Philippine Savings Bank

Philippine Savings Bank
Public (PSE: PSB)
Industry Finance
Founded Manila, Philippines (1959)
Headquarters Makati, Philippines
Key people
Jose T. Pardo, Chairman
Pascual M. Garcia III, President
Services Banking
Revenue ₱1.018 billion (Increase27%) (2007)[1]
Number of employees
2,030
Parent Metrobank Group
Website www.psbank.com.ph

The Philippine Savings Bank (PSE: PSB) (shortened as PSBank or abbreviated as PSB) is a savings bank based in the Philippines. It is a subsidiary of Metrobank and is the second-largest savings bank in the Philippines.

Subsidiaries and affiliates

PSBank in itself is a subsidiary of Metrobank, and as such is affiliated with it. PSBank is affiliated with Toyota Financial Services Philippines Corporation (TFSPC), where it currently has a 25% stake.

Ownership

Competition

PSBank competes with other savings banks, such as BPI Family Savings Bank and RCBC Savings Bank. The bank is also competing against multinational savings bank such as Citibank Savings and HSBC Savings. However, since PSBank is considered a major bank, it also competes with bigger financial institutions. It does not, however, aggressively compete with parent company Metrobank.

Controversies

Impeachment of Renato Corona

PSBank officials were about to receive a subpoena request in connection with the Impeachment of Renato Corona due to the allegations of a secret US$ account under the name of Renato Corona.[2]

In addition, the PSBank executives were also asked to bring consumer identification and specimen signature card(s) of the bank account(s) under Corona's name which won P1 million in the PSBank Monthly Millions Raffle Promo.[3]

Pork Barrel Case

During the senate investigations involving the 'pork barrel' case, PSBank was one of the domestic Philippine banks included in the senate inquiry about the bank accounts of the whistleblowers.[4]

Moreover, PSBank was also included as one of the banks from which Sen. Ramon Revilla Jr. and his family, as well as those of Janet Lim-Napoles and her pseudo-NGOs, have utilized to launder the controversial “pork barrel” funds.[5]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.