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NEW YORK, Sept. 8, 2016 — Global Finance has announced its 25th annual ranking of the World’s 50 Safest Banks. The full list of the 2016 safest banks appears on the following pages and will be published in the November issue.
Despite Brexit and the turbulent economic environment in Europe, the continent’s banks dominate the top ten of the World’s Safest Banks again in 2016. For the fifth year in a row, Germany’s KfW has taken the top spot, followed by Zürcher Kantonalbank of Switzerland and Germany’s Landwirtschaftliche Rentenbank. Toronto-Dominion Bank, of Canada, maintained its spot in the top 10.
Asian banks put in a strong showing in the top 20, led by Singapore’s DBS Bank at #12, with OCBC, Korea Development Bank, United Overseas Bank and Export-Import Bank of Korea holding positions 14 through 17.
The top-ranking US bank this year is AgriBank, which comes in at 33rd, and the top-ranking Middle East bank is National Bank of Abu Dhabi, in 32nd place.
Sweden provided two of the new names on the list this year: Swedbank, leaping in at 30th, and SEB at 44th. US Bancorp is also new from last year, in 41st place. Finland’s OP Corporate Bank, formerly known as Pohjola, rounds out the list at 50th.
“The Safest Banks ranking for 2016 illustrates the impact of some the past year’s major political and economic shifts, with low oil prices in particular having significant impact on Gulf economies. With Brexit-like populism on the rise in many countries, political tensions threaten to derail reforms. Our ranking provides a consistent metric by which clients can compare the stability and security of banks across countries and regions,” says Global Finance publisher and editorial director Joseph D. Giarraputo.
Global Finance’s annual ranking of World’s 50 Safest Banks has been the recognized and trusted standard of financial counterparty safety for a quarter-century. Winners were selected through an evaluation of long-term foreign currency ratings—from Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch—and total assets of the 500 largest banks worldwide.
In addition to the World’s 50 Safest Banks, the full report also includes the following: World’s 50 Safest Commercial Banks, Safest Banks by Country, 50 Safest Banks in Emerging Markets, 50 Safest Banks in Europe, 50 Safest Banks in the Middle East, Safest Chinese Banks, Safest Islamic Financial Institutions in the GCC, and Safest Banks by Region (Asia, Australasia, Central & Eastern Europe, Latin America, Middle East/Africa, North America and Western Europe). The report will also compare the 2016 Safest Banks against our rankings from 5 and 10 years ago.
The full results of this exclusive survey will be published in the November issue of Global Finance. The safest banks will be presented awards at a special ceremony to be held during the Annual Meetings of the IMF and World Bank in Washington, DC on October 8.
Rank |
Bank Name |
Country |
---|---|---|
1 |
KfW |
Germany |
2 |
Zürcher Kantonalbank |
Switzerland |
3 |
Landwirtschaftliche Rentenbank |
Germany |
4 |
L-Bank |
Germany |
5 |
Bank Nederlandse Gemeenten (BNG) |
Netherlands |
6 |
Nederalndse Waterschapsbank |
Netherlands |
7 |
NRW.BANK |
Germany |
8 |
Banque et Caisse d’Epargne de l’Etat |
Luxembourg |
9 |
Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations |
France |
10 |
Toronto-Dominion Bank |
Canada |
11 |
DZ Bank |
Germany |
12 |
DBS Bank |
Singapore |
13 |
Svenska Handelsbanken |
Sweden |
14 |
OCBC Bank |
Singapore |
15 |
Korea Development Bank |
South Korea |
16 |
United Overseas Bank |
Singapore |
17 |
Export-Import Bank of Korea* |
South Korea |
18 |
Banque Cantonale Vaudoise |
Switzerland |
19 |
Deutsche Apotheker- und Ärztebank |
Germany |
20 |
Royal Bank of Canada |
Canada |
21 |
Commonwealth Bank of Australia |
Australia |
22 |
National Australia Bank |
Australia |
23 |
ANZ Group |
Australia |
24 |
Westpac |
Australia |
25 |
Industrial Bank of Korea |
South Korea |
26 |
Société de Financement Local (SFIL) |
France |
27 |
Pictet & Cie |
Switzerland |
28 |
Rabobank |
Netherlands |
29 |
Nordea |
Sweden |
30 |
Swedbank** |
Sweden |
31 |
Hang Seng Bank |
Hong Kong |
32 |
National Bank of Abu Dhabi |
UAE |
33 |
AgriBank |
United States |
34 |
Caisse centrale Desjardins |
Canada |
35 |
Kiwibank |
New Zealand |
36 |
China Development Bank |
China |
37 |
Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe (Sparkasse) |
Germany |
38 |
Scotiabank |
Canada |
39 |
Agricultural Development Bank of China |
China |
40 |
Bank of Montreal |
Canada |
41 |
U.S. Bancorp** |
United States |
42 |
Export-Import Bank of China |
China |
43 |
CIBC |
Canada |
44 |
SEB** |
Sweden |
45 |
DNB |
Norway |
46 |
HSBC France |
France |
47 |
Qatar National Bank |
Qatar |
48 |
CoBank |
United States |
49 |
National Bank of Kuwait |
Kuwait |
50 |
OP Corporate Bank (formerly Pohjola) |
Finland |
* Greatest gain over position on the 2015list
**New entry to the ranking
Ratings current as of August 9, 2016
METHODOLOGY
About Global Finance
Global Finance, founded in 1987, has a circulation of 50,050 and readers in 180 countries. Global Finance’s audience includes senior corporate and financial officers responsible for making investment and strategic decisions at multinational companies and financial institutions. Global Finance also targets the 8,000 international portfolio investors responsible for more than 80% of all global assets under professional management.
Its website — GFMag.com — offers analysis and articles that are the heritage of 29years of experience in international financial markets. Global Finance is headquartered in New York, with offices around the world. Global Finance regularly selects the top performers among banks and other providers of financial services. These awards have become a trusted standard of excellence for the global financial community.
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Andrea Fiano | afiano@gfmag.com
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