Bulgarian Gymnast Boryana Kaleyn: №1 In The European Ranking!
Boryana Kaleyn, the European champion from Baku in 2023, is the Female Gymnast of the Year in the European Gymnastics ranking.
Bulgaria’s Corporate Commercial Bank (KTB) has made it to the Top 10 in terms of Tier 1 capital increase in this year’s EU banks ranking of The Banker magazine.
Tier 1 capital, also referred to as core equity capital, is a term used to describe the capital adequacy of a bank. Tier I capital is core capital, this includes equity capital and disclosed reserves, and is used as the measure of a bank's financial strength.
The rate of increase in Tier 1 capital placed KTB in ninth position from the top, behind Dutch SNS Bank with a 59.4%, and ahead of Finland’s Local Tapiola Bank with 47.71%.
With 55.43% growth in Tier 1 capital to USD 364 M KTB was 193rd out of 250 EU banks in the 2014 ranking by the magazine, part of the Financial Times group.
In the 2013 Top 10 ranking in terms of assets increase also compiled by The Banker KTB was seventh with 41.98% rise in assets, after Greece’s Piraeus Bank with 45.46% and ahead of Spain’s Grupo Cooperativo Cajamar with 41.80%.
Returning to the 2014 ranking, Bulgaria’s First Investment Bank ranked seventh among the Top 10 EU banks in terms of assets increase. Its assets increased by 30.21% to USD 6.19 B, figures showed.
FIBank was also among the Top 10 EU banks with highest return on capital (RoC) in the 2014 ranking. It ranked tenth on the list with 28.60% RoC.
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In April, inflation across the European Union remained steady, with both the EU and the Eurozone recording a rate of 2.6% and 2.4%, respectively, according to data from Eurostat, the official statistics agency of the EU
Julian Voinov, an economist and financial expert, expressed optimism regarding Bulgaria's potential adoption of the euro in 2025 or early 2026
This was stated by the Governor of the Bulgarian National Bank at the international conference "Bulgaria in the Eurozone, When?" in Sofia
Former Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov has suggested that Bulgaria's potential entry into the Eurozone may not materialize before 2026
In the initial quarter of 2024, Bulgaria's economy expanded by 0.4%, as per an expedited evaluation by the National Statistical Institute (NSI), a slight deceleration from the 0.5% growth witnessed in the final quarter of the preceding year
According to Levon Hampartzoumian, the likelihood of Bulgaria joining the Eurozone in 2025 is very slim, as no country has ever entered during the middle of the year
Sofia Airport's Terminal 3 Construction Set to Begin in Early 2026
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