Münsterländische Bank Thie & Co. KG
Münsterländische Bank Thie & Co. KG is a Münster-based private bank within the M.M.Warburg & CO group, focused on relationship-driven private and corporate banking in the Münsterland region and beyond. Its core activities include discretionary and advisory portfolio management, securities brokerage and custody, investm…
- SWIFT / BIC
- MLBKDEH1MUE
- Headquarters
- Breite Straße 6-8, 48653 Coesfeld, Germany
- Phone
- +49 2541 8900
About Münsterländische Bank Thie & Co. KG
Münsterländische Bank Thie & Co. KG is a Münster-based private bank within the M.M.Warburg & CO group, focused on relationship-driven private and corporate banking in the Münsterland region and beyond. Its core activities include discretionary and advisory portfolio management, securities brokerage and custody, investment funds, and individualized lending such as mortgages, real estate financing, and loans to small and mid-sized enterprises. The bank also provides current accounts with standard German payment options and digital access for everyday banking, while capital markets insight and execution capabilities are available through group platforms. Client service is organized around dedicated relationship managers and in-branch or appointment-based consultations; pricing is typically individualized, with advisory and custody fees, transaction charges, and loan conditions determined case by case rather than published as standardized retail tariffs. The institution is supervised by BaFin and the Deutsche Bundesbank and participates in Germany’s statutory deposit guarantee scheme (EdB); membership in any voluntary deposit protection arrangements and applicable coverage limits should be confirmed directly with the bank, as eligibility and caps vary by client type and product. Due to its size and business model, the offering is geared toward clients with significant banking or investment needs rather than mass-market retail users, and product breadth, branch footprint, and digital features are narrower than at nationwide universal banks. Prospective clients should assess minimum relationship expectations, fee schedules, and service scope, and consider group-level dependencies for research, custody, and capital markets services, as well as the implications of deposit insurance limits for large cash balances.
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