Deutscher Sparkassen- und Giroverband
Deutscher Sparkassen- und Giroverband (DSGV) is the German association of savings banks. It was founded in 1924 by the merger of Deutscher Sparkassenverband and Deutscher Zentral-Giroverband. Its headquarters are located in Berlin.
German savings banks, owned by local governments, play a major role in the country's economy, together operating some 18,530 branches and employing about 320,000 people.[1] Today they are one of the largest banking groups in the world.
History
In April 2011, DSGV took control of DekaBank, buying a 50 percent stake from the Landesbanken, public sector banks such as HSH Nordbank, WestLB and SachsenLB that stumbled badly during the financial crisis. After years of subsidising the activities of the Landesbank sector, savings banks have been more assertive about ending the Wall Street-style ambitions of some of these regional lenders.[2]
Presidents
- Ernst Kleiner
- Fritz Butschkau
- Ludwig Poullain
- Helmut Geiger
- Horst Köhler (1993-1998)
- Dietrich H. Hoppenstedt
- Heinrich Haasis
- Georg Fahrenschon (2012-2017)
- Helmut Schleweis
References
- Maria Sheahan (November 28, 2017), German savings banks pick new president after tax inquiry Reuters.
- Edward Taylor, Philipp Halstrick and Kathrin Jones (April 2, 2012), Germany's DekaBank fires CEO after spat over bonus Reuters.