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Monday, December 19, 2011

Scotiabank, RBC eye Cuba operations

Scotiabank, RBC eye Cuba operations
grant robertson — Banking Reporter
Globe and Mail Update
Last updated Monday, Dec. 19, 2011 6:32AM EST

National Bank of Canada has operated an office in Cuba for 16 years,
making it a rarity of sorts among Canadian banks, but it may soon have
some company.

At least two other Canadian banks are said to be looking at setting up
shop in Cuba, according to a report in the London-based Financial Times
on Sunday night.

Amid economic reforms on the island, Bank of Nova Scotia has reportedly
applied to Cuban authorities to set up a representative office in the
capital. Royal Bank is also considering opening an office in Havana, the
report said.

Scotiabank, which has extensive operations across South America and the
Caribbean, and RBC, Canada's largest bank, both had branches in the
country before the 1959 Cuban Revolution ushered in Communism, and a
subsequent U.S. embargo, which slowed foreign investment.

However, economic reforms in Cuba, stemming from the handover of power
from long-time president Fidel Castro to his brother, Raúl Castro, are
changing the country as the government looks for ways to boost Cuba's
economy.

If RBC and Scotia return to Cuba, they would join Montreal-based
National, Canada's sixth-largest bank, on the island. National opened a
representative office in Havana in 1995. The small operation is not a
bank branch though, and mostly handles trade finance.

Banco Central de Cuba, the country's central bank, lists National as
having a relationship with the country that dates back more than 28
years, including financing export development, securities and insurance
businesses there.

The Cuba Trade and Economic Council lists more than 80 companies in
Canada with business ties to Cuba, including Bell Canada, Bombardier,
and dozens of oil and gas companies.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/international-news/scotiabank-rbc-eye-cuba-operations/article2275793/

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