Chekiang First Bank was a bank in Hong Kong incorporated in 1950 by Li Ming. It is now merged to Wing Hang Bank. At the time of the merger with Wing Hang, Chekiang First Bank had 17 branches in Hong Kong, a wholly owned subsidiary in Luxembourg, an agency in San Francisco, and a representative office in Shanghai. As of 31 December 2002, Chekiang First had total assets of HK$27.8 billion. Wing Hang subsequent re-branded all services under the Wing Hang brand.

Chekiang First Bank
浙江第一銀行
Formation1907
Dissolved2004
TypeBank
Location
Chekiang First Bank
Traditional Chinese浙江第一銀行

History edit

  • 1907: Founded under the name Chekiang Provincial and Industrial Bank, with headquarters in Hangzhou.[1]
  • 1911: Restructured as Chekiang Bank of the Republic of China (Chinese: 中華民國浙江銀行).
  • 1912: Restructured as the Chekiang Provincial and Industrial Bank (Chinese: 浙江地方實業銀行).
  • 1923: Li Ming converted the bank's Shanghai branch into the Chekiang Industrial Bank (Chinese: 浙江實業銀行), with headquarters in Shanghai, and became its director.
  • 1948: Restructured as Chekiang First Bank.
  • 1950: Re-established in Hong Kong as Chekiang First Bank of Commerce (Chinese: 浙江第一商業銀行).[2]
  • 1962: Japan's Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank (now the Mizuho Corporate Bank), acquired a 30% stake in the bank, a stake that eventually it increased to 95%.
  • 2003: Acquired by Wing Hang Bank.[3]
  • 2004: Merged to Wing Hang Bank.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Zhaojin, Ji (2003). A History of Modern Shanghai Banking: The Rise and Decline of China's Financial Capitalism. Routledge (published 2016). pp. 114, 116–118. ISBN 9781317478072. LCCN 2002029407 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ 浙江第一银行 (Chinese Version)
  3. ^ Industry consolidation
  4. ^ Wing Hang, Chekiang First Bank complete merging