Lithuanian banking
The Lithuanian banking system is one of the largest in the Baltic States and part of the Lithuanian economy . What is unusual about the Lithuanian banking system is the very high market share of private banks compared to public and cooperative credit institutions. Big international banks come from Scandinavia .
According to the Lithuanian Banking Act ( Lietuvos Respublikos bankų įstatymas ), a company is a credit institution if it conducts banking business under license from Lietuvos bankas .
In Lithuania , the central bank ( Lietuvos bankas ) supervises credit institutions and financial services institutions , which must explicitly authorize the conduct of banking business. The number of reporting institutes according to the LB is 7 licensed banks (2015).
Commercial banks
- SEB bankas
- AB Swedbank (ex Hansabankas)
- DnB NORD bankas
- Šiaulių bankas
- Medicinos bankas
- Citadele bankas (ex Parex bankas)
Bank branch
7 bank branches:
- Danske bankas (ex Sampo bankas)
- Bankas Nordea
- Allied Irish Banks , plc Lietuvos filialas
- AS “ Unicredit Bank” Lietuvos skyrius
- BIGBANK AS filialas
- MP Investment Bank hf. filialas Baltijos šalyse
- Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB, Vilniaus filialas
Bank cooperatives
Bank agencies
- Rietumu banka from Latvia
- AP Anlage & Privatbank AG, Vilnius
- Balkan Investment Bank AD Banja Luka , Kaunas
- Balti Investeeringute Grupi Pank AS
- Raiffeisen Bank Polska SA, Vilnius
Former banks

literature
- Terleckas V. Lietuvos bankininkystės istorija 1918–1941. - Vilnius, 2000.
Web links
- LB website (lt, en)
Sources and Notes
- ↑ Lithuanian Bank: The Banks ( Memento of the original from January 6, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.