Tag: bank

  • Infrastructure Bank 2013 profit before tax hits N875m

    Infrastructure Bank 2013 profit before tax hits N875m

    The Infrastructure Bank Plc,  recorded a profit before tax (PBT) of N875 million in 2013 compared with N82 million achieved in 2012.

    This is an increase of  N793 million, according to the  Chairman of the bank, Alhaji Lamis Dikko.

    Speaking   at the bank’s 3rd Annual General Meeting (AGM)  in Lagos, Dikko said that the bank’s total expenses in 2013 stood at N757million as against the N586 million recorded in 2012.

    He attributed the growth to the bank’s strength of transaction advisory offering; ‘one-off capital cost’ and well-managed operational cost.

    According to him, the bank remained optimistic on the economic outlook, adding that all the indicators projected continuous growth trend of the past decade.

    Dikko also said that Nigeria had continued to attract high level of foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in spite of the nation’s security challenges.

    He  was optimistic  that the Federal Government’s reforms and investment in the energy, agriculture and manufacturing sector would lead to significant job creation in the country.

    He also added that the key enabler for the growth was the provision of improved and increased infrastructure.

    Dikko said that the mandate to act as an advisor and fund arranger to the Federal Government showcased the bank’s potential in serving as a partner of choice for both the public and private sectors.

    Also speaking, the bank’s  Managing Director, Mr. Adekunle Oyinloye, said its  profit impacted positively in its current earnings per share of 54 kobo in 2013, compared with 20 kobo recorded in 2012.

    Oyinloye said that a key highlight of the year under review was the increase momentum in the transaction advisory and fund arranging business that represented tangible evidence of the bank competitive advantages.

    He also said that the continued demand for infrastructure assets nationwide and the need for the delivery though alternative financing method through its project opportunities, supports the belief that the current trend was sustainable.

    “The micro economy environment remains stable and promising.”

  • Six killed in Osun bank robbery 

    Six persons were killed on Thursday evening by a gang of armed robbers in an attack on   Wema Bank in Modakeke, the headquarters of the Ife East Area Office in Osun State.

    Investigation revealed that a cleaner of the bank located at the Iraye area of the town who was among those killed by the robbers was said to have been mistaken for a policeman because of the black dress he was wearing.

    The robbers numbering five were said to have escaped from the robbery scene before the policemen and soldiers in the Swift Action Squad (SAS), who responded to a distress from the bank, arrived.

    The robbers were also said to have killed five other passers-by with dynamite which they threw at them as they were being pursued.

    An eyewitness, who preferred not to be named, said the robbers exchanged gun fire with the police while they charted an escape route out of the town.

    According to him, the robbers abandoned their vehicle and escaped with the  gun wounds into the bush near  Modakeke High School.

    The Public Relations Officer for the Osun State Police Command, Mrs. Folashade Odoro, confirmed that six persons were killed by the robbers.

    Odoro, who disclosed that no arrest had been made as at the time of filing this report,  said the policemen were combing the bush in order to apprehend the hoodlums.

  • BRICS nations to create $100b development bank

    The leaders of the five Brics countries have signed a deal to create a new $100bn (£58.3bn) development bank and emergency reserve fund.

    The Brics group is made up of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

    The capital for the bank will be split equally among the five participating countries.

    The bank will have a headquarters in Shanghai, China and the first president for the bank will come from India.

    Brazil’s President, Dilma Rousseff, announced the creation of the bank at a Brics summit meeting in Fortaleza, Brazil on Tuesday.

    The halls of Fortaleza’s conference centre were full of whispers about whether or not these Brics nations – which often see one another  more as rivals than friends – could agree a deal on the development bank.

    But challenges were overcome and the announcements were made. Despite their political and economic differences, the one thing these countries do agree upon is that rich countries have too much power in institutions like the World Bank and the IMF.

    Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff’s comments made that feeling crystal clear – the Brics countries, she said, have the power to introduce positive changes – ones that they think are more equal and fair.

    At first, the bank will start off with $50bn in initial capital.

    The emergency reserve fund – which was announced as a “Contingency Reserve Arrangement” – will also have $100bn, and will help developing nations avoid “short-term liquidity pressures, promote further Brics cooperation, strengthen the global financial safety net and complement existing international arrangements”.

    The creation of the Brics bank will almost surely create competition for both the World Bank and other similar regional funds.

    Brics nations have criticised the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund for not giving developing nations enough voting rights.

  • Bank of America reports 43% drop in quarterly profits

    Bank of America has reported a 43 percent drop in its second-quarter profits after a fall in mortgage revenue and a rise in legal costs.

    The bank, the US’s second largest, said net income of $2.3bn (£1.34bn) was down from $3.4bn (£1.99bn) a year earlier.

    Its finances have been hit recently by huge payments to the authorities to fend off accusations of wrong-doing.

    In the past year, its shares have fallen from 32 cents (19p) to 19 cents (11p) per share.

    In April the bank agreed to pay $9.5bn for misleading US mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac before the financial crisis in 2008.

    It then agreed separately to pay $783m (£470m) in fines and refunds, for mis-selling payment and identity theft insurance to nearly three million credit card customers.

    The bank’s chief financial officer, Bruce Thompson, acknowledged the rise in litigation costs and praised the bank for doing “a good job managing expenses”.

    He also said that during the quarter the bank’s credit losses remained “near historical lows.”

    The bank’s results come as analysts have noted a split in the US lenders’ quarterly results between banks that cater mainly to U.S customers and those with a more prominent global presence.

    Domestic-orientated banks have been helped by a pick-up in the U.S economy.

    International traders have not fared so well, with Citigroup seeing an almost 10 percent fall in its share price and GoldmanSachs’s shares dropping seven percent.

    Wells Fargo, which is responsible for one out of six US home loans, saw its share price rise three percent on Friday.

  • Private school owners seek education bank

    The National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) have called for the establishment of the Education Development Bank (EDB) in Nigeria.

    NAPPS urgED the Federal Government to set up the bank to enable promoters of education access loans easily. The demand was contained in a communiqué by NAPPS after its maiden three-day education summit at the Dr. Gabriel Okara Cultural Centre Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    They also want the government to include private school teachers in the teacher re-training programmes; extend free enrolment for standardised certificate examination and waive or reduce taxes levied on private school operators.

    It was also resolved that the provision of Section 122 of the National Policy on Education (NPE) be fully implemented by government.

    The stakeholders further urged the government to include private school pupils/students in the distribution of educational materials.

    Presenting the communiqué after the summit titled: Repositioning private schools for quality education, the Chairman, Central Planning Committee, Chief Diekivie Ikiogha said the event was timely.

    He said the purpose of the event was to brainstorm and review the numerous challenges facing the education sector.

    He said it would also help to provide solutions and develop the implementation plan to bring about the desired change.

    He noted that private schools have “the capacity to promote and sustain quality education in Nigeria.”

    He, however, maintained that all private education providers should ensure strict compliance to educational policies in order to achieve qualitative education.

    Delegates at the summit identified some challenges facing private schools, such as poor managerial skills by proprietors, school managers and administrators and double taxations by the national, state and local government.

    The stakeholders also discussed preservation of values and ethics among pupils, teachers and other school personnel.

    The communiqué read: “Deliberations at the summit further resolved that proprietors should develop business, financial and operational plans and create a governing board for sustainability of school operations.

    “Proprietors should also focus more on the challenges of indiscipline amongst children, parents and teachers as well as sponsor education advancement related bill at the National Assembly.”

  • Vatican bank chief to step down amid restructure

    The president and four non-executive members of the governing board of the Vatican bank are to step down.

    French financier Jean-Baptiste de Franssu will take over as head of the bank from Ernst von Freyberg as part of a restructuring of the Catholic Church’s central government.

    Pope Francis has sought to stamp out corruption and other abuses at the bank, which handles the Church’s funds.

    The bank’s profits fell last year to 2.9m euros from 86.6m euros in 2012.

    Ernst von Freyberg was appointed by former Pope Benedict just before his retirement in February 2013 after allegations were made that the Vatican bank had been used by money launderers,

    However, attempts to create a more transparent banking system for the Catholic Church will continue under new management.

    “Our ambition is to become something of a model for financial management rather than cause for occasional scandal,” the former head of the Catholic Church in Australia, Cardinal George Pell, told reporters.

    He will head a new economic affairs department at the Vatican, with oversight of all the Vatican’s financial dealings and will report directly to the Pope.

    The cardinal was called to Rome as a result of a year-long attempt to clean up the Vatican’s accounts.

    The Vatican’s precarious financial situation was revealed by the simultaneous publication in Rome of balance sheets for 2013 of the Holy See, of the Vatican City state, a separate entity, and of the Vatican bank, known officially as the Institute for Religious Works (IOR).

    The IOR moves money around the world to finance Catholic missions and provides banking services for the Pope, clergy and religious orders.

    Alongside the bank’s massive drop in profits, the Holy See, the administrative headquarters of the Church, ran up a deficit of 24.2milion euros (£19.2million) last year.

    However Vatican City state, the tiny sovereign enclave in the heart of Rome, which derives a large part of its income from tickets to the Vatican museums, reported a profit of 32.3million euros (£25.7milllion).

     

     

     

     

     

  • Unity Bank’s N39b rights issue, placement close today

    Application list for the 38.45 billion shares rights issue by Unity Bank Plc closes today, according to the extended offer period approved by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

    Shareholders of Unity Bank who have not completed the process of acceptance of their rights under the ongoing rights issue have till the close of business today to complete the acceptance, failure of which the shares would be treated as renounced shares.

    With the closure of application list, receiving agents are expected to begin the collation and submission of acceptance lists to the issuing houses.

    Unity Bank is undertaking a combined rights issue and private placement that will inject more than N39 billion into the operations of the bank.

    Unity Bank is raising N19.22 billion through a rights issue of 38.447 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each to existing shareholders at a price of 50 kobo each. The rights have been pre-allotted to shareholders on the register of the bank as at December 16, last year on the basis of one new share for one share held as at the closure date.

    The bank is also undertaking a private placement of 40 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each at 50 kobo each, bringing in additional N20 billion in new equity funds.

    The net proceeds of the new capital issues would be used for new branch development, upgrade of information and communication technology, human resource development, working capital and products and channel upgrade among others.

    Speaking on the new issue, managing director, Unity Bank, Mr. Henry Semenitari said the new issues would foster the current repositioning of the bank aimed at entrenching better service delivery and profitability.

    According to him, the net proceeds would be judiciously utilized to improve the bank’s processes, procedure and people and strengthen its overall framework to achieve impressive growth.

    “Our journey is very precise as an institution. There were two challenges to driving our growth strategy, one was capital and other was the right size and mixed of man power. On the issue of human capital, as you can see, that has been address. We have a new set of management with new executive directors and non-executive directors in place. On the aspect of capital, it has brought us this far, the importance of capital in business, beyond being regulatory as per capital adequacy, cannot be overemphasized; it is needed to drive the business. As you have seen in the prospectus, the utilisation of the proceeds clearly expressed what we are going to do with the funds,” Semenitari said.

    According to him, the bank is optimistic that it will raise all the funds and there could be over-subscription as some shareholders have started making deposits to take their rights.

    “The offer will be used judiciously to drive our business and we are going to be more prudent. It is a new dawn in Unity Bank. You can see this in our first quarter result. With the network in excess of 245 branches, our retail banking is on track. To be the retail banking of choice in five years, we are working along three parameter-small and medium enterprises (SMEs), agriculture and rural economy. Within SMEs, it involves personal banking and our growth strategy in term of deposit by the year 2016 is that 40 per cent of our deposit base will be in the hands of individuals, which is very sustainable deposit in our book coming from a public sector background. We can assure you that this is a reawakening as a bank,” Semenitari said.

    Unity Bank last week blazed the trails as the first quoted company to release its interim half-year report for the period ended June 30, 2014. Most analysts saw this move as part of efforts to bolster shareholders’ confidence in the bank.

    Key extracts of the six-month report showed that the bank grew profit before tax by 81 per cent to N7.898 billion in 2014 as against N4.355 billion recorded in comparable period of 2013. Profit after tax rose by 92 per cent to N7.11 billion from N3.70 billion while gross income inched up to N30.85 billion in 2014 as against N30.18 billion recorded in corresponding period of 2013.

  • Bank accused of contempt

    A firm General Telecom Plc has accused a first generation bank of alleged contempt of court.

    It initiated a contempt charge against the bank and the assignee to its mortgaged property at the Lagos State High Court, Ikeja.

    In the Form 48 (Notice of Consequence of Disobedience of Order of Court) filed before Justice Bola Okikiolu-Ighile, the plaintiff said the bank disobeyed a bench ruling delivered on April 30.

    The court had ordered all parties to maintain status quo over the purported sale of a property at 4, Marconi Road, Palmgrove Estate, Lagos. The firm said despite the order, the bank forcefully attempted to take possession of the property.

    The claimant said the bank and the assignee are still occupying the premises even after being served with the Form 48.

    The applicant added that the continuous act of aiding the bank and its assignee by the Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) Zonal CID to flout the order was a disregard of the authority of the court.

  • Dark clouds  gather over sale of Mainstreet Bank

    Dark clouds gather over sale of Mainstreet Bank

    The plan by the Assets Management Corporation of Nigeria, AMCON, which bought over bad loans by banks such as former Afribank Plc, (popularly known as Mainstreet Bank Limited, one of the bridged banks under its ownership), to divest its investment from the bank later this September, has set it on a collision course with shareholders and investors like Intangis Holdings, an American investment company believed to own majority shares in the bank. Intangis has since instituted litigation against AMCON in its quest to protect shareholders’ investments valued at over $1.4billion. Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf in this report examines the issues

    If the crisis brewing over the proposed sale of Mainstreet Bank Limited, one of the nationalised banks set up by the Assets Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) later this September is anything to go by, then it is correct to say that the planned sale may not become a done deal after all.

    Prelude to proposed sale drama

    It is instructive to note that AMCON had assured fairness in the planned sale of Mainstreet Bank even as it defended timelines for prospective bidders.

    Expectedly, the Corporation had selected reputable world-class firms, Barclays/Afrinvest Consortium and Banwo & Ighodalo, as financial and legal advisers, including the Central Bank of Nigeria, in the planned sale.

    AMCON’s Chief Communications Officer, Kayode Lambo, in a press statement recently in reaction to the reported investors’ concerns on the Corporation’s timelines for sale of Mainstreet Bank may not work, had countered such fears.

    According to Lambo, with regards to the on-going divestment exercise of Mainstreet Bank, interested bidders were only invited to submit their expression of interest within nine days of the publication of the invitation in the acquisition of AMCON’s shareholding in Mainstreet Bank Limited.

    The number of days required to submit an expression of interest, he said, is more than adequate for any serious buyer to respond with the required basic information of the entity interested to be admitted into the process, as well as their reasons and basis for the interest.

    AMCON further said that bidders at this stage are neither required to conduct any due diligence on Mainstreet Bank nor are they required to provide any indication of valuation or pricing.

    The information requested from bidders are simple and basic details about their company’s history, experience, ownership and other general information that will enable the advisers send further information to eligible investors.

    The sale of a bank, he said, is a standardised practice all over the world and at a latter stage, qualified bidders will have the opportunity to submit offers under a Request For Proposal (REP), and thereafter conduct due diligence exercise on the bank, which is expected to take a longer time.”

    Discordant tunes over planned sale

    AMCON’s assurances notwithstanding, shareholders raised objection over the planned sale of Mainstreet last May, saying they were not sold on the idea as well.

    Some major shareholders had kicked against what they called AMCONs hasty decision to sell Mainstreet Bank Limited.

    The group specifically kicked against the one-week notice given by AMCON to those who are interested in bidding for the bank to express their interest, a development seen to be grossly inadequate for any meaningful due diligence to be done on the bank.

    In advertorials in the media last early May, AMCON reportedly gave a week’s notice to interested parties in the acquisition of the bank to submit their Expression Of Interest (EOI) not later than May 16.

    To the parties, who asked not to be named so as not to jeopardise their interest, they said the “rush” by AMCON to push Mainstreet Bank through the divestment process without recognising the enormous work that needs to be done to ensure fairness and transparency in the eventual bid process, puts a question mark on AMCON’s intention.

    The group insisted that Mainstreet Bank Limited, Enterprise Bank Limited and Keystone Bank Limited are national assets, to which every Nigerian has a claim, insisting that all the processes leading to their sale, or privatisation at any material time must be done in such a manner that no one is seen to be excluded, either by way of withholding information, or restricting access to the process by not allowing sufficient time for qualified people to participate therein.

    Things fall apart

    Indication that things may have fallen apart irreversibly became apparent last Monday when Intangis Holdings, an American financial and investment company, raised dust over the planned sale of the Mainstreet Bank by AMCON, citing concerns over flouting of corporate governance procedures.

    Crux of the matter                    

    In a statement issued by Intangis, the firm noted that its decision to contest the planned sale of Mainstreet Bank Limited was to guide against possible cover ups by AMCON.

    In the statement which reads in part, the American firm recalled that: “This liquidation concluded between 5th and 8th August 2011 with total disregard to the rules of law, harmed all Afribank’s shareholders and creditors, including Intangis Holdings.”

    The firm explained that it referred the matter to the International Court of Arbitration, on the 29th of April, 2011, “which issued a preliminary decision in its favour in September, 2013 and took the view that Mainstreet Bank was party to the contract between Intangis Holdings and Afribank.”

    However, the firm said since that decision, AMCON has taken steps to divest from Mainstreet Bank, “while omitting to make provision as required by the international accounting rules (IFRS) for certain liabilities of the bank, estimated by Intangis Holdings at $1.4 billion.”

    Intangis Holdings, which did not indicate whether the $1.4billion is equivalent of its investment in Afribank, is insisting that AMCON complies with the international accounting rules enshrined in the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), pointing out that it reserves the right to commence legal proceedings to assert its rights.

    It said: “AMCON has broadened its mandate to the detriment of transparency and governance requirements that are essential in a global business world. Having referred the Mainstreet Bank (formerly Afribank) case to the International Court of Arbitration (ICC) in Paris, Intangis Holdings is contemplating legal action against AMCON.”

    The firm noted that AMCON has set a September 15th date for the sale of Mainstreet Bank, warning that, “if AMCON manages to sell Mainstreet Bank after having organised such a transaction and without ensuring proper reporting of the bank’s books, we would be dealing with a huge scandal. The banking group would be jeopardised, its customers endangered and its historic shareholders and creditors would suffer irreversible damages.”

    Reacting to Intangis Holdings claims, AMCON denied any wrong doing, saying its investment in Mainstreet Bank, has no linkage with Afribank.

    In a memo from Project DOS Advisers draft response to Intangis, AMCON explained that Intangis Holdings Limited recently wrote to AMCON’s advisers on the ongoing divestment by AMCON of its equity in Mainstreet Bank Limited, stating that AMCON is procuring a breach of Intangis’ rights under a Confidentiality and Non Circumvention Agreement (CNCA) dated 2 November, 2009 between Afribank and Intangis.

    In its defence, AMCON said it is not a party to any agreement with Intangis and that Mainstreet did not even exist at the time Intangis signed the CNCA with Afribank. It added that Mainstreet Bank was established following a special’ audit of the banking sector in which Afribank was found to be “in a grave situation” along with nine other banks.

    It said Afribank’s Board and Management was then replaced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) with a view to cleaning up the bank and repositioning it.

    “However when it became apparent that Afribank lacked the capacity and ability to recapitalise before the September 2011 deadline, CBN revoked Afribank’s license. Consequently, pursuant to Section 39 of the NDIC Act, the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) in consultation with CBN organised and incorporated three “bridge banks” including Mainstreet. A Purchase and Assumption Agreement was executed by NDIC (as the statutory transferor of Afribank) and Mainstreet, who purchased assets and assumed certain liabilities of Afribank. AMCON subsequently subscribed for shares of Mainstreet in 2011.

    Speaking exclusively with The Nation from his base in US, in an online interview over the weekend, Jean Missinhoun, Senior Partner, Intangis Holdings said it was determined to pursue the matter to a logical conclusion at the law court.

    A disincentive to investment

    Speaking with a cross-section of respondents who ventilated their views on the impasse involving AMCON and shareholders of Mainstreet Bank, they said matter-of-factly that if the details of the transaction are considered on its merit, AMCON may have taken the other parties for a ride.

    Firing the first salvo, Mr. Ibrahim Abdulmalik, a lawyer said, clearly there is a breach in the agreement, and AMCON could be liable if the case is proven beyond reasonable doubt.

    “Such disappointments may clearly be a disincentive to business. The crisis within Mainstreet Bank is a sad commentary on what is currently playing in the so-called nationalised bank set up by AMCON. I think the authorities need to review these cases with a view to dispensing justice”, he stressed.

    Echoing similar sentiments, a member of the shareholders’ association who asked not to be named because he is not authorized to speak on behalf of the group said many of the shareholders of the bridged banks are not happy with the way things have turned out.

    Short of blaming the Sanusi-led CBN governor for some of the trouble plaguing the nation’s financial sub-sector, the shareholder called for a re-orientation.

  • Bank of England names London Chinese currency clearing hub

    The Bank of England has appointed one of China’s “big four” banks as the Chinese currency clearing bank in London.

    The China Construction Bank will be the London renminbi clearing house.

    The appointment is part of a plan to make London a hub for Chinese currency dealing.

    Standard Life chair Sir Gerry Grimstone said renminbi trading is the most important issue facing the City of London at the moment.

    In March, the Bank of England signed a memorandum of understanding with the People’s Bank of China setting out the deal.

    The banks have said they want to encourage the cross-border use of renminbi, or yuan, to rebalance the global economy.

    Bank of England governor Mark Carney said the appointment was an “important milestone”, because the Chinese bank would “play a valuable role in facilitating greater use of the RMB (renminbi) for trade, investment and other economic activities in the UK”.

    Mr Grimstone, who chairs financial services trade body The CityUK and Standard Life, helped broker the memorandum.

    He said the deal could help to secure City jobs for decades.

    “We’re moving down a track very rapidly where London is going to become … the offshore centre for trading renminbi,” he told the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).

    Two-thirds of Chinese currency traded outside of China is already done in London, he added.

    On Tuesday, Prime Minister David Cameron announced that trade deals worth more than £14billion had been signed during a state visit by Chinese premier, Li Keqiang.

    Mr Li said the yuan clearing house deal “will further consolidate and promote London’s status as an international financial hub” and help “promote trade and investment liberalisation and facilitation”.

    During Mr Li’s visit, the London Stock Exchange (LSE) said that it had signed agreements with two of China’s biggest banks to develop UK renminbi trading.

    The LSE deal with the Bank of China will see the two firms design clearing and financing processes for financial products.