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Bank bust: 50 court cases against shareholders, directors, loan defaulters – Addison

Dr. Ernest Addison Proper 6 Finalize Ernest Addison, Governor of the Bank of Ghana

Tue, 21 May 2019 Source: classfmonline.com

Governor of the Bank of Ghana (BoG) Dr Ernest Addison, has revealed that there are close to 50 court cases filed by the Receivers of the banks that recently went bust with some being amalgamated to form the Consolidated Bank Ghana (CBG) Limited.

“I am also reliably informed that the Receivers have fully engaged the judicial system to assist in the recovery of certain assets and monies from some of the shareholders, directors and other loan defaulters of these erstwhile institutions, with about 50 cases currently pending before the courts,” Dr Addison said in a speech at the 4th Ghana CEO Summit in Accra on Monday, 20 May 2019.

Dr Addison expressed frustration about the processes in recovering assets such as individuals involved “resorting to the court system to frustrate the process by engaging in frivolous actions”.

He cited “low or poor documentation” as another factor presenting a challenge for the Receivers to identify and pursue some of the loan defaulters.

Dr Addison revealed that preliminary investigations indicated that “some of the assets were not registered in the names of the specific financial institutions but in the names of related or connected parties, making it difficult to dispose of the underlying collateral to offset the outstanding loans”.

He was concerned that “some of these loans were even fictitiously created” and, so, authorities are making every effort to pursue the directors and retrieve the monies.

A clean-up of the banking sector resulted in the revoking of the licences of nine local banks.

Seven banks went bust within a space of one year – from August 2017 to August 2018. They include UT Bank, Capital Bank, uniBank, Sovereign Bank, The Royal Bank, The Beige Bank and The Construction Bank. The first two went under in August 2017.

The other five went bust two weeks shy of a year after the first two failed.

Two other banks – Heritage Bank and Premium Bank – had their licences withdrawn after the deadline for the payment of the GHS400m minimum capital requirement in December 2018.

UT Bank and Capital Bank were taken over by GCB Bank while the last seven were put together by the BoG to form the all-new CBG.

In his updates, after the clean-up, Dr Addison noted that “out of the total loans of GHS10.1 billion taken over by the Receivers, total recoveries so far is in excess of GHS731 million and this has been achieved through loan repayments by customers; repayment of placements; sale of vehicles; liquidation of bonds; and from other incomes sources (largely from interests on placements and refund of commissions paid)”.

He said loan repayments by customers alone constitute about 72 per cent of the total proceeds realised.



Source: classfmonline.com
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