Sparekassen Sjælland

Sparekassen Sjælland-Fyn (Nasdaq Copenhagen: SPKSJF) is a bank headquartered in Holbæk, Denmark.

Sparekassen Sjælland (About)
TypePublicly traded Aktieselskab (Nasdaq Copenhagen: SPKSJF)
IndustryFinancial services
Founded1825
Defunct24 November 2015 
HeadquartersHolbæk, Denmark
Key people
Lars Petersson (CEO),Thomas Kullegaard (Chairman)
ProductsRetail, commercial and private banking
Number of employees
+600
Websitewww.spks.dk

History

Sparekassen Sjælland-Fyn traces its history back to the foundation of Holbæk Amts Sparekassen on 23 December 1825 at Frydendal Manor. The estate's owner, Jacob Frederik van Deurs, was the first chairman of the board. He was succeeded by Chr. v. Barner from Kalundborg Slots Ladegård in 1829.[1] The current bank is the result of a series of mergers between local saving banks on Zealand and the bank has formerly operated under names such as Sparekassen Holbæk, Sparekassen for Holbæk og Omegn, Sparekassen Nordvestsjælland and Sparekassen Vestsjælland. The current name was introduced in 2001. In 2010, Sparekassen Sjælland merged with Næstved-based Max Bank. Sparekassen Sjælland-Fyn was listed on the Copenhagen Stock Exchange on 4 December 2015.[2]

Company

Studiestræde

The current headquarters were built in 2003 (according to BBR) and are located on the harbourfront in Holbæk. It houses approximately 150 employees. The bank has 45 branches (2020) across Zealand and Funen.

Sparekassen Fyn

Sparekassen Sjælland has the subsidiary Sparekassen Fyn which operates under its own name on the island of Funen (Danish: Fyn). It was created when Sparekassen Sjælland acquired Faaborg Sparekasse in 2013.[3] After IT-merge in 2016, the two banks operate under the same name: Sparekassen Sjælland-Fyn.

References

  1. "Holbæk Amts Sparekasse". coneliand.d (in Danish). Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  2. "Sparekassen Sjælland skyder børsdebut i gang i kurs 107,50 kr" (in Danish). Jyllands-Posten. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  3. "Sparekasse: "Pænt farvel" til opkøbt direktør" (in Danish). Jyllands-Posten. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.