Tag: LOAN

  • NNPC seeks stakeholders’ support for $1.5b loan

    NNPC seeks stakeholders’ support for $1.5b loan

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has begun to engage stakeholders in its bid to secure a $1.5 billion loan to offset creditors’ debts..

    The Group Managing Director of the Corporation, Andrew Yakubu, while fielding questions, told reporters that the organisation needs the money badly to remain credit worthy, saying all stakeholders should endeavour to approve of it.

    Yakubu, who was in Lagos yesterday to inspect the vandalised NNPC pipeline at Arepo, said the corporation was very much indebted and has been discussing with the creditors over time on how to make repayment.

    The planned loan has been severely criticised by Nigerians, including members of the National Assembly and the Debt Management Office which said it was unaware of the loan arrangement. Yakubu, however said a lot of engagement is currently on-going to resolve the issue and secure public understanding.

    He said: “We are discussing. We have quite a lot of indebtedness and this has affected our credit rating. We have had a lot of meetings with the creditor. Arrangement have been put in place to resolve the issue through the current intervention we are about to embark upon. We are discussing with all stakeholders to let them understand that NNPC is taking the loan to solve its credit worthiness. We have been trying to be as open as possible on the issue.”

    The NNPC is currently working to obtain a $1.5 billion syndicated loan to enable it pay debts to its international fuel traders.

    The deal, according to reports, was struck at the end of last year. The loan which was brokered by Standard Chartered Bank, the report noted, will be provided by Nigerian and international banks.

    Currently, the NNPC lawyers and those of the creditor banks are looking at the terms of the transaction to tidy up the deal.

     

  • Senate queries alleged $1.5b NNPC loan

    The Senate yesterday said it was unaware of a $1.5billion (about N240billion) loan allegedly obtained by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to offset debts to international fuel marketers.

    The loan, according to reports was provided by some Nigerian and international banks and brokered by the Standard Chartered Bank.

    The NNPC is believed to have put up 15,000 barrels per day of its oil production as collateral for the facility which is to be repaid in over five and half years.

    Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe said the National Assembly did not approve the loan.

    Abaribe said: “Under the law, no government agency can borrow money without the approval of the National Assembly. We have to know if that was done first, but then the question to ask under the circumstance is, what happened to the N161billion supplementary appropriation that was approved by the National Assembly for government to take care of the shortfall in the fuel subsidy budget, particularly to ensure steady supply of petroleum products during the yuletide.”

    Again, Chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Senator Magnus Abe said there is no record of the deal before the Upper Chambers.

    Abe said the committee was still trying to confirm the loan from the authorities of the oil giant.

    He lamented that the committee has received several calls from Nigerians seeking to know whether the National Assembly approved the loan.

    Abe said: “As at this (yesterday) afternoon, there’s no record of the loan deal before us.

    “We are still trying to confirm the loan from NNPC.

    “The committee read about the loan deal on the pages of newspapers like other Nigerians and we have had concerned Nigerians calling to ask whether the National Assembly approved the loan.”

    Replying a question, the lawmaker said: “We have no record of such before us.”

    A financial expert who spoke on condition of anonymity said not all Federal Governments loans are supposed to be approved by the National Assembly.

    He said: “It depends on the type of loan. If it is a loan from the Paris Club and London it has to go through the National Assembly. “If it is a concessionary loan, it may or may not go through the National Assembly for approval.

    “But an investment loan may not require the endorsement of the National Assembly because the agency that obtained the loan must have worked out how to repay the loan.”

    He, however, added that since the corporation is the “cash cow” of the Federal Government and considering the volume of cash involved it ought to seek the approval of the National Assembly.

     

  • Imo agric firm gets loan

    Skye Bank Plc has provided funds for Imo Hill Farm as part of efforts to support agriculture in the country

    A statement from the lender said the initiative would help drive top-line performance and profitability, while at the same time minimising costs through low-cost deposits for the farmers

    The Imo Hill Farm, an integrated farm project in the Southwest, which covers poultry, piggery, feed mill and meat processing. It engages MP Farms, a German agric firm known as one of leading names in Europe, as its technical partners.

    MP Farms would help to oversee the management of the whole farm, with experienced managers in poultry and piggery management already hired to manage each division. The processing unit is to be run by top class professionals from Germany with over 20 years experience in meat processing and food technology.

    The bank cited the Imo Hill Farm as a case study of what it has been doing in recent times to ease access to finance to farmers and support them all through to meet the peculiarities of their operations.

    Executive Director, Corporate and Investment Banking, Skye Bank Plc Mr Timothy Oguntayo said the bank would focus on growing businesses that would develop into stable long-term banking relationships.

    He said the Agriculture Support Desk of the bank reinforces Skye Bank’s long-standing role as a key player in agricultural project financing with its portfolio in the agricultural sector covering the nooks and crannies of Nigeria.

    Oguntayo said the Imo Hill Farm would be a case study in agricultural innovation and livestock development in sub- Saharan Africa.

     

  • No to loan frenzy

    No to loan frenzy

    •National Assembly should stop external borrowing 

    For a Federal Government that has done little else than flash a dubious global record of lowest debt to GDP ratio to rationalise its unbridled appetite for loans, last week was a moment of truth-telling from Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.

    Venue was the Honorary International Investment Council (HIIC) conference in London. Subject was the mounting debt stock at a time of high crude prices. The CBN governor was unequivocal: At the current levels of foreign debts, and with the current trend, the nation stands in grave danger of relapse into debt peonage.

    His words: “we are borrowing more money today at a higher interest rate while leaving the heavy debt burden for our children and grandchildren”. The trend, he surmised, if unchecked, will lead to the mortgaging of the future of generations unborn”.

    For an individual regarded as being rather too outspoken for the demands of his conservative office, the immediate temptation is to dismiss his views with a wave of the hand. But that would be most unfortunate not just because of his role as head of the monetary policy committee, a role which makes his views authoritative, but also because of his membership of President Jonathan’s Economic Management Team.

    The fact of the matter is that Sanusi was merely echoing the opinions of majority of Nigerians on the issue of the bourgeoning debts. To ratchet up debts at a time of rising revenues is not only inexplicable, it is unconscionable.

    The arguments in favour of more foreign loans have remained as unconvincing and worn. The merit, we are told, lies in the fact that they are cheap and are of relatively long gestation. That may well be. But then, the issue of whether the loans are actually needed at all, or whether they can be well utilised is a completely different matter. The point bears restating that we are hard pressed to see the sense in stacking up debts at a time of record earnings in crude oil. What makes it more confounding is that this is happening at a time the nation is said to have built an impressive reserve in the excess crude account.

    Now seems the time to settle the question of what the Jonathan administration has done with the loans taken, particularly as it does not appear that many Nigerians can point to any on-going projects to justify the mountains of debts being stacked up in their name. The National Assembly can help in this regard by putting a moratorium on new loans while insisting on a comprehensive audit of the existing ones to establish how much value has been delivered.

    Obviously, the latest development is merely a symptom of how far the nation is from imbibing the lessons of its celebrated exit from the London and Paris Clubs of creditors in 2005/6. Six years after, Nigerians still struggle to find evidence that any lessons have been learnt. They find none. Whereas, in pre-2005/6, the creditor cartel was the London and Paris Clubs, in 2012, attention has shifted to the Chinese and the World Bank – more of the same.

    The same goes for fiscal discipline; very little has been learnt; evidence is one of unbearably incompetent government that cannot implement its capital budget –a mere 30 percent of the whole. Nigerians expect the Jonathan administration to deliver value; not in the loan frenzy.

     

  • Reps cut external loan by $1.9b

    •Okay $200m loan for Lagos

    THE House of Representatives has slashed the proposed borrowing profile of the Federal Government for 2013 by $1.9 billion.

    The lawmakers okayed the inclusion of Lagos State’s next tranche of $200million from a World Bank loan of $600 million in next year’s budget.

    President Goodluck Jonathan had sent a proposal of $7.9 billion, which was later reviewed upwards to $9.2 billion, but the House Committee on Loans, Aids and Debt Management, in its report on the external borrowing plan under the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) 2012-2014, pegged it at $7.3 billion for 2013.

    Chairman of the Committee Adeyinka Ajayi (ACN Osun) said there was no justification for not capturing the next tranche of the facility by the Federal Government in the MTEF and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP) 2013-2015 presented to the National Assembly by the Executive.

    Lagos State had accessed the first tranche of $200 million in 2010 while expecting the next tranche to be captured in 2011 budget but was not successful.

    However, at the consideration of the report of the Committee, the Federal Government was advised to capture the loan as it passed due process.

    Ajayi said the decision of the Committee was informed by the submission of the state and the World Bank.

    “Even the Ministry of Finance confirmed that Lagos can access the loan having complied with all the procedures and conditions. “It is the opinion of the Committee that Lagos is worthy of the loan and the facility be accommodated in the borrowing plan for 2013,” he said.

    The report also berated the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) for ignoring the invitation of the Committee to defend its borrowing plan while Yobe State also failed to make available the cost benefit analysis for a $120 million Islamic Development Bank loan facility.

    The lawmakers during the clause-by-clause consideration of the report, however, agreed to consult more on the recommendation concerning the status of the Bank of Industry and the NEXIM Bank.

    Four recommendations were, however deleted from the report before it was adopted.

     

     

  • Loan, not constitutional right – AMCON boss

    Loan, not constitutional right – AMCON boss

    Mr. Mustapha Chike-Obi, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON), a debt recovery vehicle set up by the Federal Government about one-and-half years ago to clean up the toxic loans in the banks, has been in the news in recent times. In this interview with Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf, Chike-Obi, who doesn’t suffer fools gladly, speaks on the raging controversy over the N141billion settlements to the corporation by business mogul, Femi Otedola, and also takes us through the activities of the corporation in the last 18 months or so vis-à-vis its challenges and prospects

    Could you respond to the raging controversy involving the N141 billion settlements made by Femi Otedola to AMCON in view of the nine-man committee set up by the Reps to probe the deal?

    I have a number of things to say about this whole drama from the House of Reps. First, I don’t like that it is called a deal. It is a normal settlement agreement that we had. I understand that the National Assembly has the responsibility to account to the people.

    But people look at this transaction and say all sorts of things. I only wish that the National Assembly had invited me to come and make presentation about the transaction in a closed briefing session. And if after that briefing, they were uncomfortable and had other questions, they should have made their queries known before people started making all kinds of insinuations about secrecy and all of that.

    Hopefully, I know they want to be informed, they want to ask question, but the words I’m hearing, “secrecy”, “unauthorised”, and so on, are unnecessary. As far as I’m concerned, we’re all different arms of government who are trying to do the same job. So, there is really no need for rancour of any sort. But if they want information about these transactions, we’re happy to share it anytime, any day.

    Otedola’s companies were among the 131 companies blacklisted by the CBN from taking further credits from banks due to their indebtedness. I think people are curious that the issue of Otedola’s settlement to AMCON came up just after the CBN directive…

    One thing I need to say is that this settlement with Femi Otedola had nothing to do with the CBN directive. We have been engaging with him for at least nine months. We had to value the assets and that takes time.

    We had to get different sets of valuers to value the assets. Then, we had board decisions; we had exco meetings, then board meetings. It was just a coincidence. If people are imputing that the settlements had something to do with the CBN directive, they are incorrect.

    It is just unfortunate that people are insinuating that these settlements had something to do with the CBN announcement. That’s not true.

    What I can tell you, however, is that there are people who have now approached us because of the CBN directive and that process will take anywhere from three to six months. I wish it was that easy to recover debts. He (Otedola) had court injunctions, we had to negotiate. So, it is a complicated matter. We had to negotiate, we got lawyers involved. But it is a changing list because people perform. And if they convince AMCON that they can pay, then we’ll write the CBN. And if the CBN agrees with AMCON’s recommendations, then only they can remove the person from the list. Bu the CBN doesn’t necessarily have to agree with AMCON.

    So, it is not an AMCON regulation. The purpose of the CBN directive, I must emphasise, is to prevent a bad situation from occurring again. So, we’re certain that if people that have demonstrated that they cannot pay are disallowed from the accessing credit, the banking system would be protected. That’s the objective. Nobody said let’s do this so that we can pay AMCON, no. They did it so that they can protect the banking system because we know these people brought the banking system to its knees and we need to be careful before we let them in again. So, it’s not about AMCON, we are well ahead of our projections.

    Besides Otedola, could you let us in on the other companies that have made efforts to clear their debts?

    (Laughs)…Nice try.

    It has been argued in some quarters that the CBN’s decision to cut off credit to debtors is an attempt to criminalise debts. What’s your view on that?

    Criminalise is the wrong word because nobody is pursuing anybody criminally and criminalising anybody. Having said that, what people have to understand is that there is no constitutional right to borrow money from the banks. If the banks decide to give you money, pay it. Most importantly, they have to consider that you can pay back that loan.

    Now, in other countries, they have something they call credit scores and if your credit score is below a certain amount, you cannot borrow from the banks anymore, whether as an individual or an institution.

    So, the notion that somebody who has demonstrated that they are unable to pay deserves further credit is absolutely wrong.

    In fact, all those debts that AMCON bought, the banks have been trying to recover them in the last two to three years or more. So, somebody who has demonstrated that he does not have the ability to pay up his debts, I think it is wise in order to avoid the crisis to not let them borrow more money so that they don’t create further problems down the road.

    So, this is a CBN prudential regulatory decision and we at AMCON supports it because we do not want a situation whereby five years down the road, there is another issue that somebody has to rescue a bank. We have said that the problem of toxic loans in the banks is over. But part of it is to ensure that the people that created the problems are watched carefully to make sure they don’t borrow more money. So, if somebody owes a bank, it is wise for the bank to say you owe us money that you have not paid, and therefore you cannot borrow more since you haven’t demonstrated the ability that you can pay. So, nobody is criminalising anything.

    Also tied to the issue of bankruptcy is the problem of the escalating rate which many borrowers are contending with. I think this is a major hurdle..

    I don’t know what point you’re trying to make. But if you don’t have enough resources as a business, the best thing to do is to increase your equity. I think this is a problem with most Nigerian businesses; most of them rely on debts to fund their businesses. At some point, it may become a problem to pay such debts. If you can’t pay back a loan, there is no need taking it in the first place.

    The facility is usually subject to going rates, no doubt. But you should plan your business and take decisions based on wise calculation of the risk involved.

    So, I’ll not be so quick to blame it on the banks and so on. The CBN in the last two years has made it clear that it will ensure price and exchange rate stability possible and in a predictable manner because it is only when inflation comes down that interest rates can also come down.

    You talked about credit rating earlier. We don’t have too many of these around apart from Augustus and co and so on. Is it that there are no opportunities available in credit rating?

    It is still developing in the country. It’s one step at a time. Credit agencies require some expertise, some investments and we have to have enough people that would be on ground. So, I think they’re developing. But I think that five years from now, credit agencies will become renowned in the country.

    Having said that, to what extent do you think credit rating agencies would help stabilise the financial sector?

    They would provide information that a prospective lender would use in making their lending decision. That I believe will ensure that the banks know the customers’ financial habits, his lifestyle, among others. Yes, credit rating agencies will help you make lending decisions but the banks are not supposed to rely on them completely. The banks would need to use other variables to reach a final decision.

    Still on knowing your customers, there have been cases where relationship managers of most banks hardly know their customers. Don’t you think this dereliction of duty by this category of bank staff is partly responsible for the crisis in the banking sector?

    AMCON’s job is clearly spelt out. So, when you talk about behaviour of bankers, that’s not our core, it’s more a matter for the CBN. We’re not a regulator. Much as I agree with you that the banks need to really know their customers, I think it’s the CBN that can do something about it. So, AMCON cannot tell the banks to know their customers better.

    But we can tell the CBN, that part of the problem we noticed with ABC is so and so, do something about it as a regulator.

    I know you have recovered over 500 loans. But could you bring our readers up to speed on the activities of your corporation in the last one and half years?

    Our work was in three stages. The first and immediate thing we had to do was to take out the nonperforming loans from the banks. The reason why we did that was because when banks have a high percentage of nonperforming loans, they cannot focus on their real business.

    So, we took out the nonperforming loans because capital was trapped in those loans. That was the first thing.

    The second thing is having taken out the non-performing loans, there was a need for capital in most of those banks.

    As far as we are concerned, no bank has more than five per cent of those debts.

    We needed to capitalise the bank because after they took the loans the bank recorded a lot of losses. Most of them were having negative capital. I really need to explain to the public what it means when a bank has a negative capital. It means that their assets are not enough to pay their liabilities. And the first liability that a bank must pay is the depositors. So, when you have a bank with negative capital, it means you can’t pay the depositors and if you can’t pay the depositors, then every other liability is legally extinguished. Because if you cannot pay the depositors then you certainly cannot pay the staff salaries, gratuities, can’t pay shareholders and you cannot pay anybody.

    So, everybody from the depositors was already wiped out. So when people complain and shout I just wonder.

    What AMCON did by recapitalising those banks from zero was to pay the depositors. AMCON’s legal obligation is to make sure a depositor must not lose money. So, we recapitalised those banks to ensure that when people get to the banks they can get their money back.

    The third and last stage is to manage all the assets that AMCON has now acquired, the properties, non-performing loans, in such a manner that we would make maximum resources in order to satisfy our obligations.

    So, now, we have become really what our name is, an asset management corporation. And our objective is to make sure that we have enough assets at the end of a period of time to pay every liability without taxpayers’ money.

    On the last point you made about taxpayers’ money, it is the view of some people out there that the corporation is being heavily funded through taxpayers’ fund. What is your take on that?

    It keeps amazing me that people talk about taxpayers’ money. The only taxpayers’ fund in AMCON was the statutory, budgeted expenditure of N10billion which was used as take-off grant for AMCON. When you’re talking of the obligation of N5trillion debts that we have, you’ll see that the N10billion is a very small amount. So, it always amazes me when people keep talking about taxpayers’ money. This country should not and does not have N5trillion to give AMCON.

    But what the government had done is to provide guarantee so that AMCON can realise money from the assets so that at the end of time, AMCON can have a way of paying back its obligations without spending taxpayers’ money. It has always been the plan and the plan is still on course.

    I’m aware that AMCON has recovered over 500 loans out of about 12,000 loans. What measures has AMCON put in place to recover the rest?

    We have recovered for restructuring about 500 loans. Now keep in mind that the top 1000 loans represent about 90 per cent of the obligation. The balances are smaller. So, when you say 500 loans, those loans represent about two thirds of all our outstanding.

    How would you assess AMCON’s loan recovery drive thus far?

    The record for recovering non-performing loans that we are aware of is the Malaysian model, which is about 54 percent. So far, we are averaging over 100 per cent. We recognise that easy loans are easy to recover. So, naturally, you do the easy ones first. But overtime, we will be able to get around the 100 per cent.

    But again, as I said, the best in the world, which is 54 per cent that we know about, is by Danaharta in Malaysia. So, we don’t want to blow any trumpet yet; we want to keep working hard. But our plan is for 70 per cent, that’s what we projected and the balance will come from the banks. But so far, we’re doing very well. But time will tell.

    What is the lifespan of AMCON? And if it does have a lifespan, what is the exit plan?

    AMCON does not have a lifespan. But AMCON, as I described it is a self-reducing organisation. We’re planning that this whole process should take up to 10 or 15 years. That’s our plan. In the best case, it could be 10 years but in the worse case 15years depending on how things work out. We hope to get smaller and smaller. But it’s useful to have an organisation that has a law and a body even if it’s one or 10 employees so that if there is any need to resuscitate AMCON, it will be easy. But it is a wise decision that AMCON does not have a terminal date. We’re planning this rescue operation; this phase will be almost finished or very small.

    On a lighter note, I know part of your brief is to go after debtors and all of that. If you’re not chasing after debtors, how do you unwind?

    (Laughs). My job is a fulltime one. My brief is to ensure that Nigerian banks are rescued from incidents of bad debts and all of that. And we’re working round the clock to ensure that this is achieved.

  • How banker ‘stole N23 b’ as  loans to firms, by EFCC

    How banker ‘stole N23 b’ as loans to firms, by EFCC

    A Lagos State High Court, Ikeja, yesterday heard how a former Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of Bank PHB Plc, Mr Ugo Anyanwu, authorised the transfer of N23billion of depositors’ funds to some accounts without their owners’ approval.

    An Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) investigator, Mr David Ikpe, said the beneficiaries of the transferred sums did not follow the due banking process of applying for a loan.

    Anyanwu is standing trial before Justice Lateefah Okunnu, along with a former Managing Director of BankPHB, Mr Francis Atuche and his wife, Elizabeth.
    The EFCC brought a 27-count charge bothering on alleged conspiracy to commit felony and stealing against them. It said they allegedly stole the bank’s N25.7 billion between November 2007 and April 2008. They denied the charges.

    According to the agency, the three conspired with one another to steal from the bank various sums of money, which were fraudulently described as loans to various companies, including Future View Securities, Extra Oil Limited, Resolution Trust and Investment Limited, Petosan Oil and Gas and Tradjek Nigeria Limited.

    Testifying at the trial yesterday, Ikpe said Anyanwu gave the instructions to other bank officials to make the transfers, using his position as CFO, adding that the transactions were “not normal.”

    His investigations, he said, revealed that some officers who were asked to make the transfers “raised eyebrows.”  He said a bank official, Ifetayo Obi, complained that “she never had the customer’s instruction to transfer these funds.”

    The witness said an official asked to make a transfer had written on the instruction document: ‘Customer Instruction Outstanding.’ “The conceptualisation and utility of the transfers were not normal. The beneficial owners ought to have applied and approval given. It was the impunity that characterised the banking sector in the past which brought us here,” Ikpe said.

    According to him, the owner of one of the companies to which funds were transferred, Peter Ololo, expressed “shock” when his name was published as being indebted to Bank PHB.

    “Ololo said he did not authorise the transfers. The transfers were made without the knowledge of the owner of the account,” the witness said, adding that Ololo was confronted as to why the accounts were debited.

    Ikpe, however, admitted that no particular unit of shares was traced to Anyanwu’s account, and that the phone numbers and signatures on the transfer documents were not all of defendant’s.

    He also said Anyanwu was not on the committee charged with granting loans, but insisted: “As the Chief Financial Officer, his role in authorising the payments is clear.”
    “The third defendant (Anyanwu) authorised the transfer of the N23billion,” he said. “That the third defendant ordered this transfer is not in doubt. I did not see these transactions as done in the normal course of banking transaction. I disagree that it was a normal transaction.”

    Ikpe also admitted that he did not find any query in respect of the transfers Anyanwu authorised. EFCC in the charge said the defendants allegedly converted N25.7 billion to their personal use to acquire hundreds of millions of units of shares, including 140,625,000 units of Bank PHB shares on behalf of Guesstrade Services.

    They also allegedly used over N1 billion, fraudulently described as a loan from the bank and converted it to their own personal use by using it to buy 112,500,000 units of BankPHB shares on behalf of Sebtron Trading.

    Other companies involved in the alleged multi-billion naira fraud are: Montrax Investico, Claremount Asset Management Limited, Arabian Probity Management, Clearville Business Support, Commercial Trading and Services Limited, Trenton Trade Limited, Stamford Global Concept Limited, Felimon Enterprises, Ghzali Yakubu Investment Limited and AFCO Associates Limited.

    Atuche, Elizabeth and Anyanwu pleaded not guilty to all the counts.