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CEC Bank
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CEC Bank (prior to May 6, 2008 Casa de Economii și Consemnațiuni, but already known then as CEC),[1][2] is a state-owned Romanian banking institution.[3][4]

Key Information

In 1990, shortly after the Romanian Revolution of 1989, CEC had a 32.9% share of the Romanian market for banking; by 2006 this had fallen to 4.03%.[5] At the end of 2009, CEC Bank had 1,351 branches, more than 800 of which were in rural Romania.[6] After 2017 CEC began a protracted modernization process and as of January 2024, it had grown back to third-largest bank in Romania.[7]

History

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CEC was founded in 1864—five years after the union of the two Danubian Principalities, and more than a decade before the Romanian state as such—as the Casa de Depuneri și Consemnațiuni[4] (literally "Deposits and Consignments House"[8] but effectively "Deposits and Consignments Bank": the Romanian casa is used analogously to the French caisse; both are related to the English cash.[citation needed]) In 1880, the name was changed to Casa de Depuneri, Consemnațiuni și Economie[4] ("Deposits, Consignments and Savings House").[8] In 1881, the financially independent Casa de Economie ("Savings Bank"), was set up under its aegis.[4][8]

The CEC Palace shortly after its completion

In 1887, the cornerstone of the CEC Palace was set; the building opened as the bank's headquarters in 1900.[8] As of 2012, CEC Bank is still headquartered there, although the building has been sold to the municipality of Bucharest for an eventual museum; CEC Bank is leasing the building until they build or otherwise obtain an appropriate modern headquarters.[citation needed]

Romania entered World War I belatedly on the Allied or Entente side, and was largely overrun by the forces of the Central Powers (see Romania in World War I). A portion of the bank's management remained in occupied Bucharest, while another portion relocated to Iași, in Northeast Romania. Prime minister Ion I. C. Brătianu decided to send the Bank's treasury, as well as other assets including the treasury of the National Bank of Romania, to Iași and later to Moscow.[8]

Present building

In 1930, the Casa de Economie was spun off as an institution in its own right, the Casa Generala de Economii ("General Savings House" or "General Savings Bank"), which in 1932 became the Casa Națională de Economii și Cecuri Poștale ("Savings and Postal Cheques National House", "National Bank for Savings and Postal Cheques", etc.). The two entities were joined back together at the start of the Communist era, in 1948.[2][9]

In Communist Romania, CEC the main retail institution collecting household deposits and placing them into government-issued assets while being also involved in housing finance, similarly as DSK in Bulgaria, OTP in Hungary, and PKO in Poland.[10]: 24  It created a number of types of accounts, including passbook savings accounts with various combinations of interest and prizes, and opened branches throughout Romania. From 1970 to 1985, CEC made housing loans as well. After the 1989 revolution, CEC began activities such as granting loans to other banks and dealing in government securities.

In 1996, Law No. 66 reorganized CEC as a joint-stock company with the Finance Ministry as its sole shareholder. Beginning in 2005, moves were made toward privatization.[2] A 2006 attempt at privatization was cut short when the government was dissatisfied with the bids.[11] The possibility of privatization was in play again in January 2011.[12]

Notes

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from Grokipedia

CEC Bank S.A. is a state-owned universal commercial bank headquartered in Bucharest, Romania, established on 28 July 1864 as Casa de Depuneri și Consemnațiuni, the country's first savings institution and oldest continuously operating bank. Wholly owned by the Romanian Ministry of Public Finance as its sole shareholder, the bank maintains the largest physical network in Romania with over 1,000 branches and ATMs, serving more than two million retail, SME, and corporate clients through both traditional and digital channels. As of June 2025, it ranks third among Romanian banks by total assets, which stood at 99.42 billion lei, reflecting a 7% year-on-year increase, and reported a net profit of 304 million lei in the first half of 2025, up 12.8% from the prior year. The institution has pursued modernization since 2019, including IT infrastructure upgrades and the formation of the CEC Bank Group in 2023 via majority acquisition of the Rural Credit Guarantee Fund, while maintaining a Fitch rating of 'BB' with stable outlook.

Historically rooted in promoting savings among Romania's populace during the 19th century, CEC Bank evolved from a specialized savings entity into a full-service commercial bank, navigating nationalizations under communist rule and post-1989 privatization delays that preserved its public ownership. Its defining characteristics include a focus on retail and SME lending, state-backed stability, and extensive rural presence, contributing to financial inclusion amid Romania's economic transitions, though it has faced critiques for slower digital adoption relative to private competitors until recent reforms.

History

Establishment and Early Development (1864–1917)

The Casa de Depuneri și Consemnațiuni (House of Deposits and Consignments), predecessor to CEC Bank, was established on December 1, 1864, through a decree issued by Domnitor Alexandru Ioan Cuza and published in Monitorul Oficial no. 268. The institution originated from a 1845 project by Costache Bălcescu and was conceived as early as 1859 as an annex to the Banca de Scont și Circulațiune, aimed at managing state-related financial deposits. Operations commenced on January 1, 1865, under the leadership of economist Enrich Winterhalder (1808–1900), with oversight provided by a commission chaired by Ion Ghica and including members such as Constantin Steriadi and Scarlat Creţulescu. Its primary functions involved handling judicial and administrative deposits, funds from vacant successions, communal surpluses, and private deposits, all under the Ministry of Finance, with deposits guaranteed by the state. Initially operating from a modest office within the Ministry of Finance building in Bucharest, it served as Romania's first dedicated savings and deposit institution. In 1876–1877, the institution underwent reorganization, transforming into one of Romania's first public establishments with the introduction of current accounts and the issuance of bonds, the designs for which were created by artist . A significant expansion occurred in 1880–1881 with the launch of the Casa de Economie (Savings House), leading to its renaming as Casa de Depuneri, Consemnațiuni și Economie; King Carol I opened the inaugural public savings account on April 1, 1881. This development broadened its role to actively promote savings among the general population, marking a shift from primarily state-focused operations to public . By the late 1890s, growth necessitated new , with of the iconic Palatul CEC headquarters beginning on , 1897, in the presence of King Carol I and Queen Elisabeta, and completing in 1900. Around 1900, targeted initiatives encouraged savings among minors and students, accounting for 25% of deposits, including the introduction of school-based savings programs. As approached, the institution faced disruptions; in November 1916, its administration relocated to amid Romania's military retreat, with treasury assets temporarily moved to Moscow's for safekeeping. These adaptations underscored its resilience and central role in national finance during early industrialization and geopolitical challenges.

Interwar Period and World War II (1918–1947)

In the interwar period, the institution, then operating primarily as Casa de Economie within the broader state savings framework, continued its role in mobilizing public deposits amid Romania's economic integration of the new territories acquired in 1918, including Transylvania, Bessarabia, and Bukovina, though specific branch expansions were gradual due to administrative challenges. Despite recurrent crises, including hyperinflation in the early 1920s and the global Great Depression after 1929, deposits grew steadily post-1933 as depositors shifted funds from failing private banks to state-guaranteed savings outlets, reflecting heightened public mistrust in commercial institutions amid over 200 rural cooperative bank bankruptcies by 1928. In 1930, savings operations were detached from the parent Casa de Depuneri și Consemnațiuni, leading to reorganization; by 1932, it was renamed Casa Națională de Economii și Cecuri Poștale (National House of Savings and Postal Money Orders), retaining the CEC and assuming responsibility for postal services alongside traditional savings. This period marked accelerated growth, with the institution capturing approximately 50% of Bucharest's total deposits by 1938, underscoring its position as a of retail savings in an dominated by and uneven industrialization. During , following Romania's alignment with the in 1940 under Ion Antonescu's regime, savings banks like CEC were increasingly directed toward war financing, including bond issuances and resource mobilization influenced by German economic pressures, which strained and exposed depositors to inflationary risks as military expenditures escalated. Romania's territorial losses in 1940 (northern Transylvania to , southern Dobruja to , and to the ) temporarily curtailed operations in affected areas, though core functions persisted; the 1944 coup shifting allegiance to the Allies brought partial reconstruction efforts, but and wartime destruction persisted into 1947, eroding real deposit values until communist in 1948.

Communist Era (1948–1989)

Following the nationalization of Romania's banking sector under Decree No. 197 on August 13, 1948, which placed all banking and credit enterprises under state control, the assets of existing savings and deposit institutions—including the Casa de Depuneri, the National Bank for Savings and Postal Cheques, and the Industrial Credit Society—were consolidated. In September 1948, these were pooled to establish the Casa de Economii, Cecuri si Consemnatiuni (CECC), which was renamed CEC (Casa de Economii și Consemnațiuni) in 1949, marking its formal reorganization as a centralized state entity dedicated to retail savings operations. Under the communist regime, CEC held a monopoly on collecting individual savings from the public, functioning as the sole banking institution accessible to ordinary citizens amid the elimination of and the centralization of financial activities. It introduced various passbook savings accounts featuring different interest rate combinations to encourage deposits, which were primarily channeled toward state-directed priorities such as housing loans to promote homeownership in line with socialist policies. The majority of collected funds were transferred to the for allocation according to the central economic plan, supporting industrial and infrastructural development while limiting CEC's independent lending to microcredits and targeted public needs. CEC's operations emphasized public engagement through an extensive network of branches, often integrated with postal services, to mobilize savings for the , though this role was constrained by the regime's overarching control and the absence of competitive or profit-driven incentives. The institution's headquarters, the in , continued to serve as its operational base, enduring wartime damage and regime-era urban policies without significant alteration, underscoring its enduring administrative function. Throughout the period, CEC adapted to successive five-year plans, maintaining stability as a conduit for state financial mobilization despite broader economic rigidities and shortages in the later Ceaușescu years.

Post-Communist Transition (1990–2003)

Following the of 1989, CEC continued its operations as the primary state-owned institution for retail savings and deposits amid severe macroeconomic instability, including peaking at over 200% annually in the early and the liberalization of the banking sector under the 1991 Banking Law, which introduced competition from newly established private and foreign banks. The bank expanded its activities beyond traditional savings to include interbank lending and operations in government securities, reflecting initial efforts to adapt to a market-oriented economy while remaining under full state control. Systemic challenges in the Romanian banking sector, such as widespread non-performing loans reaching approximately 35% of total portfolios by the late due to legacy communist-era debts and weak credit discipline, indirectly pressured CEC through eroded public confidence and the failure of other state banks like Bancorex in 1996. As a savings-focused entity with a large deposit base from the population, CEC avoided immediate but required ongoing state recapitalizations to cover operational losses and maintain liquidity, highlighting the soft budget constraints typical of state-owned banks in transition economies. A pivotal occurred on , 1996, when Law No. 66 reorganized CEC into a joint-stock banking company (societate bancară pe acțiuni), with the as the sole shareholder, aiming to enhance , institutional modernization, and service diversification while preserving its mandate. This restructuring marked the formal shift from a communist-era administrative entity to a structure, though political interference in management persisted, limiting efficiency gains. By 2003, amid stalled broader efforts for state banks, CEC had stabilized its core retail functions but lagged in competitiveness against privatized rivals, setting the stage for intensified restructuring.

Restructuring and Growth (2004–present)

In the mid-2000s, CEC Bank underwent significant internal to address inefficiencies inherited from its state-dominated past, including staff reductions and operational streamlining, as it employed over 9,100 staff across 1,400 branches by late while ranking fourth in assets among Romanian banks. These efforts aligned with broader financial sector reforms tied to Romania's accession preparations, focusing on reducing non-performing loans and enhancing governance under oversight. A key component involved preparing for , with government plans announced in targeting completion by 2005 through a tender process. However, the 2006 privatization auction was canceled due to bids falling short of expectations, preserving full under the Ministry of . Post-privatization abort, CEC Bank shifted emphasis to sustainable growth as a universal commercial lender, maintaining a nationwide branch network while expanding retail services such as mortgages and consumer loans to underserved segments, including rural areas and employees. This state-backed stability enabled resilience amid 's post-EU integration credit booms, with the bank avoiding the aggressive foreign expansion that characterized privatized peers like BCR. By prioritizing domestic retail operations over high-risk corporate lending, CEC achieved gradual recovery, culminating in its ascent to the third-largest bank by assets in . Financial performance strengthened markedly from the onward, reflecting improved and economic recovery. Net assets reached 83.5 billion RON by end-2023, a 35% year-over-year increase, alongside a net profit of 515.8 million RON. In 2024, total assets grew 17.25%, securing a 10.95% . This trajectory continued into 2025, with first-half net profit rising 12.8% to 304.1 million RON, driven by 42,000 new loans totaling 5.5 billion RON, primarily in and SME financing. Recent initiatives underscore ongoing modernization, including a 2025 contract with to upgrade retail and corporate systems for enhanced digital capabilities. The European Commission approved a 200 million EUR (1 billion RON) recapitalization in March 2025 to bolster lending for strategic public projects, affirming the bank's role in national development despite critiques of state influence potentially limiting competitiveness.

Ownership and Governance

State Ownership Structure

CEC Bank S.A. is wholly owned by the Romanian state, with the Ministry of Public Finance serving as the sole shareholder holding 100% of the shares. The bank functions as a joint stock company, fully controlled by the state without any private or minority investors, distinguishing it as Romania's primary state-owned universal commercial bank. This ownership structure enables direct state influence over strategic decisions, including capital injections; for instance, in March 2025, the approved a €200 million (RON 1 billion) recapitalization by the Ministry of Public Finance, increasing the bank's capital base by approximately 40% to RON 3.5 billion while maintaining full state control. Such measures underscore the state's role in bolstering the bank's financial stability without diluting ownership. Despite periodic government discussions on potential partial listings or share sales—such as proposals in 2019 and references to possible divestitures in 2025—no has materialized, preserving the 100% state stake as of October 2025. This full public ownership positions CEC Bank alongside EximBank as one of Romania's two remaining state-controlled banking institutions, collectively representing about 14% of the domestic market.

Management and Regulatory Oversight

CEC Bank is governed by a Board of Directors that provides strategic direction and oversight, complemented by an Executive Management Committee responsible for operational execution. As of June 30, 2025, the Board is chaired by Tiberiu Valentin Mavrodin, with members including Bogdan Constantin Neacșu, Cristian Florin Șaitariu, Mirela Iovu, Simona Andrei, Ciprian Sebastian Badea, Mirela Șițoiu, and Nicoleta Mioara Cîrciumaru. The Board members serve a four-year mandate, renewed on May 12, 2023, following appointments by the General Meeting of Shareholders. Appointments to key executive positions require approval from the National Bank of Romania to ensure compliance with prudential standards. The Executive Management Committee is led by Bogdan Neacșu as President and Director General since 2019, with over 18 years of banking experience and concurrent role as President of the Romanian Banking Association since May 2021. Other key members include Cristian Șaitariu as First Vice-President, Mirela Iovu as Vice-President, and Simona Andrei as Vice-President and , who has held her role for eight years. In January 2025, Cristian Șaitariu joined the executive team amid structural adjustments nominated by the Ministry of Public Finance, the bank's sole shareholder. This structure reflects the bank's status as a under , with governance influenced by state ownership while adhering to corporate standards. Regulatory oversight of CEC Bank is primarily exercised by the (BNR), the serving as the for licensing, prudential supervision, and enforcement of banking regulations for all Romanian institutions. As a domestically capitalized entity, CEC Bank falls under BNR's direct jurisdiction, including assessments for . The bank is classified as an Other Systemically Important Institution (O-SII), subjecting it to enhanced supervisory measures such as higher capital requirements based on a threshold of 275 basis points, evaluated annually by BNR in line with European Systemic Risk Board guidelines. Compliance with anti-money laundering and EU directives is also monitored through BNR's framework, with Romania's EU membership integrating broader harmonized standards.

Operations and Services

Branch Network and Customer Reach

CEC Bank maintains the largest physical branch network among Romanian banks, comprising 48 branches and 962 agencies as of December 31, 2024, down slightly from 964 agencies in 2023, reflecting ongoing optimization efforts while preserving extensive territorial coverage. This network spans all 41 counties and the municipality, with a particular emphasis on rural and underserved areas where private competitors have limited presence, enabling the bank to serve regions with lower population density and facilitating for small depositors and local businesses. Complementing the physical outlets, CEC Bank operates 1,169 ATMs and over 23,872 POS terminals nationwide as of late 2023, supporting cash access and electronic transactions across urban and rural locales. The bank's branch strategy prioritizes over in major cities, with historical indicating over 800 rural outlets as of 2009, a footprint that has contracted through mergers and closures post-2017 modernization but remains unmatched in scale, covering approximately 80% of Romania's administrative units. This distribution aligns with CEC Bank's mandate as a state-owned to promote in peripheral areas, where alternative banking channels are sparse, though critics note potential inefficiencies from maintaining legacy amid digital shifts. In terms of customer reach, CEC Bank serves more than 2 million clients, including retail individuals, SMEs, and corporates, leveraging its physical presence alongside digital platforms to attract depositors seeking proximity-based services. The network's rural focus has historically supported a broad base of low-value savers, contributing to deposit volumes exceeding RON 70 billion in recent years, though growth relies increasingly on urban expansion and online adoption to counter demographic challenges in remote areas.

Product Offerings and Digital Initiatives

CEC Bank provides a range of products tailored to individual clients, including consumer loans, mortgage loans, and energy efficiency loans designed to finance home improvements and sustainable projects. The bank also offers personal loans, cards, and packages with varying features for everyday transactions. Deposit products include savings accounts with periodic deposits, introduced in August 2023 as a fully online option allowing flexible contributions and competitive interest rates. For corporate and small-to-medium enterprise (SME) clients, CEC Bank extends financing solutions such as loans to enhance competitiveness and support the transition to a , including subsidized options for environmental upgrades. These are complemented by corporate banking services encompassing , payments, and , processed through modernized systems to handle domestic and international transactions efficiently. In digital initiatives, CEC Bank selected Temenos in January 2025 to overhaul its core banking infrastructure for retail and corporate segments, deploying a cloud-ready platform with API capabilities and Temenos Payments for seamless transaction processing. Earlier efforts include the rollout of the CEC_IN portal around 2021, enabling mobile and internet banking for account management, transfers, and bill payments. The bank has leveraged low-code platforms like Aurachain since 2021 to automate internal processes and develop custom applications, including low-code apps for SME support launched to streamline financing requests. By July 2024, it introduced fully online processing for additional corporate products, reducing paperwork and approval times. A July 2025 partnership with Romanian Post and Visa facilitates direct cash deposits to bank cards via postal services, targeting underserved rural areas with digital alternatives to branch visits. Integration with Microsoft Azure since 2022 further supports agile deployment of new services, shortening time-to-market for customer-facing innovations.

Financial Performance

Key Historical Metrics

CEC Bank's financial metrics reflect a trajectory of recovery and expansion following periods of , with total assets growing from approximately 27.5 billion RON in to over 99 billion RON by , driven by increased lending and state support. Net profitability has similarly improved, shifting from modest gains in the mid-2010s to hundreds of millions in RON annually in recent years, amid efforts to address legacy non-performing loans from the post-communist era. Key recapitalizations underpinned this stability, including a state injection approved by the equivalent to about 1 billion RON, which bolstered capital amid the global and domestic banking challenges. By the restructuring phase post-2003, the bank transitioned from systemic losses—stemming from communist-era directed lending and transition shocks—to sustainable operations, with equity levels stabilizing around 3-4 billion RON in the early . The following table summarizes select historical metrics based on audited financial statements:
YearTotal Assets (billion RON)Net Profit (million RON)Total Equity (billion RON)
201627.59.62.1
202041.33384.5
202150.63673.9
2022N/A4243.9
202383.6~516N/A
202499.3668N/A
Figures represent bank-level data where available; group-level adjustments may apply for recent years. Growth in assets averaged double-digits post-2020, correlating with Romania's economic recovery and the bank's focus on retail and SME lending, though equity fluctuations highlight ongoing provisioning for credit risks.

Recent Financial Results (2020–2025)

In 2020, CEC Bank reported a net profit of 337.7 million RON, reflecting resilience amid the COVID-19 economic disruptions, with total assets estimated around 40 billion RON based on quarterly expansions in loans and deposits. The net profit rose to 355 million RON in 2021, supported by increased lending activity and deposit growth in a recovering economy. In 2022, audited net profit reached 424.3 million RON, a 16% increase from the prior year, driven by higher net interest income amid rising rates, though preliminary figures initially estimated 446.8 million RON before adjustments. Net profit further increased to 515.8 million RON in 2023, bolstered by expanded loan portfolios and operational efficiencies. For 2024, the achieved a net profit of 668.2 million RON at the bank level and 687.9 million RON at the group level, with net assets growing 19% to 99.3 billion RON, fueled by over 75,000 new loans totaling 15.2 billion RON. Total assets reached 109.43 billion RON, positioning CEC Bank as Romania's third-largest by assets with a 10.95% . In the first half of 2025, net profit stood at 304.1 million RON for the bank (up 12.8% year-on-year) and 306 million RON for the group (up 9.4%), with net assets at 99.42 billion RON, a 7% rise, indicating sustained momentum into the year.

Economic Role and Criticisms

Contributions to Stability and Access

As a fully state-owned entity under the Romanian Ministry of , CEC Bank contributes to national through its alignment with sovereign ratings and implicit government support, enabling it to absorb shocks and sustain operations amid economic pressures. Its 'BB' long-term issuer default rating from , affirmed with a stable outlook as of January 23, 2025, reflects the state's high propensity and capacity for extraordinary assistance, bolstering systemic resilience in a banking sector where provides a counterbalance to private institutions' cyclical vulnerabilities. The bank's role in channeling funds, including EU recovery and resilience facility disbursements and guarantees for strategic projects via partnerships like the October 14, 2025, agreement with Banca de Investiții și Dezvoltare, further reinforces stability by financing and development without undue market distortion. CEC Bank's extensive physical presence enhances access to banking services across , operating over 1,000 branches and territorial units as of 2024, the largest network in the country and a deliberate strategy to serve rural and remote regions where private competitors have retrenched. This infrastructure supports as a core mission, with initiatives providing advisory services, tailored products for individuals and SMEs, and accommodations for people with , such as adapted banking access. In 2024 alone, the bank approved over 75,000 new loans totaling RON 15.2 billion, aiding more than 64,000 individuals and extending credit to underserved segments amid broader efforts to promote digitalization and green financing for SMEs. Complementing its branch network, CEC Bank advances inclusion through hybrid digital-physical channels, including 100% online account openings and loans, alongside collaborations like the , 2025, digital wallet service with Romanian Post and Visa to broaden electronic payment access for populations. These measures address Romania's uneven financial penetration, where state involvement via CEC mitigates risks of exclusion in a transitioning economy, though efficiency critiques persist due to its public mandate prioritizing coverage over pure profitability.

Challenges of State Ownership and Efficiency

As a fully state-owned entity under the Romanian Ministry of Public Finance, CEC Bank faces inherent challenges associated with government ownership, including vulnerability to political interference in management decisions. In 2020, Prime Minister Ludovic Orban dismissed the bank's president, Bogdan Ghetea, amid a political scandal involving allegations of improper lending practices and ties to political figures, highlighting how executive changes can disrupt operational continuity. Such interventions reflect broader issues in Romanian state-owned enterprises (SOEs), where political appointments often prioritize loyalty over expertise, leading to suboptimal governance as noted in the OECD's 2023 review of Romania's SOE framework, which identified persistent shortcomings in board independence and transparency despite regulatory efforts. Efficiency metrics underscore these governance vulnerabilities, with CEC Bank's return on assets (ROA) at 0.66% and return on equity (ROE) at 4.39% in 2024, positioning it as the 15th most profitable Romanian bank relative to its asset base among peers. Administrative expenses surged 24.3% year-over-year in 2024, driven by staffing and operational costs, outpacing revenue growth and signaling cost control weaknesses typical in state-owned banks with softer budget constraints. Fitch Ratings anticipates a moderate profitability decline through 2027 due to rising risk-weighted assets and expenses offsetting net interest margin gains, attributing this partly to CEC's traditional lending model skewed toward lower-yield, state-linked sectors rather than dynamic private-market opportunities. Comparative analysis reveals CEC underperforming private competitors; for instance, while CEC holds about 11% of 's banking market by assets as the third-largest lender, state-owned banks collectively capture only 13.6% share amid dominance by efficient private entities like Banca Transilvania. Historical patterns in Romanian SOEs, including CEC, show management inefficiencies and risks exacerbating these gaps, as political priorities—such as funding public projects—divert resources from , per analyses of post-communist banking transitions. Recapitalizations, such as the €200 million injection approved by the in March 2025 (deemed market-conform and free of state aid), have stabilized the balance sheet but underscore recurring capital needs absent in more agile private banks, potentially perpetuating dependency on taxpayer funds.

References

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