Exchange Currency

Bank Holiday

1. In the United States, the temporary closing of a bank in the event that its obligations exceed its resources. 2. In the United Kingdom and Ireland, a public holiday on which the banks are closed. A bank holiday is generally not a major holiday such as Christmas Day (although, the banks are indeed closed on these holidays), but instead a day that would otherwise be a non-holiday. For example, the first Monday in May is considered a bank holiday, and banks along with many other businesses close for the day.

Related information about Bank Holiday:
  1. Bank holiday - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    A bank holiday is a public holiday in the United Kingdom or other commonwealth countries, or a colloquialism for public holiday in Ireland. There is no automatic ...
     
  2. Emergency Banking Act - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    With the benefit of hindsight, the nationwide Bank Holiday and the Emergency Banking Act of March, 1933, ended the bank runs that had plagued the Great ...
     
  3. Bank Holiday Definition | Investopedia
    Any business day during which commercial banks and savings & loans institutions are closed for business to the public, specifically at physical locations. These ...
     
  4. Holiday Schedules
    Federal Reserve Bank Holiday Schedules.
     
  5. J.P. Morgan | Bank Holidays
    Date, Holiday. Monday, January 2, New Year's Day (Observed). Monday, January 16, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. Monday, February 20, Presidents' Day ...
     
  6. Why Did FDR's Bank Holiday Succeed?
    After a month-long run on American banks, Franklin Delano Roosevelt proclaimed a Bank Holiday, beginning March 6, 1933, that shut down the banking system.
     
  7. A Bank Holiday [ushistory.org]
    Two days after taking the oath of office, Roosevelt declared a "bank holiday." From March 6 to March 10, banking transactions were suspended across the nation ...
     
  8. Bank Holidays - Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
    ... Federal Reserve System. Holiday, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015.