SeaBank Philippines has a new name, say hello to MariBank Philippines. SeaBank Philippines, as of today, is now officially part of the MariBank Singapore Banking Group. We'll start by saying that SeaBank Philippines has assured its users that there will be no changes to banking operations at this point in time. Based on the announcement, both SeaBank Philippines and MariBank Singapore are both members of the Sea Limited Group, the Singaporean company that also owns other highly-recognizable platforms such as Shopee (E-Commerce) and Garena (Gaming). This acquisition will put MariBank Singapore at the helm of SeaBank's regional strategy, innovation, and governance. It has also been announced that all cutting-edge banking technologies made available to MariBank will also be made available to SeaBank users, if proven effective. Of course, SeaBank Philippines will also be receiving financial backing as a result of this strategic move. Some are hoping that SeaBank can begin to offer credit card services much like MariBank, and the trust in the Singaporean company Sea Limited Group is quite high. Read more in our articles including "SeaBank officially rebrands to MariBank Philippines" and "SeaBank is now part of the MariBank Singapore Banking Group".
SeaBank Philippines has a new name, say hello to MariBank Philippines. SeaBank Philippines, as of today, is now officially part of the MariBank Singapore Banking Group.
We'll start by saying that SeaBank Philippines has assured its users that there will be no changes to banking operations at this point in time. Based on the announcement, both SeaBank Philippines and MariBank Singapore are both members of the Sea Limited Group, the Singaporean company that also owns other highly-recognizable platforms such as Shopee (E-Commerce) and Garena (Gaming). This acquisition will put MariBank Singapore at the helm of SeaBank's regional strategy, innovation, and governance.
Our coverage of seabank includes: "SeaBank officially rebrands to MariBank Philippines"; "SeaBank is now part of the MariBank Singapore Banking Group"; "SeaBank shifts to InstaPay as default for linked cash-ins, P15 fee applies to non-InstaPay transfers". Each article provides unique insights and information.