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Raiffeisen Bank International AG (RAW.BE)

Berlin - Berlin Delayed price. Currency in EUR
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16.17-0.02 (-0.12%)
At close: 09:52PM CEST
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Previous close16.19
Open16.23
Bid15.95 x N/A
Ask16.43 x N/A
Day's range16.15 - 16.40
52-week range12.68 - 20.86
Volume200
Avg. volume4
Market capN/A
Beta (5Y monthly)N/A
PE ratio (TTM)N/A
EPS (TTM)N/A
Earnings dateN/A
Forward dividend & yieldN/A (N/A)
Ex-dividend dateN/A
1y target estN/A
  • Reuters

    Austrian regulators fine Raiffeisen for money laundering lapses

    Austrian regulators fined Raiffeisen Bank International for lapses in its money laundering controls, the country's Financial Market Authority said on Friday, imposing a record fine of just over 2 million euros ($2.1 million). The penalty, the biggest ever to be awarded by regulators in Austria, was handed out after failings were found in RBI's money laundering and terror financing checks on two banks it was dealing with, the regulators said, without naming the banks or the countries where they were based. The punishment, albeit minor compared to penalties that could be imposed, further tarnishes Raiffeisen's image which has been under pressure for continuing to do business in Russia when Western peers have severed ties.

  • Reuters

    European banks in Russia face 'awful lot of risk', Yellen says

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told Reuters that European banks face growing risks operating in Russia and the U.S. is looking at strengthening its secondary sanctions on banks found to be aiding transactions for Russia's war effort. "We are looking at potentially a tougher stepping-up of our sanctions on banks that do business in Russia," Yellen told Reuters in an interview, declining to provide specifics and not identifying any banks at which they could be aimed. Speaking on the sidelines of a G7 finance leaders meeting in northern Italy, Yellen said that sanctions related to banks' dealings in Russia would only be imposed "if there was a reason to do so, but operating in Russia creates an awful lot of risk," she added.

  • Reuters

    Yellen warns German banks to boost compliance with US sanctions on Russia

    FRANKFURT (Reuters) -U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen urged German bank executives on Tuesday to step up efforts to comply with sanctions against Russia and shut down efforts to circumvent them to avoid potential penalties themselves that would cut off dollar access. Yellen said at the start of a meeting with bankers that the Treasury's new authority to hit banks with secondary sanctions if they aid Russian military-related transactions had helped to frustrate Russia's efforts to procure goods needed for its war in Ukraine, but more work was needed.