tailieunhanh - Depositor trends in the Limehouse Savings Bank

Nordbanken, which took over Gota Bank in 1993, is known today as Nordea Bank, of which the Swedish government still holds a % stake. 14 In 2007, the revenues from several sources, dividends, selling of stock and a rising value of the government’s remaining equity stake, finally offset the cost of the bailout. That the bailout eventually paid for itself is attributable to the success of Sweden’s bad bank plan in minimizing losses on troubled assets. In 2001, a Berlin based bank holding company known as the Berliner Bankgesellschaft was threatened with bankruptcy due to the . | Depositor trends in the Limehouse Savings Bank London between 1830 and 1876 Linda PERRITON May 2012 WSBI World Savings Banks Institute - aisbl - European Savings Banks Group - aisbl Rue Marie-Thérèse 11 B-1000 Bruxelles Tel 32 2 211 11 11 Fax 32 2 211 11 99 E-mail first Website 2nd Prize Winner of the Savings Banks Academic Award Edition 2012 Dr Linda Perriton The York Management School University of York Freboys Lane YOrK YO10 5GD Email Introduction The Limehouse Savings Bank previously the Limehouse Provident Institution for Savings was founded in 1816 one of the many savings banks that were formed in the early decades of the 19th Century in Britain. According to Horne there were 27 savings banks in the London metropolitan area by the end of 18191. Many of these pre-1819 banks identified by Horne map directly on to London s densely populated inner-city areas such as St Martins Place Covent Garden Moorfields and Southwark. In the six square miles encompassing the newly established London docks and its industrial hinterland directly to the east of the city and known generically as the East End there were three savings banks - Whitechapel Limehouse and Poplar. In 1976 a set of nine account ledgers of the Limehouse Savings Bank covering the period 1816-1876 were found in the crypt of a local church close to the site of the bank s 19th century The extended continuous run of accounts is relatively rare in respect of 19th century savings bank records and it is fortuitous that Limehouse s system of accounting kept the depositor name and other details together with their account information. As a result the Limehouse data not only allows an opportunity to study a London savings bank but also to look closely at another neglected aspect of savings bank research - patterns of account usage3. The Limehouse accounts are just one of range of financial institution accounts that are part of

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