Bank
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From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia A bank is a financial institution that accepts
deposits and channels those deposits into lending activities. Banks
primarily provide financial services to customers while enriching investors.
Government restrictions on financial activities by banks vary over time and
location. Banks are important players in financial markets and offer
services such as investment funds and loans. In some countries such as
Germany, banks have historically owned major stakes in industrial
corporations while in other countries such as the United States banks are
prohibited from owning non-financial companies. In Japan, banks are usually
the nexus of a cross-share holding entity known as the keiretsu. In France,
bancassurance is prevalent, as most banks offer insurance services (and now
real estate services) to their clients. |
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The level of government regulation of the banking industry varies widely,
with countries such as Iceland, having relatively light regulation of the
banking sector, and countries such as China having a wide variety of
regulations but no systematic process that can be followed typical of a
communist system. The name bank derives from the Italian word
banco "desk/bench", used during the
Renaissance by Jewish Florentine bankers, who used to make their
transactions above a desk covered by a green tablecloth.[2]
However, there are traces of banking activity even in ancient times.
In fact, the word traces its origins back to the Ancient Roman Empire,
where moneylenders would set up their stalls in the middle of enclosed
courtyards called macella on a long bench called a
bancu, from which the words
banco and bank are derived. As a moneychanger, the merchant at
the bancu did not so much invest
money as merely convert the foreign currency into the only legal tender in
Rome—that of the Imperial Mint.[3]
The earliest evidence of money-changing activity is depicted on a silver
drachm coin from ancient Hellenic colony Trapezus on the Black Sea, modern
Trabzon, c. 350–325 BC, presented in the British Museum in London. The coin
shows a banker's table (trapeza) laden with coins, a pun on the name
of the city.
In fact, even today in Modern Greek the word Trapeza (Τράπεζα)
means both a table and a bank.
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