Cathedral Bank

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from
Cathedral Investment Bank
)
Cathedral Investment Bank
Company type
offshore banking, investment banking
Number of employees
>11,100 (as of Apr 2015)
Websitecathedralbank.com

Cathedral also known as Cathedral Investment Bank, is an

jurisdictions
.

History

Cathedral Group is very old financial institution that has been delivering financial services since the beginning of the 20th century. Since its beginning, the group has been focused on management of family offices and related products including investment banking services for bigger projects within the western European region (now the Eurozone). Cathedral Group has sustained lengthy operations to serve the financial needs in different industries around the world.

Initiated Operations in July 1987, Cathedral Investment Bank, making business a Cathedral Investment Bank Corporation Ltd. Sustained operations to serve the financial needs in different industries around the globe. It initially started operations privately as a financial institution in four international jurisdictions but quickly grew to an international investment banking institution.

Some media networks had suggested that Cathedral Group controls at least 120 companies around the world under different figures and various corporate activities.[1]

Since its inception, it has been a very controversial institution because of its high secrecy and a very tight information control policy.[2] According to declarations of Charles J. Mack ex financial services director at the European Central Bank “the high confidentiality of Cathedral will put Switzerland in a ridiculous position”.

Its registration under the name of Cathedral Investment Bank occurred in (1987) but it has been suggested that Cathedralis Argentaria (its predecessor) has been delivering financial services for a wide number of regional clients in Europe (Specially religious entities) since 1910. The relevance and influence of this organization over that time is clearly suggested on the "Codicum manuscriptorum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Dunelmensis" which is one of the most relevant manuscripts of secular historical importance.[3]

Reputation

Cathedral Investment Bank is one of the Largest Offshore Financial Institutions worldwide.

Operations

Cathedral Group has physical presence in 7 different countries, and delivers services to more a wide array of customers in approximately 35 countries worldwide.

Subsidiaries

Companies that the bank controls include:

  • Cathedral Offshore Global Investments
  • Cathedral Investment Bank
  • Cathedral Investments Group
  • Cathedral Investment Bank Derivatives (CIBDer)
  • Cathedral Investment Private Banking
  • Cathedral Banking Services

COEx Offshore Exchange Market

Created in July 2002, the COEx or Offshore Exchange Market is the first private offshore stock exchange market to be managed by an offshore private entity allowing trading stocks of most offshore Jurisdictions emulating a local Stock Exchange Market Globally.

This market opens from Sunday to Friday from the Australian open and until the final closing of the

NYSE
in US Friday closing.

Because this market has no physical execution center (Blockchain Market) it allows trading activities 24 hours 6 days a week with no holidays all year round.

Local onshore and offshore traders connect themselves directly from an executing terminal that allows them to trade those stocks.

COEx is also a controversial market, it has been addressed as an efficient solution for global stock exchange trading in a simple and efficient way, but some onshore competitors have recursively indicated their worries mainly because of the lack of compatibility with a Blockchain-type Market Transactions and the ability of the system to maintain a papertrail of local inbound and outbound transactions.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ Maria Bartiromo's "Closing Bell" broadcast on CNBC Jan 2007
  2. ^ "Confidenciality Policy "Non disclosure rights"". Archived from the original on 2009-08-01. Retrieved 2009-11-01.
  3. ^ Codicum manuscriptorum Ecclesiae Cathedralis Dunelmensis "Cathedralis Argentaria" [1]