OutInTheRain
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- May 6, 2022
Citibank is a Schedule II bank, and BoA and Wells Fargo are Schedule III. When you were rage Googling and throwing a fit did you bother to look those up? Don't answer I know you didn't.Citibank, Bank of America, Wells Fargo
This is honestly something you can easily Google to not look like an idiot before posting.
So you're going to learn something today.
A Schedule II bank under The Bank Act. Are Subsidiaries of foreign banks that are allowed to accept deposits. Notice how the word SUBSIDIARY is in that sentence. Now you might be wondering, what is a subsidiary. Well a subsidiary is a separate legal entity from its parent company. It must comply with local laws and regulations, including tax laws, and is responsible for its own debts and liabilities. So it is an actual separate company. Which maybe owned in partial, or wholly by its parent company. The amount typically hovers somewhere above 50%. Less than 50% it is an affiliate. Subsidiaries are used, because you cannot enter the market unless you have a corporate entity in the nation. Subsidiary companies can also be sold off or spun into independent companies, sometimes keeping the name.
For example Citibank Canada, which has been steadily moving out of personal banking in Canada for the last decade or so. Citibank Canada issues credit cards and does commercial and investment banking in Canada. It's personal banking was bought out and became Fairstone financial, which as of 2021 became Fairstone Bank of Canada which is now a Schedule I bank. A schedule 1 bank is wholly domestic bank operating in Canada. But I am sure you knew that.
Now Schedule III banking in Canada are actual branches of foreign banks. Such as your examples of Bank of America and Wells Fargo. However, Schedule III banks, cannot accept deposits of less then 150k. So entirely and wholly used for commercial banking and investment.
So when the orange man says American Banks cannot operate in Canada. He is in broadstrokes correct. A subsidiary being a separate corporate entity means that it does not have the full weight and resources of its parent company, it just has the name. It is a result of a company like Citigroup throwing tons and tons of money into a foreign market, and hoping to establish a foothold. Now Canadian banking regulations are protectionist in nature. I will let you decide whether or not that is a good thing.