te parece CITIBANK ESPAÑA, S.A. un banco USA?
La matriz es USA, otra cosa es que tenga alguna division, pero es un banco americano con division en españa :)
al ser una division española trabaja como cualquier banco español con todos sus deberes y derechos.
Yo lo expresaría diciendo que CITIBANK ESPAÑA, S.A. es un banco español que pertenece a Citigroup. Y Citigroup sí es un grupo norteamericano.
En cambio, ING DIRECT, N.V. es la sucursal en España de un banco comunitario.
Bueno acObo de firmar a 12 meses 4% , mUy amables, 0 comisiones en cuenta y targeta de debito si el deposito es mas de 12000€.
la oferta sigue vigente en principio hasta fin de año.
saludos
Hombre quien salió al rescate de CITIGROUP (empresa madre de Citibank)fue Obama no Zapatero
http://www.expansion.com/2008/11/24/empresas/1227510247.html
Es decir, supongo que si hubiese desaparecido Citigroup, hubiese desaparecido Citibank.
Hoy ha salido la noticia de que el secretario del tesoro USA
quiere eliminar la "garantía implícita" de ayuda a las entidades
en apuros.
Lo digo por si alguien lee eso fuera de contexto, que no cunda el pánico,
ya que CITIBANK ESPAÑA, S.A. está cubierto por el FDG y demás.
http://www.thestreet.com/story/10619657/1/prepackaged-bankruptcy-seen-for-cit.html?cm_ven=GOOGLEN
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- CIT Group (CIT Quote) is likely to file for bankruptcy protection, possibly as soon as Sunday night, according to a published report.
Shares of CIT tumbled in midday action, falling 15 cents, or nearly 16%, to 80 cents on volume of 53 million.
CIT is expected to get approval for its prepackaged bankruptcy plan from 50% of the bondholders representing two-thirds of CIT's outstanding debt, according to a report from CNBC's David Faber Friday. Faber said a filing is likely on Sunday, citing people involved in the talks.
Also Friday, CRT Capital analyst Kevin Starke told Bloomberg News that CIT's bonds are trading as if the prepackaged plan is likely to be approved. The plan would give senior bondholders 70 cents on the dollar plus equity in the restructured company, while junior noteholders would get equity, and common shareholders would get nothing.
Preferred shareholders, including the U.S. Treasury, which invested $2.33 billion in CIT, would most likely be wiped out, according to a source familiar with the situation. The source, who worked on the restructuring plan, told TheStreet that preferred shareholders, though, would get a security called a contingent value right. This security would have some value, if, 60 days after the bankruptcy filing, more money than expected is available for other stakeholders.
Early Friday, CIT reached terms to amend a $3 billion loan agreement with Goldman Sachs (GS Quote), reducing its size to $2.125 billion and paying Goldman a $285 million termination fee, according to a regulatory filing.
CIT has been scrambling to cut its debt following a funding crisis that began in earnest after it was denied access to a government program that guaranteed the debt of larger lenders, including General Electric (GE Quote) and large banks like Citigroup (C Quote), Bank of America (BAC Quote) and Wells Fargo (WFC Quote). Bondholders had until midnight on Thursday to agree on the proposed debt exchange or the bankruptcy plan. CIT says it is still counting the votes.
-- Written by Dan Freed in New York.
Este es un foro de habla castellana o española, no en ingles, por lo menos usa un traductor de internet y nos lo pones en castellano.
saludos