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THE COLONIAL BANK.

[From the Press, July 25.] Another addition is on the point of 'being made to the monetary institutions of New Zealand. The share list of the Colonial Bank has just been closed, and we understand that, the requisite number of shares having been subscribed, it will soon commence operations. We heartily wish it success. As the colony progresses, every institution of the kind, properly managed, vi ill be useful in developing the resources of the country, as well as profitable to the shareholders j and we believe there is room enough for all.

"We think it, however, a mistake on the part of the promoters of the new Bank to bold out such promises of liberal terms and cheap money to all classes as are to be gathered from their prospectus. They will assuredly find that their shareholders, like all other capitalists, will require the best returns obtainable for their money, and that none of them will prefer patriotism to profit. We think, too, it would have been better had they refrained from attacking the " three Bankß from Australia" by the implication contained in their prospectus that the latter are merely making New Zealand subservient to their business elsewhere. This statement is not borne out by the facts. We find by the sworn returns for the quarter ending March 31st, 1874, that the amount of their own capital employed by those Banks in New Zealand, in addition to all the deposits obtained in the colony, exceeded £1,600,000. The total amount of deposits, circulation, and all other funds derivable from the colony, held by the Banks referred to, according to their sworn returns to the 31st March, 1874, was (omitting shillings and pence) £2,025,940. At the same date, according to the same returns, the total amount employed by the three Banks within the colony was £3,693,839. So that the total amount these Banks employed within the colony exceeded the funds they derived from the colony by no less a sum than £1,667,899—0r upwards of half a million more than the united paid-up capital and reserves of the other Banks trading in New Zealand, which by these returns appears to be ODly £1,123,327. Such being the case, it was scarcely fair to those institutions to refrain from puttiug it forward. In the prospectus before us the colonists are invited to keep " within " their own domain the absolute con- " trol of their own money." This simply means that they ought to withdraw their deposits from the three Banks alluded to; a proceeding which would inevitably result in the withdrawal also of the large sum with which these banks are now content to supplement the deposits derived on the spot. It cannot be supposed that under such a condition they would continue operations here, as mere investors of capital for which they can find profitable employment elsewhere. And we fail to see any advantage in transferring the duty of employing the deposits they now hold and employ to any other institution whatever, when the transfer must evidently involve the loss to this colony of the large amount of foreign capital which the above returns prove the Banks in question to be the means of introducing. We believe, as we have already Baid, that there is room enough for all. And we deprecate any measure tending to force capital out of the colony, no matter whence it is derived.

There has heen a protracted debate in the Irish Church Synod jn the Athanasian Creed, one party wishing to exclude it from the formularies, another to relegate it to the Articles, a third to leave the reading of it to the clergyman altogether. Some contended that its exclusion would favor Uoitariam'sm, but others believed that UnitariaDism would receive a blow by its removal.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GLOBE18740725.2.13

Bibliographic details

Globe, Volume I, Issue 48, 25 July 1874, Page 4

Word Count
630

THE COLONIAL BANK. Globe, Volume I, Issue 48, 25 July 1874, Page 4

THE COLONIAL BANK. Globe, Volume I, Issue 48, 25 July 1874, Page 4

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