Tag: Performance

  • Revival of stage performance

    Revival of stage performance

    The palace of Olofa of Offa turned a temporary amphi theatre where some actors and actresses performed live recently.

    The ocassion made it a special day in Offa, Kwara State, as Chief Jimoh Aliu (Aworo), Pa Lere Paimo, Alhaji Abdulkareem Adepoju, a.k.a Baba Wande, Musiliu Dasofunjo (Jogunomi), Iya Ninwe, Sade Aliu and Bola Aliu, among others, staged a show tagged Ogbon Ju Agbara to appreciate the Olofa of Offa, Oba Mufutau Gbadamosi, Esuwoye II, for his contributions to the development of the ancient town.

    Aliu, who is set to mark his 55th year on stage, said he would do everything possible to revive the long-forgotten stage performance. He said the advent of home videos pushed stage performance off the scene. He recalled that fathers of the profession, such as the late Hubert Ogunde, the late Oyin Adejobi, Moses Olaiya (Baba Sala) cut their tooth with stage performance and also attained heights through the Alarinjo theatre.

    Olofa’s Media and Publicity Officer Mr Yusuf Babatunde said Kabiyesi always appreciated creativivity hence his handsome reward for the artistes.

    The Olofa blessed his subjects in the spirit of the celebration. He prayed for peace and progress for Offa community.

    Aliu appreciated the King for his numerous contributions to the development of Offa kingdom.

    “Your Majesty Sir! Some people are born great while others work themselves into greatness. When a boy is born, his destiny lies in the hand of the creator and little is known about him but he continues to strive despite all odds. When it is time for his star to shine, God will single him out and uplift him. God who has raised you up, for the benefit of your people will never let you down.

    “For Chief Jimoh Aliu to celebrate you today is a living example of your greatness. My name has been written in Gold across the globe, because I have, through the theatre arts taught people lessons of life. I have performed in this palace on several occasions, as a musician and dancer. For this community to have Kabiyesi on the throne is a blessing for the good people of Offa. The community has started noticing a very high degree of greatness even in this short time that you have ascended your father’s throne. Kabiyesi, the dividend of royalty is manifesting in Offa where you have turned farmland to streets, bushes into markets”

    Aliu started the make belief business 55 years ago, after his stewardship in Hubert Ogunde and Akin Ogungbe’s theatre groups. He has carved a niche for himself through performances that told Nigeria’s story, especially during the civil war, when the Nigeria Army employed him to perform in its various formations as a way of comic relief in the war situation.

    Other royal fathers, and High Chiefs at the fun fair include Olusan of Osan Ekiti; Afaji of Faaji, Osun State; Alaho of Ahoo Igbada and Onidun of Igboidun Kwara State. The national president of Offa Descendant Union Alhaji Hamzat Adedeji, his General Secretary Mrs A.W Macarthy; Chief Tayo Shittu; Alhaji Mustapha Olowogada as well as former council boss Alhaji Saheed Lekan Popoola.

     

  • ABS warns coaches, players against poor performance

    ABS warns coaches, players against poor performance

    The management of Abubakar Bukola Saraki (ABS) FC of Ilorin has warned its coaching crew and players to sit up or face the wrath of the club.

    The warning came just two days after the ‘Saraki Boys,’ as the team is fondly called by fans, suffered a 2-3 home defeat to Kano Pillars, the champions of Nigeria’s apex league.

    A statement by Alloy Chukwuemeka, the club’s General Manager, rated the performance of the team after five matches as “very poor and unacceptable’’.

    The statement charged the players and officials to see the challenge as a temporary setback and pleaded with their fans to be patient with the team.

    It, however, called for more prayers from the admirers of the only private club in the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL).

    ABS are placed 17th on the NPFL log with four points from five games, having won one match, drawn one and lost three.

  • Cadbury Nigeria: Steady performance

    Cadbury Nigeria Plc leveraged on economy of scale and tightened cost management in 2012 to cushion the adverse impact of a sluggish top-line, strengthening further performance outlook of the food and beverages company. After six years of non-declaration of any dividend, Cadbury Nigeria signall ed full recovery from the hangovers of its 2006 accounting scandal with the recommendation for distribution of about N1.6 billion to shareholders as cash dividends for the 2012 business year.

    Audited report and accounts of Cadbury Nigeria for the year ended December 31, 2012 showed marginal decline in sales, but improved cost and financing management squeezed out more profit than the previous year. Although tax provisions impinged on net earnings, underlying profitability ratios generally showed stronger performance.

    The company’s balance sheet indicated better financing and liquidity positions, which supported the overall performance outlook. With lower gearing ratio, improved liquidity, higher working capital and increased proportionate contribution of equity funds to total assets, amenable balance sheet structure moderated midline constraints that could have resulted from the lull in sales.

     

    Financing structure

    Total assets increased by 19 per cent to N40.16 billion in 2012 as against N33.66 billion in 2011. Non-current assets had increased marginally from N13.43 billion to N13.99 billion while current assets rose by 29 per cent from N20.23 billion to N26.17 billion. On the other hand, total liabilities rose by 18 per cent from N17.07 billion to N20.12 billion. While long-term liabilities steadied at about N3.2 billion, current liabilities increased by 22 per cent from N13.88 billion to N16.91 billion. The company’s paid up share capital remained unchanged at about N1.57 billion, consisting of about 3.13 billion ordinary shares of 50 kobo each. With about 55 per cent of net earnings flowed into the reserves, shareholders’ funds improved by 21 per cent to N20.04 billion compared with N16.59 billion recorded in the previous year.

    The underlying financing structure improved slightly in 2012. The proportion of equity funds to total assets inched up to 50 per cent in 2012 as against 49 per cent in 2011. Debt-to-equity ratio improved from 9.0 per cent to 7.5 per cent. However, current liabilities/total assets ratio stood at 42 per cent in 2012 as against 41 per cent in 2011. Long-term liabilities/total assets closed 2012 at 8.0 per cent as against 9.5 per cent in 2011.

     

    Efficiency

    Overall outlook appeared to suggest steady productivity and cost efficiency in 2012. Although there were no available data to determine actual unit cost per productive output at the press time, available extracts indicated little negative variance. Total cost of business, excluding financing charges, stood at 88.4 per cent of total sales in 2012, almost flat with 88.0 per cent recorded in 2011.

     

    Profitability

    The profit and loss performance showed a mixed-grill in 2012 as sluggish sales weighed in on overall performance. While the lull in sales constrained opportunity for wider profit growth, the company fell on cost and finance management to mitigate decline and steady the bottom-line. These played out variously in the outward profit and loss items and the underlying profitability ratios. While sales, gross profit and trading profit dipped to lower levels, gross profit margin and pre-tax profit margin showed improved cost efficiency and profitability.

    Gross profit margin inched up to 33.1 per cent in 2012 as against N32.7 per cent in 2011. Profit before tax margin also improved modestly from 14.8 per cent to 16.4 per cent. Both indices indicated that the company witnessed improvement in average profit per unit of sales, in spite of the decline in actual figures.

    Total sales dropped marginally by 1.6 per cent from N34.11 billion to N33.55 billion. Cost of sales also slumped to N22.45 billion from N22.95 billion. Gross profit flattened to N11.10 billion in 2012 as against 11.16 billion in 2011. Total operating expenses stood at N7.21 billion, some 1.8 per cent above N7.08 billion recorded in 2011. Trading profit thus dropped from N4.08 billion to N3.89 billion. With 67 per cent increase in non-core business income from N971 million to N1.62 billion, profit before tax heaved upward to N5.51 billion in 2012 compared with N5.05 billion in 2011. However, increase in tax provisions reversed net profit after tax by 5.9 per cent to N3.46 billion as against N3.67 billion in previous year.

    Per share analysis indicated earnings per share of N1.10 in 2012, a slight decrease from N1.17 recorded in 2012. The board of the company has recommended the distribution of some 45 per cent of net earnings as cash dividends to shareholders. Gross dividend of N1.57 billion would be distributed on the basis of 50 kobo per every ordinary share of 50 kobo each. Though current earnings yield and dividend yield appear relatively low, the recommendation suggests a recovery and represents substantial yield for long-term investors, such as those that picked up their rights during the last supplementary issue. Net assets per share also increased by 21 per cent from N5.30 to N6.40. The dividend cover of 2.20 times also represents substantial future payment potential. Underlying returns were however, generally lower. Return on total assets dropped from 15 per cent to 13.7 per cent while return on equity slipped from 22.1 per cent to 17.2 per cent.

     

    Liquidity

    The liquidity position of the company improved considerably during the period. Current ratio, which indicates the potential ability of the company to meet emerging liabilities, strengthened to 1.55 times in 2012 compared with 1.46 times in 2011. The proportion of working capital to sales also improved from 18.6 per cent to 27.6 per cent. Debtors/creditors ratio stood at 42.5 per cent as against 43.3 per cent.

     

    Governance and structures

    Incorporated in January 1965, Cadbury Nigeria Plc became a publicly quoted company in 1976. Mondelçz International, a global snacks company, holds the majority equity stake of 74.99 per cent in Cadbury Nigeria while thousands of Nigerian individual and institutional shareholders hold the remaining 25.01 per cent. The dogged foreign investors had increased its equity stake through acquisition of additional rights’ shares, which were not picked up by the Nigerian investors during the trying period of the food and beverages company. Mondelçz International has operations in 165 countries with total revenue of $35 billion in 2012. Mondelçz is listed in the Standard and Poor’s 500, NASDAQ 100 and Dow Jones Sustainability Index.

    The board and management of the company remained stable. Mr Atedo Peterside still chairs the board. Mr Emil Moskofian replaced Mr Alan Palmer as the managing director. Cadbury Nigeria complied with codes of corporate governance and best practices during the review period.

     

    Analyst’s opinion

    The board and management of Cadbury Nigeria clearly have their challenge cut out for them-to unfrozen the top-line while sustaining efficient cost management. The performance in 2012 still showed resilience and the company appeared to be in good stead to surmount the headline problem. With a relatively strong balance sheet, streamlined business that focused on optimal return and recent horizontal and vertical integrations, the intrinsic potential, just like the underlying profitability, tends to outweigh the negative. Besides jumpstarting sales, the recent absorption of its less-optimal subsidiary-Stanmark Cocoa Processing Company Limited and continuing integration of Cadbury Nigeria as the hub for Mondelez International’s African operations are expected to be catalysts for significant growths in the years ahead. Fast moving consumer goods multinationals tend to shadow one another in terms of investments and growth plans, and Cadbury Nigeria may witness further expansion in line with the competitive trend. Overall, there are reasonable basis to assume that Cadbury Nigeria may sustain its recovery.

     

  • ‘Obi’s performance will work for APGA’

    ‘Obi’s performance will work for APGA’

    All Progressives Grand Allinance (APGA) chieftain in Anambra State Chief Jude Emecheta has said the performance of Governor Peter Obi will play a pivotal role in the proposed November 16 governorship election in the state.

    Emecheta told reporters after attending a stakeholders’ meeting in Awka, the state capital, that the governor has added value to the party, assuring that the party will reap the benefits at the polls.

    The party chieftain said Obi, who is the APGA’s deputy leader, is eminently qualified to succeed the late Chukwuemeka Ojukwu as the party leader.

    He said: “Ojukwu remains the party’s spiritual leader while Obi is the physical leader of APGA in the absence of Ojukwu. By November 2013, a new APGA governor will emerge in the state to replace Obi, despite the gang up against the party.

    “Anybody saying that APGA has crisis in Anambra State will have himself to blame when the time comes because what happened last week during the rally to commemorate Ojukwu’s first remembrance was an eye opener.

    “Other parties still have the right to dream, but the works of Obi in Anambra State will do the campaigns for anybody who will succeed him. Right now, there is no strong party to compete with the APGA in Anambra. What is happening in the party is just pure restructuring; we need to inject fresh blood into the system.’’

    Emecheta clarified that Governor Obi has not endorsed anybody to replace him, contrary to the speculations. He assured that the governor will always insist on fairness and equity.

    It had been speculated that Governor Obi had endorsed the Minister of Aviation, mrs. Stella Oduah, as the APGA candidate. But Emecheta said that nobody, including Obi, has notified the party about any endorsement.

    He stressed:“Obi has not endorsed Oduah for the election. We have not been told. I do not believe it is true. Oduah is a PDP member and the governor is in APGA. If our governor should endorse anybody, the person should be a member of APGA and not any other party. I believe it is one of such rumours again”.

     

  • Nigeria vs Cape Verde fallout: Eagles’ performance bad for African football — Onigbinde

    Nigeria vs Cape Verde fallout: Eagles’ performance bad for African football — Onigbinde

    Former Super Eagles Head Coach Adegboye Onigbinde has said that the Super Eagles’performance against Cape Verde tells a bad story about African football. Onigbinde told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in a telephone interview on Thursday in Abuja that there was a need for the technical crew to improve on the team. The former Super Eagles handler was reacting to the team’s 0-0 draw against Nations Cup debutant, Cape Verde, in an international friendly match on Wednesday.

    NAN recalls that in their first friendly match on Jan. 3 in Spain, the Eagles held a star-studded Catalonia to a 1-1 draw. The two matches were part of the team’s build up for the 2013 African Cup of Nations (AFCON) scheduled to hold in South Africa from Jan. 19 to Feb. 10. Nigeria is one of the 16 teams participating in the tournament.

    “I did not see any exciting moment throughout the ninety minutes of the game and that tells a bad story about African football.

    “But I hope the technical crew will work on the team and make them improve,’’ he said. Onigbinde, who is a renowned CAF and FIFA instructor, added that the team’s performance against Catalonia was a fluke and should not be used to assess it.

    “The match we played against Catalonia was a fluke. Fluke in the sense that all those stars paraded in the opponent’s side had another match for their club the following day.

    “So, they did not come out and play with full zeal which we saw on the pitch; we shouldn’t use the match as an assessment of our team in anyway,’’ he said. He, however, expressed the hope that the team would lift the trophy. “My expectation of the team as a patriotic Nigerian is that I am waiting for them to come back with the trophy.

    “But I know it does not come with magic nor by talk, but by hard work, and that depends on what the coaches do with the team,’’ Onigbinde said.

    Reacting to the 23-man final list released by Coach Stephen Keshi, Onigbinde said the coach had the exclusive right for the choice he made.

    “He is in charge of the team and he has the exclusive rights to make the selection of players he feels will be needed. Also, he is the only one that knows the system he wants the players to play and I am sure he made his selection based on that. So, the only thing left is for the technical team to ensure that the players deliver and not fall short of expectations,’’ he said.

  • Cleric hails Aregbesola on performance

    The General Evangelist of the Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) worldwide, Prophet Samuel Abiara, has hailed the achievements of the Osun State Governor Rauf Aregbesola administration in the last two years.

    Abiara spoke yesterday at the Government House in Osogbo, the state capital, when he visited the governor.

    He said the achievements of the Aregbesola administration should be celeberated by all Nigerians, regardless of political affiliation.

    Abiara said the administration has built roads, created jobs through the Osun Youth Empowerment Scheme (OYES) and maintained a clean environment, among others.

    The cleric, who hails from Erinmo, said the administration’s social security scheme for the elderly is “reminiscent of what Christ lived for, which is to show compassion to the people”.

    He said: “I have come to say hello and thank you for the good work you have been doing. The general cleaning of the expressway, the environmental cleaning in the state, the road constructions, employment opportunities and all the wonderful things done by your administration are worthy of commendation.

    “A lot of people have been praising your administrative style and achievements. My visit is to greet you on the Christmas celebration and thank you for what you have been doing for the people.

    “Christ left a legacy of good work, which people still talk about today. I believe the good works you have embarked upon are also legacies that will remain after your tenure expires.”

    Aregbesola said the birth of Jesus Christ preaches love, compassion and sacrifice, adding that anyone who aspires to be like the Messiah must live a Christ-like life.

    He said: “Christ came to demonstrate the undiluted love of God for humanity. Christ came to demonstrate compassion and sacrifice. So when we mark Christmas, we are celebrating love, compassion and sacrifice.”

    On the urban renewal programme of his administration, the governor urged those whose property were demolished not to see it as an attempt to punish them, but as a sacrifice that must be made to improve the state.

  • Talk without tactics; Judicial Performance Record; Emergency electric power; Split road contracts into 10

    Talk without tactics; Judicial Performance Record; Emergency electric power; Split road contracts into 10

    Road officials nationwide should operate 7am to 9pm even on Sundays at every jammed junction.

    Warning about newspaper articles: ‘Agreement without action’, ‘words without work’ and ‘talk without tactics’ are worthless. Those who love Nigeria must take action –like NGOs on the ‘First $12.5b Gulf Oil Windfall’ where their court case was thrown out perhaps for lack of jurisdiction or time lapse or even that the NGOs ‘lack authority to represent the people’. But has the money expired? Has a NGO no right to enquire about the common wealth? More NGOS should follow this lead. Unfortunately the government lawyer relished the moment publically but the moral shoe is on the other foot. Millions of Nigerians wept watching him boasting as yet another opportunity to expose the truth was thwarted ‘legally’. The war against corruption has not started. Judges know they could die without being remembered for ‘moral judgements’ unlike UK’s Lord Denning and Nigeria’s Justice Kayode Eso.

    Eventually the judiciary must learn courage or face ridicule and ‘watchdog’ judicial enquiry. In fact a compulsory monthly updated computer-based ‘Magistrates and Judges Performance Record’ for evidence-based keeping track of ‘sick leaves’, injunctions, adjournments, no shows, wrong jurisdiction courts and technicalities, adjournments, case length, judgements and reversals on Appeal should be created by the Judicial Council or NGOS. Such a performance record will paradoxically help protect judges from corruption pressure. Is it not amazing that from infamous Pol Pot to Pinochet to today, the excuse of ‘sickness’ ridicules the judicial process as an excuse for ‘alternative’ incarceration in VIP hospital or hotel instead of a prison cell? Their dead and murdered victims had no ‘sick-off’ to avoid execution.

    Nigeria should be in a hurry to right the wrongs of decades of incompetent rulership. The pain of a pothole is when it is filled and you remember the needless suffering from rubbish road works. The pain of electricity powerlessness is when you visit those with 24 hour power and discover they are black like you and do not have two heads or a generator at home, office and everywhere.

    Job creation means work in building the 14,000,000 Nigerian homes. Japan replaced all power losses from its shutdown nuclear plant within 3 months using known international emergency electricity companies. Japanese did not starve of power while awaiting a new power station. Nigeria’s multi-billion budget for publically funded generators, fuel and maintenance charges could be better spent on cheaper, large scale, emergency power pending ‘the final solution to power problems’ –the IPPs. So let us remove generators, fuel and maintenance items, except for hospitals, from all government budgets, offices and homes from the presidency, politicians and public officials and PHCN staff. If we do this from Jan 1st 2013 power will ‘flow’. Power is an emergency and a right, not a dividend of democracy. To put our 100,000MW pathetic political power failure in perspective, every single Nigerian from barber to baker to banker would be 10-30% better off financially if power was constant. They would be able to invest in and increase non-oil business and employment by 10-30%. Of course the petroleum billionaires would be 40-50% poorer if Nigeria’s generators dry up as fuel consumption would go down. Hurray!

    A 300 Level undergraduate of Political Science told me today that they have never analysed current affairs in class. It is time for curriculum change to include ‘Application of Today’s Lecture to World and Local Events’. Undergraduates in every discipline need a lecturer guided/ student space to discuss and research Nigeria’s pathetic state every day.

    Potholes are filled year round in countries like Thailand with monsoon rainy season. Nigerian roads are mysteriously abandoned during ‘rainy season’ –disgracing Nigerian professionals. Nigeria must fill potholes 365 days a year and work day and night during the dry season.

    Teachers should teach NASS and government an old mathematical puzzle – ‘If it takes one farmer 10 days to plough a field, how long would it take 10 farmers to do the same field? Answer ‘One day’. So why does Nigeria not divide all roads into sections of 10-20km for 5 or 10 contractors? Road mega-contracts have failed Nigeria, creating 1 or 2 billionaires and millions of road sufferers and failed projects nationwide. A country is not made great by billionaires but by its other classes. Multiple small contracts will produce a quick execution of contracts, healthy rivalry, competitive quotations, more happy contractor families, more spread of wealth, 10 times the employment, fewer exclusive yachts and private jets. Governments must initiate a ‘Split Contract Policy’ of ‘Prove why the contract should not be split’.

    CBN governor Sanusi’s comments about workers reduction require dispassionate thought. The origin of our recent financial problems is the excesses of the NASS ‘Salaries And Perks’ precipitating the ‘Second Nigerian SAP programme’ after Babangida’s First SAP programme. This caused a backlash of supersalary demands among other political appointees, civil servants and states and LGAs. The CBN could deliberately improve the naira at say N1/month over 4 years and bring down the 12% interbank interest rates and the 21-25% bank interest rate. This would have reducing the cost of living. Nigeria is eating its own hands. To save the economy, put politicians on a sitting part-time allowance and target strategies for a naira of N120: $1 by 2015. Strengthening the naira will empower salary earners, create jobs, wealth and halve the number of Nigerians living on $1/day.

     

  • ‘Union Bank now performance-oriented’

    ‘Union Bank now performance-oriented’

    She came, she saw and she conquered. This line best describes the success story of the immediate past Group Managing Director of Union Bank of Nigeria Plc, Mrs Funke Osibodu. She was one of the turnaround managers hired by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in August 2009 to rescue some lenders that posed a threat to the financial system, after eroding their capital. From the outset, Mrs Osibodu’s role (to stabilise and retain the identity and name of the bank) was clear. Mrs Osibodu, the last ‘man’ standing, who  held sway until last Wednesday, was mandated to fix three issues weighing down the 95-year-old lender: corporate governance, negative capital and liquidity crisis. It was not an easy task as she had to contend with sceptical shareholders, pensioners, employees, brokers and other stakeholders. In this interview with journalists in Lagos, she speaks on her three-year tenure. The Nation’s Group Business Editor, AYODELE AMINU was there.

     

    Since October 2009 when you came to Union Bank, what has been your experience trying to revamp the bank? Considering that a lot of people had come and gone, what made you the last ‘man’ standing in view of the fact that you have been able to achieve the mandate given to you by the CBN? What has kept you going over the years?

    I would say that I am not the last ‘man’ standing. I thought that Union Bank was the last man standing. I think Union Bank has been a very, very interesting institution, though tough to work for. Union Bank, you know, is an institution that has a very rich heritage in terms of relationships and people. There are many stakeholders with their various angles. I believe these were what kept me this long. What the CBN Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, asked us to do was to stabilise the institution and move it to a new home; in other words, get investors to participate. My stay in Union Bank couldn’t have been shorter because the Board from day one took a decision that Union Bank must stand on its feet again. From that perspective, we opted to look for investors who will ensure that, going forward, some of the things we had in the past will not take place again. As you already know, we have core investors called Union Global Partners Limited. But what is unique about them is that they are largely foreign investors who bring strong corporate governance and international exposure to the bank.  As you know, even externally, they have been making their own public announcements about their involvement with the bank; i.e., some of the members of Union Global Partners who have invested in Union Bank. When you bring international players who are foreign into the Nigerian environment, their time frame is not necessarily fast. And two, the methodology we used was different from that of the other intervened banks. It was such that it required careful process, lots of due diligence and regulatory approvals. So, while we wanted it faster, we couldn’t get it faster.As you also know, we had closed and concluded the recapitalisation process long before now. Again, to ensure smooth transition, I had to stay and be part of the new board. The new board started in February, this year. We had to make sure that there is a new executive. It was also important to make sure that when I leave, it is not all of us (executives) leaving, so that there is continuity. And as you know, three of the former executives – Executive Director, Commercial Banking (North) and Public Sector, Alhaji Ibrahim Kwargana, Executive Director, Commercial and Retail Banking (South), Mr Kunle Adeosun and Executive Director, Corporate Banking and Treasury are staying behind as part of the process of making sure that the transition is smooth and two new executives will join them. One of them has commenced and she is Executive Director Finance, Mrs. Oyinkan Adewale.  The other one will not be able to join the bank until sometime next year. With that, the bank will have a completely effective executive team. We have everything planned out to ensure that with the change in baton, the transition is smooth.

    Sometimes when I read some of the reports in the newspapers that are speculations, it gives me the energy to say that I will stay and prove to them that the information is not correct. But most of the time there are positive reports in the press in terms of celebrating what we’ve done so far. The change we (Union Bank) went through has been very significant. You remember, at some point when we needed shareholders to agree to what we were doing, we needed staff and shareholders to work together. That was one point where I saw the real strength of Union Bank. We had staff, pensioners; and shareholders all working together to make sure Union Bank remains the last man standing. Generally, there were so many things in bits and pieces that ensured that we (my team) were successful.

    It’s been a long story from 2009, bringing the bank back from tatters. We would like to have some performance indicators. When you met this bank, what were the indicators?

    Well, I will talk in general not very, very specific term. As you know, when I came in there were three things wrong: corporate governance, negative capital and liquidity crisis. Today, from the liquidity perspective, I think within the first three months we dealt with the liquidity crisis. Our liquidity ratio has moved from below 20 per cent to between 80 and 90 per cent. This is very positive as the minimum statutory liquidity ratio is 30 per cent. And we are leaving it far higher and above the statutory minimum. The major portion of this came from the new capital that came in and the loans we sold to the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON).

    On negative capital, I think at our peak level, our shareholders’ fund was negative, somewhere around N378 billion negative; in other words, we were in such a deep hole, and as you said, nobody would touch us and even at that point, existing shareholders technically abandoned their bank. Today, we have positive capital of N190 billion, so we moved from N378 billion negative to N190 billion positive – that is over N570 billion positive. That was something that took quite a lot of work by all us and we are reaping the gain today.

    On the corporate governance side, you remember, the corporate governance issue was that everybody was doing his own thing and there were so many things we (Union Bank) had done and were still doing wrongly.A number of these have been corrected using best practice as our guideline. Standards have been set and are monitored. I think the example I usually use is that when you go into an old woman’s house (Union Bank is 95 years old now), you are bound to find a lot of cobwebs and junks because she will not throw away many things that are no longer useful or relevant away easily. Even though the sitting room may look okay, it is only when the children and grandchildren go into her bedroom and forcibly clean up the bedroom that a new and modern environment is formed. Our job when we were brought in by the CBN was to go in and clean out those cobwebs. I believe we’ve done a reasonable job. There are many things we have cleared up. Remember that I used to say we had un-reconciled accounts of over N3 trillion, today our un-reconciled accounts is in hundreds of millions not even billions. We had an army of over 150 people that worked day and night and they are still working and cleaning it up. So, that’s part of the cobwebs that we were cleaning up. We also had bad loans, which we sold to AMCON. We wrote off some, renegotiated some.We now have a department called portfolio management and part of their job is to manage and monitor those bad loans in such a way that we still resolve them. We only have those that are in very small bits, nothing substantial anymore in terms of bad loans. So, we have a relatively clean book. It means that our loan portfolio reduced from somewhere around N700 billion to around N200 billion.  When you look at our balance sheet, it is small but very clean. All the things clustering us are gone. It’s now for us to build on it.

    More importantly, some of you are our customers. People used to say, that Union Bank is for the old senior citizens. The young man cannot have an account or work in Union Bank. Even the young man will say: “That it is the bank of my father or the bank of my grandfather; they took me there in those days.” But there is good news for you. We have an army of young people that we recruited over the last three years now working in the bank. As at the last count, they were about 1,000-man army. I had what we call a congress with some of them (600 people) about two weeks ago. We gathered all of them into one big canopy hall, somewhere in Victoria Island and we had our own mini- rally. It was interesting, the energy I saw in that group and the testimonies in terms of their experience in Union Bank. So, we have this strong army that is taking over Union Bank. The way we describe ourselves is that we now have energy and experience in the new Union Bank. The young 1,000 people recruited over the last three years have the necessary energy for the future of Union Bank.The older people like us have the necessary experience, which will ensure that we learn from our experience and mistakes. And with that, we can’t go wrong because when the experience tells you this is what we have to do, the energy takes over and moves very fast.

    So, many things have changed. When you look at customer service, even though we will not say that we have got to where we should be, quite a number of our customers are surprised at the good quality and responsive service that they now receive from our staff. When customers come into our branches, we attend to them fast. We had many of our branches looking very, very run down and we are working round the clock to revamp them. We have changed 75 out of about 300, all of them are wearing a new look.The one on Oba Akran, Ikeja, Lagos is a good example of our new look. So, those are some of  the changes that I am leaving behind and what I will call the foundation to move to the next level.

    Finally, the third issue of inadequate capital was sorted out through the combined help of AMCON and the new core investors – Union Global Partners Limited (UGPL).

    What is your projection in the next one year? What should the shareholders and the customers expect in the next one year? Secondly, banking is now Information Technology (IT) driven. Where is Union Bank in terms of technology?

    I want to start from the last one. As you know, just as it happened with the intervened banks, when we came in, some of our customers came to withdraw their money from the bank. Our staff were trying to pacify them, to stop them but I said no, allow them to take their money in spite of the fact that you are shaking. You know even the Iroko tree can shake when the wind is very strong but that does not remove the fact that it is an Iroko tree. So, we said that we (Union Bank) will show them that we are still big, strong and reliable. Let them take their money and they did. But within a short while, they returned. And this is very, very important. In the last three years, our savings account has continued to grow, not going down and our current account has also continued to increase. Now those two (savings and current accounts) are very strong marks of confidence. It is largely from our retail network. That is from our entire branch network. That rural banking, you call it rural, I call it retail because there is nowhere that is rural anymore; there is no where you cannot reach with technology today. Those locations became the bedrock of savings and deposit accounts. These customers are so strongly committed to Union Bank. We continue to hear from these customers: “this is my bank and am not moving anywhere and there is nothing going to happen to it.” So, in the area of continuous growth in confidence and bonding from our customers, we believe that we are still big, strong and reliable. We do not have any serious issue.

    On technology, for some of us that have been in the bank before we joined, while we had computers, several people did not know how to use the computers or the technology. Today, everybody is technology compliant. We did not have to buy anything new. We had all the technology internally. All we had to do was to turn them on. When it comes to banking using technology, we had everything –whether it is telephone or mobile banking, whether it is internet banking, the facilities existed in-house but were not utilised.Even in the latest cash-less initiative and the Point of Sales (POS), we became number one out of all the banks in terms of active POS utilisation. I never dreamt that we will get to be number one in active POS. In other words, our customers use our machines and they will only use your machines if you educated them well, and you are making sure that those machines work. We are becoming very effective in technology utilisation.

    For mobile banking and internet banking, again, we didn’t need to buy anything new; we had them. All we need was to open them up for our customers to use them and get our staff to appreciate and start using them, so whether it is using technology to transfer money from one account to the other, whether it is going on line using your computer to move money, we do all that. We used to have a very low number of cards that we issued to our customers, now that is a thing of the past. Somebody was saying that before when he requested for ATM cards from Union Bank, at times if we are very fast, it might take you two or three months to get it,  at times it might even take you up to six months. Today, the maximum is 10 days. We are working on turning it around to make it 48 hours. Even to collect cheque book from the bank, it used to take a long time.Now if you want a cheque book you get it by latest the next day. So, a lot of things have changed and are still changing on that technology side. We even have the technology where you can use your Naira ATM card to withdraw money abroad, which we will soon be activating.

    So, what I am highlighting to you is that the ‘big, strong, and reliable’ bank is not only back but much better. Our stallion brand remains very strong and resilient. Within the first month in office after I resumed in Union Bank, I went to Abuja to see a customer. The security man at the entrance called me big, strong and reliable, merely by looking at me. He saw the way I looked at him surprised and he just pointed at my stallion lapel pin. That is how strong our brand is. Our marketing and advertising communication campaign now has the line: “We have only just begun.” This is to mark the commencement of a new beginning and a new phase for Union Bank. We are no longer an old institution but a young and vibrant institution.

    When you look at our published performance as at June 2012, we exceeded our budget and market expectations. We expect we will continue to exceed our budget going forward. We have laid the foundation, it is time to build. As you know, laying a good foundation of any house is critical and often is not easily noticed. Now that we have put the pillars, the bank is ready to move fast.

    When will the new Group Managing Director resume?

    The new GMD will officially take over on the 1st of November, that is, Thursday (last week). We’ve been working together and even tomorrow (Tuesday) again we’ll be working together so as to make sure that the handover of baton is smooth and effective. Thereafter, I will take my accumulated leave but will always be available for any clarification. Someone was telling me that I am looking relaxed. It’s just the thought of the leave that I am about embarking on. This would allow me an opportunity to ‘let my hair down’ after these years! The thought is enough to relax me.  So, in the initial period I’ll just take that leave, travel and then come back.

    You said you are going on leave and after a while you’ll come back. Could you be more explicit?

    I did not say after a while I’m coming back to Union Bank. This is why it is very useful to have an interactive session. What I said was that I will be proceeding on leave. I will be taking my accumulated leave and come back to Nigeria after that. Technically, I am still a staff member of Union Bank till the end of December. I was talking about transition with the new chief executive; we’ve been exchanging information for a while in order to ensure a smooth transition.For the next two days (last Tuesday and Wednesday), we will be working together and when I leave if there are things that are unfinished, that I need to clear, I will be coming in to sort them out, so I am not returning to Union Bank. I’ll just be performing my duty as a staff of Union Bank.

    I know initially you had this problem with the staff, especially the retired ones. What is the situation now? And, again, are you satisfied with what you have done in Union Bank?

    First on the retired staff, it was an issue that I met on ground. We had a situation where there were so many things done wrongly in the past. We had staff that had issues on whether they were exited on retirement or retrenchment. We had retired staff who said their benefits had not been paid for quite a while and some who had issues with the timing of the commencement of payment of their retirement benefit. We had over 2,000 ex-staff affected, with very many cases in court, and picketing being the order of the day. What we’ve done over the last three years, is to streamline all the issues and start paying those who have genuine issues. I am happy to say that substantially, we have resolved all these issues. On those who had issues on if they were retired or on retrenchment, we reached an out-of-court settlement.

    We are now more performance oriented, and we are accordingly rewarded; so everybody is aligned to work for the shareholders and the stakeholders. This bank has a new orientation. I think we now have a major culture change as a result of the measures we have introduced.

  • ‘Performance ‘ll swing poll in our favour’

    An opinion poll has shown that the Action Congress of Nigeria’s (ACN’s) candidate, Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN), will win Saturday’s election because of his performances in the positions he has held.

    The poll, which was released yesterday, was conducted by Nigeria Gallop Poll Watch (NGPW) in association with Track Pool Ltd. UK between August 13 and October 4.

    The prevailing factors that will decide the winner of the poll, after an analysis of the respondents’ voting pattern, showed that 30 per cent electorate will vote for “performance both in and outside government,” while 20 per cent will vote for “candidate’s personality.”

    Other factors listed in the voting pattern included party loyalty (18 %), candidate manifesto and programmes (17%), external influence (8%) and ethnic consideration (3%).

    The result showed that 40.28 per cent of the 5,000 respondents sampled across the 18 local governments want the ACN candidate as their next governor, mainly because of his track record and personality.

    Akeredolu is the only Nigerian to have held the position of the Nigeria Bar Association president for two consecutive tenure, during which the Bar flourished as a credible defender of democracy and human rights.

    The result ranked the Labour Party’s candidate, Dr. Olusegun Mimiko, second with 24.84 per cent and the Peoples Democratic Party’s candidate, Chief Olusola Oke, ranked third with 22.84 percent.

    The sampling comprised a balanced mix of respondents from the three senatorial districts in the state, with the central, south, and north senatorial districts having 43.2, 30.6 and 26.2 percentage representation.

    The respondents comprised 250 senior citizens, 400 academicians and 4,350 residents of different wards.