Fifth Third Bancorp. on Oct. 6 agreed to buy Comerica Bank in an all-stock deal valued at $10.9 billion that would create the ninth-largest U.S. bank, one of the largest banks in Michigan, and likely ...
Comerica Bank, founded as the Detroit Savings Fund in the 1800s and headquartered in Detroit until moving to Dallas in 2007, has held the naming rights of the Tigers' stadium, Comerica Park, since it ...
Fifth Third Bancorp announced Monday it will acquire Comerica Inc. in an all-stock deal valued at $10.9 billion, merging two major regional banks into what will become the nation’s ninth-largest bank, ...
It is anticipated that over half of Fifth Third’s branches will be located in the Southeast, Texas, Arizona and California by 2030.
Fifth Third paying nearly $11 billion for Comerica as wave of bank mergers builds Michelle Pfeiffer Recalls Bloody Incident With Al Pacino That Landed Her ‘Scarface' Role ...
Comerica Park – the Major League Baseball stadium that opened in 2000 as the home of the Detroit Tigers – is named for a ...
Could Comerica Park's name change? That's a question many people are wondering after Fifth Third Bancorp acquired Comerica Bank.
Cininnati-based Fifth Third Bancorp agreed to buy regional lender Comerica, aiming to expand its presence in key growth markets.
Comerica Bank is set to be bought by Fifth Third Bancorp, but it’s unclear if that will impact the name of the Detroit Tigers’ home field.
The deal is the largest bank merger of the year, creating a $288 billion behemoth and the 9th largest bank in the U.S.
On Monday, Fifth Third announced its acquisition of Comerica, a regional lender based in Dallas, in a $10.9 billion deal that will create the ninth-largest bank in the U.S. and expand Fifth Third's ...
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Fifth Third CEO Tim Spence said discussions to buy regional bank Comerica started a few weeks ago when the latter company's CEO Curtis Farmer called to discuss a deal, Spence told ...