industry classification excludes bank holding companies, but includes investment, personal, and public utility holding companies
By 1929 bank holding companies and a few chains that resembled holding companies controlled about 8 percent, or 2,103, of all U.S. banks
In 1929, bank holding companies held $11 billion, of all loans and investments
Bank holding companies are companies that own more than one bank. Bank of America Corporation, M&T Bank Corporation, and SVB Financial Group are all bank holding companies.
Bank holding companies are essentially corporations whose assets are comprised of controlling shares of stock in one or more banks.
In 2003, three holding companies dominated the industry: Citigroup, Inc., Bank of America, and J.P. Morgan Chase
The Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 required bank holding companies to refrain from all nonbanking related operations
Hassell H. McClellan has written: 'Managing one-bank holding companies' -- subject(s): Bank holding companies, Bank management, Management
According to the U.S. Census Bureau's Statistical Abstract of the United States, bank holding companies' financial assets tripled between 1990 and 2000
They controlled about $14.8 billion in deposits
Joseph G. Beckford has written: 'Bank holding company compliance manual' -- subject(s): Banking law, Bank holding companies, Bank mergers
They controlled about $27.5 billion in deposit assets
Federal Reserve