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Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB Class A
€13.53
Dec 12, 4:34:10 PM GMT+1 · EUR · FRA · Disclaimer
StockDE listed securitySE headquartered
Previous close
€13.47
Day range
€13.53 - €13.53
Year range
€11.70 - €14.24
Market cap
331.09B SEK
Avg Volume
77.00
P/E ratio
-
Dividend yield
-
Primary exchange
STO
CDP Climate Change Score
B
Market news
Financials
Income Statement
Revenue
Net income
(SEK)Sep 2024Y/Y change
Revenue
20.51B-2.30%
Operating expense
8.50B6.04%
Net income
9.45B-10.65%
Net profit margin
46.09-8.55%
Earnings per share
4.57-9.15%
EBITDA
——
Effective tax rate
20.00%—
Total assets
Total liabilities
(SEK)Sep 2024Y/Y change
Cash and short-term investments
937.77B159.43%
Total assets
4.14T0.21%
Total liabilities
3.92T0.04%
Total equity
224.59B—
Shares outstanding
2.04B—
Price to book
0.12—
Return on assets
0.91%—
Return on capital
——
Net change in cash
(SEK)Sep 2024Y/Y change
Net income
9.45B-10.65%
Cash from operations
-58.86B-307.18%
Cash from investing
-3.84B-2,320.81%
Cash from financing
-28.25B-376.87%
Net change in cash
-96.56B-585.62%
Free cash flow
——
About
Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB, abbreviated SEB, is a Swedish bank headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden. In Sweden and the Baltic countries, SEB has a full financial service offering. In Denmark, Finland, Norway, Germany, and the United Kingdom, the bank's operations are focused on corporate and investment banking services to corporate and institutional clients. The bank was founded in 1972 by the Swedish Wallenberg family, which is still SEB's largest shareholder through major investment company Investor AB. SEB is the largest Swedish bank by both market capitalisation and total assets. The SEB Group traces its origins to the Stockholms Enskilda Bank and Skandinaviska Banken, established in 1856 and 1864 respectively. Both banks played an important role in Scandinavia's industrialisation throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, especially in Sweden. After a period of strong growth throughout the twentieth century, Stockholms Enskilda Bank and Skandinaviska Banken merged in 1972 to form the SEB Group. Wikipedia
Founded
1972
Employees
18,975
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