Personal Loans Choa Chu Kang

Blk 304 Choa Chu Kang Avenue 4 #01-657/659 Singapore 680304

DBS Bank Ltd is a multinational banking and financial services corporation headquartered in Marina Bay, Singapore. Founded on 16 July 1968 by the Government of Singapore to manage the industrial financing activities from the Economic Development Board, [8] the bank’s primary purpose was to offer loans and financial aid to the manufacturing and processing industries and to help establish and upgrade existing industries in Singapore. In 1960, the Singapore government invited a United Nations (UN) industrial survey mission to assess the economical situation in Singapore and to come up with an industrialisation programme for the city.The proposal included setting up a development bank, together with an economic body to attract foreign investments and provide financing and managing the industrial estates. The bank was incorporated in July 1968 and began operations in September of the same year

304 Choa Chu Kang Ave 4 #01-663 Singapore 680304

Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited, abbreviated as OCBC Bank, is a publicly listed monetary services organisation with its head workplace in Singapore. The “Oversea-Chinese” usage leads numerous to think mistakenly that the bank’s name is misspelled, but this is the proper standard spelling. It is asserted that this is the proper spelling, “oversea” rather than “overseas”, which is the proper usage of the word in generic English, sounds uncomfortable and clumsy to native English speakers. The bank’s worldwide network has actually grown to consist of subsidiaries, branches, and representative offices in 18 areas and countries. It has retail banking subsidiaries in Malaysia, Indonesia, Hong Kong, and China, and branches in China, Hong Kong, Japan, Australia, the UK and US. OCBC’s Indonesia subsidiary, Bank OCBC NISP, has 630 branches and offices

OCBC’s Indonesia subsidiary, Bank OCBC NISP, has 630 branches and offices

In 1932, 3 banks– Chinese Commercial Bank (1912), Ho Hong Bank (1917), and Oversea-Chinese Bank (1919), merged to form Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation under the management of Tan Ean Kiam and Lee Kong Chian. In the subsequent years, the bank broadened its operations and became the biggest bank in South East Asia.

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