Joke Collection Website - Public benefit messages - The salary of Bank of Communications is slow to arrive.

The salary of Bank of Communications is slow to arrive.

There may be two reasons for the slow arrival of Bank of Communications wages. First of all, the internal staff of the bank checked the payroll and went through many online processes, which led to the delay in the payment of wages; The second reason is that rest days and legal holidays cannot arrive in time.

Generally speaking, employees' wages are uniformly transferred. If it's not your first paycheck, you'll get it on the same day. However, when banks pay salaries, there will be more accounts to remember, which will lead to inconsistent payment time. In addition, some employees have received SMS reminders. When they are paid, their reminder messages are usually late. It is possible that the money has arrived, but the reminder message has not arrived. Therefore, it is recommended to check the account amount at the counter.

Bank of Communications (English BCM, Chinese Bank of Communications) was established in 1908. It is one of the six largest banks in China, one of the oldest banks in China and one of the modern note-issuing banks in China. 1 987 April1day, the newly established Bank of Communications officially opened to the outside world, becoming the first national state-owned joint-stock commercial bank in China, with its head office in Shanghai. Bank of Communications was listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in June 2005 and successfully listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange in May 2007.

Bank of Communications is one of the major financial service providers in China, covering commercial banks, securities, trusts, financial leasing, fund management, insurance and offshore financial services. There are 235 domestic branches of Bank of Communications, including 30 provincial branches, 7 directly affiliated branches, 99 provincial branches/kloc-0, and 3,270 outlets in 239 cities above prefecture level and 158 counties or county-level cities. It owns seven non-bank companies, including wholly-owned subsidiaries of Bank of Communications Leasing, Bank of Communications Insurance and Bank of Communications Investment, and holding subsidiaries of Bank of Communications Fund, Bank of Communications Guo Xin, Bank of Communications Life Insurance and Bank of Communications International.