posted
Here's a new bank in a hot market area with loads of "potential" = Bank of Commerce North Carolina in Charlotte (Symbol: BONC). Dirt cheap, take a looksy. Visionist
IP: Logged |
posted
Bank of Commerce Achieves OTC Bulletin Board Listing THURSDAY, MARCH 09, 2006 9:30 AM - PR Newswire
BONC CHARLOTTE, N.C., March 9, 2006 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ -- Charlotte, NC-based Bank of Commerce, which opened for business February 7, 2006, has already lined up a market maker and achieved over-the-counter bulletin board (OTCBB) listing for its stock. Bank of Commerce's ticker symbol is "BONC".
Hoefer & Arnett, a San Francisco-based investment banking firm, will act as a market maker for Bank of Commerce stock. The OTCBB is a regulated electronic trading service offered by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) for stocks that typically aren't traded often or in large blocks. A market maker is a broker-dealer firm that holds a certain number of shares of a stock to facilitate trading in the security.
"We are very pleased to have obtained our ticker symbol so early after formation of the Bank," says Wes Sturges, president of Bank of Commerce. "Having a market maker allows our staff to focus completely on banking and our clients' needs without the distraction of handling stock transactions."
Bank of Commerce (OTC: Bulletin Board: BONC) serves the needs of independently owned businesses in the Charlotte, NC area. From a midtown Charlotte office at 100 Queens Road, it offers guidance to customers from experienced loan officers, in addition to start-up capital and other financial products, services and information. Online banking, courier service and extended deposit hours are additional hallmarks of the Bank of Commerce, www.bankofcommercenc.com, 704-971-7000.
SOURCE Bank of Commerce
Harry Hoover of Hoover ink PR, +1-704-953-3406, or harry*hoover-ink.com, for Bank of Commerce
posted
Please don't get people confused. Bank of Commerce is a new bank with potential. I like bank stocks because they seldom fail and financial growth comes easy and isn't dependent on a any particular market. Banks almost always make money, even in a sour economy. Visionist
IP: Logged |