ushahid
Senior Member
My sister and her inlaws live in a town near Worcester, Massachusetts and there is a outlet mall that has TD's branding all over. TD is apparently a big thing in Mass.
Thankfully, Scotia Bank owns the arena where our respective teams play...so there's no conflict of interests there.I've always found it interesting that Toronto-Dominion Bank owns the naming rights to TD Garden in Boston where the Bruins and Celtics play.
Yes, it was fun shocking my friend from New Jersey with that fact. All the banks moved to using their initials as their official branding around 2000 which I heard was to open up the possibility of becoming more international.Indeed, my US friends were amazed when I told them that the "T" stands for Toronto. Probably wisely, they do not publicise their Canadian roots!
Yes, it was fun shocking my friend from New Jersey with that fact. All the banks moved to using their initials as their official branding around 2000 which I heard was to open up the possibility of becoming more international.
Funnily enough, Scotiabank has a huge Latin America presence (the biggest of any Canadian bank), and plenty of Latin Americans I know aren't aware it's a Canadian bank. They'd been banking with Scotiabank even before they moved to Canada, and didn't even realize.Scotiabank sitting in the corner alone
Forgot about them! But even "Scotia" is obfuscating their old name, "Bank of Nova Scotia" a bit. I wonder if some people think it originated in Scotland?Scotiabank sitting in the corner alone
Ok I see that. But it could also be the first step in a much longer process based on our country’s demographic realities.That’s not really expanding an international presence though. It’s really just to provide services to students coming to study in Canada.