Tag: SKYE BANK

  • EFCC’s allegations against me ‘weighty’, says Patience Jonathan

    Former First Lady Dame Patience Jonathan Wednesday urged the Federal High Court in Lagos for time to respond to “weighty” allegations against her by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    Justice Mojisola Olatoregun, on April 26, 2017, ordered the temporary forfeiture of $5.7million and N2, 421,953,522.78 allegedly belonging to Mrs. Jonathan.

    The judge made the order based on an ex-parte application by the EFCC.

    The commission said the N2.4billion was found in an Ecobank Nigeria Ltd account numbered 2022000760 in the name of La Wari Furniture and Baths Ltd.

    Following the temporary forfeiture, Mrs. Jonathan, through her lawyers Chief Ifedayo Adedipe (SAN) and Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN), appealed.

    The Court of Appeal, last January 12, upheld the temporary forfeiture.

    Dissatisfied, Mrs. Jonathan appealed to the Supreme Court.

    The Supreme Court, on March 15, affirmed the Court of Appeal judgment.

    It directed the appellant to return to before Justice Olatoregun to show cause why the money should not be permanently forfeited to the Federal Government.

    The Supreme Court also rejected her prayer to strike down the provisions of Section 17 of the Advance Fee Fraud Act, which EFCC relied on in securing the forfeiture.

    Wednesday, EFCC’s lawyer Rotimi Oyedepo said he received two affidavits from Ozekhome on April 29.

    One of them, he said, is a counter-affidavit to the motion on notice for final forfeiture; the other is a further affidavit.

    He said EFCC filed and served its reply to the SAN’s motions on Tuesday.

    Responding, Ozekhome said: “We got their affidavit at 5.5pm on Tuesday. A plethora of exhibits were attached. Their affidavit is replete with new facts.

    Read Also: EFCC, Patience Jonathan get new date in forfeiture case

    “These are facts that are weighty, so weighty that they require us to respond. We don’t want any of their facts to be deemed admitted because we did not respond.

    “I was served with a bulky document which has things that were not part of the original application.

    “I’m only saying that in the interest of justice, we need to react to those issues raised.”

    Adedipe said he had no objections to Ozekhome’s request for an adjournment.

    Granting the adjournment, Justice Olatoregun said there must be an end to litigation.

    “I hope parties realise that there must be an end to backward and forward filing of applications,” she said.

    In an affidavit in support of the ex-parte originating summons, an EFCC operative, Musbahu Yahaha Abubakar, said Mrs Jonathan opened the Skye Bank account on February 7, 2013.

    “Upon the opening of the account, several huge cash deposits in dollars were made to the account.

    “One Dudafa Waripamo Owei who was the Senior Special Assistant to the former President was one of the frequent depositors in the account.

    “Another frequent cash depositor of funds reasonably suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activities into the account is one Festus Iyoha, a steward at the State House, Abuja,” the deponent said.

    The EFCC investigator said Iyoha also made deposits with fictitious names.

    Abubakar said between February 8, 2013 and January 30, 2015, $6,791,599.64 suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activities was deposited into the account in cash.

    He said Mrs Jonathan dissipated part of the funds, leaving a balance of $5,731,173.55.

    “If this fund is not forfeited in the interim, the operator of the account, Mrs. Dame Patience Jonathan, will fully dissipate it,” the investigator said.

    On the N2.4billion, the operative said the commission also traced the money to the Ecobank account following suspicions that it was a proceed of crime.

    He said the “purported” signatory to the account was one Ada Ifegbu, with a telephone number belonging to one Esther Oba.

    The EFCC operative said the N2.4billion “was substantially the naira equivalent of the United States Dollars given to one Chima Nwafor John of Ecobank Nigeria Ltd by one Esther Oba at the Aso Rock Villa.”

    He said it was John who contracted bureau de change operators to convert the money to naira and deposit it to La Wari Furniture and Baths Ltd’s account.

    Justice Olatoregun adjourned until May 24.

  • NDIC saved N949b depositors’ funds Skye Bank’

    The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) said it saved about N949.6 billion depositors’ funds in failed Skye Bank.

    Managing Director of the Corporation, Alhaji Umaru Ibrahim, disclosed this in Benin City on Tuesday at the opening of a workshop for financial journalists organised by the NDIC.

    He said that the saving was achieved through the adoption of “bridge bank option’’, adding that the corporation also saved over 6,000 jobs in 277 branches of the failed bank.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that NDIC sacked the board and management of Skye Bank on Sept. 22 and changed the management and renamed the bank as Polaris Bank, using bridge bank liquidation option.

    Ibrahim, who was represented by a Director in the corporation, Mr Mohammed Umar, said that the bridge bank liquidation option was less disruptive to rendition of services unlike outright liquidation.

    “With the bridge bank option, the depositors of the defunct Skye Bank Bank Plc are guaranteed access to their total deposits.”

    He said that all those that contributed to the failure of the bank were being investigated by relevant law enforcement agencies to determine their levels of culpability.

    Ibrahim said that the revocation of banking license of defunct Skye Bank and establishment of a bridge bank was done entirely by the NDIC and not the CBN as reported by the media.

    “It is important to stress that while the roles of the CBN and the NDIC complement each other, a clear distinction exists in their roles in the handling of failed or failing financial institution.”

    He said that the CBN recently revoked the licenses of 154 micro finance banks and six primary mortgage banks due to insolvency.

    Ibrahim said that the affected institutions were closed because some were found to have insufficient assets to meet their liabilities.

    Others, he said, had their capital to risk-weighted assets ratio and regulatory capital below the prescribed minimum by the CBN.

    He said that a number of banks had ceased to carry on with the type of banking business for which licenses were issued, while others had gone into voluntary liquidation.

     

    The managing director said that NDIC had started verification of insured deposits of insured depositors and would start paying the verified claims to appropriate depositors in these liquidated institutions.

     

    He promised that the NDIC, in collaboration with all relevant key players in the financial system, would continue to work on several initiatives to accelerate financial literacy and financial inclusion, especially among rural communities.

     

  • FG to prosecute those responsible for the failure of Skye bank

    The Federal Government has promised to persecute all those found to be responsible for the failure of the erstwhile Skye Bank.
    A statement from the federal ministry of finance issued on Friday evening and signed by the Director of Information Mr. Hassan Dodo said the Minister of Finance, Zainab Ahmed made this known when she a paid a familiarity visit to the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), in Abuja.
     
    According to Dodo, “The minister directed the Managing Director/CEO, Umaru Ibrahim to ensure that a thorough investigation is done into the failure of Skye Bank, adding that at the end of the investigations, all those found culpable in the failure of the bank would be prosecuted.”
     
    “The example of the recently wound-up of Skye Bank, now Polaris Bank is something we would look into. We would find out what happened. Your investigation must be thorough, we are going to hold whoever was responsible for the failure of that bank.”, she said.
     
    “We have to show some examples, we can not just be bailing out banks and leaving perpetrators of the failure of these banks to just go scot-free. Even though you intervene by protecting depositors, but your intervention is limited. You’re not able to payback all that the depositors have. We must show some examples and this is a good one for us to start with”, the Minister said.

    Read Also: CBN revokes Skye Bank’s licence

     
    Ahmed stressed the need for the NDIC to continuously monitor the banks to ensure that problems are detected early and solved before they become crises. 
     
    “The role that you play in monitoring banks should be continuous, because if you capture these issues early, there is a better chance of us protecting these banks, protecting shareholders and depositors”, the Minister said. 
     
    The Minister commended the NDIC for its adherence to the requirements of the fiscal responsibility act by constantly paying its operational surpluses to the Federal Government. 
     
    “I can confirm to you that just within this week, the sum of N15 billion was received by the Federal Government and this brings to about N107 billion that NDIC has paid to date”, she said. 
     
    The Minister said the job of the NDIC of ensuring capital adequacy within the banking system, ensuring profitability, ensuring access to finances are very important for the success of the administration and the economy, adding that the agency should work with the CBN to reduce the number of unbanked citizens.
     
    Earlier in his remarks, the Managing Director/CEO, Umaru Ibrahim briefed the Minister on the achievements and challenges of the Agency. 
     
  • ASSBIFI hails CBN on Skye Bank

    The Association of Senior Staff of Banks, Insurance and Financial Institutions (ASSBIFI) has hailed the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for revoking Skye Bank’s licence.

    The union said the N786 billion injected into the bank,  which has been renamed Polaris Bank, was a bold move at ensuring soundness and efficiency of the banking sector. It added that the bank’s sale process be done under best practices.

    ASSBIFI National President Comrade Oyinkan Olasanoye stated this while briefing reporters in Lagos. She said there was no need for panic by the public, customers and workers of the bank.

    Olasanoye noted that as at today, Polaris Bank has a clean balance sheet as it carries no toxic assets in its new balance sheet. “The Bank is well positioned to meet its obligations to all its numerous customers,” she said.

    She advised the bank’s numerous customers to continue to do business with the bank as there is no cause for alarm.

    Olasanoye said ASSBIFI, as a strategic partner in the banking sector, will study the purchase and assumption agreement, which established Polaris Bank and engage the management of the new bank in concrete discussions aimed at ensuring the realisation of its vision, goals and objectives.

    She said the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) should be allowed to undertake the sale exercise without undue interference from greedy party patrons and ensure that the exercise does not go the way of Mainstreet Bank, which was clandestinely sold to the defunct Skye Bank.

    The president advised that only healthy financial institutions with very clean balance sheets, which will add great value to Polaris Bank should be made to participate in the exercise and the best among them made to pay.

     

  • Skye Bank: Another blow to investors’ confidence

    The Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN’s) weekend sudden turnaround and liquidation of Skye Bank Plc took the financial services sector by surprise. The revocation of the licence and establishment of a bridge bank to take over the assets and liabilities of Skye Bank evoke the bitter experience of the previous losses by investors in three nationalised banks. In this report, Capital Market Editor Taofik Salako examines the undercurrents around the defunct Skye Bank.

    There had been much enthusiasm around Skye Bank’s shares recently. In the last trading session on Friday, few hours before the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced its decision to liquidate the bank, Skye Bank was one of the top 10 highest gainers, rising by 4.05 per cent to close at 77 kobo. The bullish trading at the weekend rounded off a week-long positive sentiment that saw the bank closing last week with a week-on-week gain of 14.93 per cent, the seventh highest for the week and exceedingly above the average of 0.66 per cent for the entire equities market. The price appreciation underscored the increase in momentum of transactions on the bank’s shares. Skye Bank has been one of the more active stocks.

    The CBN last July extended the tenure of the board of directors and management of Skye Bank for another two years till June 30, 2020. The apex bank on July 4, 2016 taken over the management of the Skye Bank by reconstituting the board of directors and management of the bank to pave way for a new team to take charge of the bank and resolve various issues that were perceived to be hindering its optimal performance. The apex bank gave the new board and management a mandate with particular focus areas to turn the institution around positively. CBN attributed the extension of tenure to “stellar performance of the board”.

    In a show of confidence and regulatory compliance, the board and management of the bank on August 13, 2018 issued their last communication to the investing public. In the regulatory filing signed by Company Secretary and General Counsel, Skye Bank Plc, Babatunde Osibodu, the bank explained the delay in the submission of its half-year results for the period ended June 30, 2018.

    “The bank’s unaudited financial statements for the period ended June 30, 2018 were approved by the board at its meeting of August 09, 2018, and have been presented to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), as the bank’s primary regulator, for approval. As with the bank’s audited financial statements for previous financial years (2016 and 2017), the unaudited financial statements for the period ended June 30, 2018 shall be published as soon as the CBN grants its approval,” Skye Bank stated. The board reassured the investing public of its commitment to “transparency, full disclosure, and compliance with regulatory requirements”. There were no profit warnings, no suspension due to delay in results, no cautionary statements and any such alerts that are required by extant rules and regulations in terms of any material change.

     

    A kick in the teeth

    Addressing the media at the weekend, CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, noted that the apex bank took the “proactive action” in July 2016 because of unacceptable corporate governance lapses as well as the persistent failure of Skye Bank to meet minimum thresholds in critical prudential and adequacy ratios, which culminated in the bank’s permanent presence at the CBN Lending Window.

    According to him, the focus of the action then was to save depositors’ funds and to ensure that the bank continued as a going concern, being a systemically important bank. Part of the intention was also to stem imminent job losses to staff if a liquidation option had been adopted.

    “These objectives have been fully achieved and the bank has been able to meet customer obligations, having curtailed the liquidity haemorrhage and restored depositor confidence. Indeed, the bank’s performance has improved considerably compared to the pre-July 2016 era,” Emefiele said.

    He however noted that the result of examinations and forensic audit has revealed that Skye bank requires urgent recapitalisation as it can no longer continue to live on borrowed times with indefinite liquidity support from the CBN. “The shareholders of the bank have been unable to recapitalize it,” Emefiele said.

    “As a responsible and responsive regulator and in consultation with the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), we have decided to establish a bridge bank, Polaris Bank, to assume the assets and liabilities of Skye bank. The strategy is for the Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) to capitalize the Bridge Bank and begin the process of sourcing investors to buy out AMCON. By this decision, the licence of the defunct Skye Bank is hereby revoked,” Emefiele said.

    He assured all depositors that under this arrangement, their deposits shall remain safe and that normal banking services shall continue in the new bank on Monday, September 24, 2018, to enable customers to transact their businesses seamlessly. All customers of Skye Bank shall be automatic customers of the new bank and their accounts and records duly purchased by Polaris Bank.

    “Given the good performance of the board and management, the CBN shall retain them. In addition, all employees of Skye Bank shall be absorbed by Polaris Bank under a new contract unless any employee decides to opt out. We wish to assure the general public that the Nigerian banking industry remains safe and resilient and that the CBN will continue to live up to its responsibilities of promoting stability in the banking and financial system,” Emefiele concluded.

     

    Bolt from the blue

    Most stakeholders were surprised at the turn of event for Skye Bank, which had in 2014 consummated a N126 billion deal that what was widely regarded as one of the biggest acquisitions in Nigeria. From financial reporter+s to shareholders, capital market operators and analysts, there were many questions with few or no responses. Most analysts were quick to point at the contradictions in the apex bank’s statement and what shareholders regarded as incorrect assertion on the move to recapitalise the bank. Shareholders and capital market stakeholders were unanimous that there was never a time that the issue of recapitalisation was table before shareholders.  At what point did CBN decide on liquidation and bridge bank option? Were the board and management of Skye Bank aware of any discussion, no matter how preliminary, in this regard? Why did the CBN refuse to release the interim and audited financial statements of the bank for more than two years for consideration by shareholders? Given the good rating of the bank and its board and management, why will the apex bank resort to the drastic option of bridge bank? Did the apex bank consult the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) before the liquidation of a publicly traded quoted company with thousands minority retail shareholders? So many questions that should shed light on the extent of transparency and compliance with due process.

    “It is worrisome that CBN appears to be thinking about the banking sector and depositors alone without consideration for the investors and capital market. Action like this tends to erode the little confidence that remains in the market,” Executive Vice Chairman, Capital Assets Limited, Mr Ariyo Olushekun said.

    “The development is a sad commentary and capable of further putting investor confidence in a quandary,” Managing Director, Sofunix Investment and Communications Limited, Mr Sola Oni said. The NSE scurried for a late-night statement placing the shares of Skye Bank on suspension with effect from today, Monday, September 24, 2018. “This action is taken following on the recent regulatory action of the Central Bank of Nigeria revoking the banking license of Skye Bank…,” the Exchange stated in a three-paragraph statement.

    Shareholders were miffed and unsparing in their criticisms of the decision of the apex bank.  “CBN’s takeover of Skye Bank is a very sad and avoidable story. A total lost for all the minority shareholders of the bank. Though CBN said the owners were not able to recapitalise the bank, I can’t remember when the CBN-imposed management called on us to bring money and we refuse,” National Publicity Secretary, Independent Shareholders Association of Nigeria (ISAN), Mr Moses Igbrude said.  National President, Constance Shareholders’ Association of Nigeria Mikail Shehu said the action taken by the CBN has further exposed the fault lines in the regulatory framework. “It is tantamount to gang-up against the voiceless retail shareholders. It will erode the confidence of investors in our capital market with negative implication on the economy. It is the same regulator that appointed the interim board and management since 2016 till date and extended their tenure for the next two years without even calling shareholders to brief us on their stewardship till date. Now CBN is saying the bank needs recapitalisation, have they ever asked shareholders for capital injection?” Shehu said.

    According to him, the action of CBN shows that there is little protection for investors in the economy. He said shareholders might consider legal action against the CBN and other related parties to seek redress against what he described as a thoughtless decision.

    “The apex bank’s rescue technique through Polaris Bank tilts more in favour of depositors. What is the fate of the real owners, the equity holders? Although shareholders take the highest risk and in good time, highest return, action must be expedited to attract strategic investors in order to bring the bank on the track. This is the only way the shareholders can heave a sigh of relief,” Oni said.

    While the apex bank lauded Skye Bank’s board and management, shareholders said the directors did not live up to their words. Alhaji Muhammad Ahmad, the founding director-general of the National Pension Commission (Pencom), who was appointed by the CBN as the new chairman of Skye Bank, had during a working visit to the NSE assured the investing public of the safety of their investments.  He said the reconstitution of the board of the bank by the CBN was not a takeover but an intervention to correct observed corporate governance issues under the old board. While explaining that the ownership of the bank remains in the hands of the shareholders, Ahmad said the CBN does not own the bank and has not taken over the bank, stressing that the apex bank was fully behind the bank and would support it to fully stabilise.

    He reassured the bank’s customers and investors that the bank was not distressed but only had corporate governance issues under the old board adding that the bank’s fundamentals remain strong and it remains one of Nigeria’s leading and retail banks. Mr. Tokunbo Abiru, a former commissioner for finance in Lagos State and executive director at FirstBank of Nigeria, who was appointed as the new group managing director, corroborated Ahmad.

    Abiru said the management team and the board would work to achieve value enhancement for shareholders, customers and other stakeholders by bringing the cost-income ratio to acceptable levels, improve the risk assets quality and work towards increasing the liquidity and capital adequacy of the bank.

     

    Failed acquisition

    Igbrude said the acquisition of Mainstreet Bank by Skye Bank was the beginning of the failure of the bank. Skye Bank had in 2014 acquired the entire issued shares of Mainstreet Bank from the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) in a deal valued at N126 billion. It was hailed as a game changer by several pundits. Skye Bank, with dominant operations in the Southwest, had sought out Mainstreet Bank to deepen its penetration of the Southeast and Southsouth regions. Some 26 per cent or 54 branches of Mainstreet Bank’s network were located in the two regions, which also accounted for 28 per cent of Mainstreet Bank’s over 1.9 million customers, second only to Lagos with 37 per cent. Besides, a second generation leader, Mainstreet Bank had a large pool of loyal institutional and corporate customers as well as a history of successfully managing agricultural loans, with agric loans accounting for 12.6 per cent and 16.9 per cent of its loan portfolio in 2012 and 2013, second only to ‘general’ sector. Mainstreet Bank was also a product of takeover of Afribank Nigeria Plc, a publicly quoted bank, by the apex bank.

    The CBN had taken over the trio of Afribank Nigeria Plc, Bank PHB Plc and Spring Bank Plc to create three bridge banks of Mainstreet Bank Limited, Keystone Bank and Enterprise Bank. AMCON subsequently acquired the banks.

    “While shareholders of Skye Bank have now lost their investments, what happened to the management who took the decision to buy Mainstreet Bank and those professional consultants who did the due diligence reports that the management relied on to take the decisions?” Igbrude quipped.

    Olushekun called on capital market regulators to strengthen their investors’ protection mechanisms by ensuring that companies do not take advantage of investors.

    As shareholders rue their losses, their concerns extend beyond the immediate takeover. Who is next? That’s a worry that may reverberate on other banking stocks in the days ahead.

  • Skye Bank: Expert advises CBN to strictly enforce financial guidelines on banks

    A financial expert, Dr Samuel Nzekwe, has advised the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to intensify efforts to  enforce  the implementation of  its  financial guidelines  in banks,  to forestall collapse of the financial sector  in the  country.

    Nzekwe, a former President, Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN), gave the advice in an interview with our reporters on Sunday in Ota. Ogun.

    He was reacting to the announcement  of CBN that Skye Bank had been taken over by Polaris Bank.

    Mr Godwin Emefiele, the CBN Governor,  announced on Friday  that Polaris Bank had taken over the assets and liabilities of Skye Bank.

    According to him, if Skye Bank had strictly followed and looked into the CBN financial guidelines on granting loans to investors, the bank would not have problems.

    Nzekwe said that it could have been devastating and terrible if  depositors of the troubled bank lost all their money.

    “We have to appreciate the apex bank for not allowing people’s money to go down with the troubled bank because when bank has problems like this, it is the customers that bear the burdens and the loss, ” he said.

    Read Also: CBN revokes Skye Bank’s licence

    The former ANAN president noted that the action of the CBN would make people to have confidence in the financial sector since customers were safe when there in times of crises in the banking sector.

    Nzekwe further said that it would boost financial inclusion in the financial sector as people would be willing to bring their money to the banks.

    “When people brought more funds into the financial sector, the banks would be able to perform their financial roles which would make the economy to develop,” he said.

    The expert, however, said that the direct effect of the troubled bank would be on the shareholders as they would lose all their shares in the bank.

    Nzekwe explained that this would make investors to reduce purchasing banks’ shares on the floor of Nigeria Stock Market as people would begin to lose confidence in banking stocks.

    The former ANAN president also advised shareholders to always vote out non-directors at the Annual General Meetings (AGM), to avert collapse of such company.

    He, however, said that CBN should not have changed the name of the Skye Bank so as not to scare investors away from the bank.

    NAN

     

  • NSE suspends trading on Skye Bank shares

    The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) on Friday officially notified the investing public that Skye Bank Plc shares would be suspended from trading on Sept. 24.

    The exchange gave the notice in Lagos in a statement by Mr Olumide Orojimi, Head, Corporate Communications and Mr Godstime Iwenekhai Head, Listings Regulations.

    NSE said in the statement that the action was taken following the recent regulatory action of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) revoking the banking license of Skye Bank.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the exchange said that the decision was pursuant to the “Rules on Suspension of Trading in Listed Securities, Rulebook of The Exchange (Issuers’ Rules).”

    It stated that further developments would be communicated as appropriate in due course.

    CBN has revoked the banking licence of the Bank, and transferred its assets and liabilities to a newly licensed bridge bank called Polaris Bank.

    Mr Godwin Emefiele, CBN Governor, said at a news conference in Lagos that the decision was due to failure of its shareholders to recapitalise the bank.

    Emefiele, however, said that the purpose of the CBN’s intervention in Skye Bank on July 4, 2016 had been achieved.

    He said that the focus of the action then was to save depositors’ funds and to ensure that the bank continued as a growing concern, being a systemically important bank.

    “Part of our intention was also to stem the imminent job losses to staff if a liquidation option had been adopted.

    “These objectives have been fully achieved and the bank has been able to meet customer obligations, having curtailed the liquidity haemorrhage and restored depositor confidence.

    Indeed, the bank’s performance has improved considerably compared to the pre-July 2016 era”, he said.

    Emefiele said that the result of its examinations and forensic audit of the bank showed that the bank required urgent recapitalisation.

    According to him, the bank can no longer continue to live on borrowed times with indefinite liquidity support from the CBN.

    He added that the bank’s shareholders were unable to recapitalise it.

    “As a responsible and responsive regulator and in consultation with the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), we have decided to establish a bridge bank, Polaris Bank, to assume the assets and liabilities of Skye bank.

    “The strategy is for the Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) to capitalise the bridge bank and begin the process of sourcing investors to buy out AMCON,” Emefiele said.

    He, however, assured all depositors that under the arrangement, their deposits shall remain safe and that normal banking services shall continue in the new bank on Sept. 24.

    The CBN governor said te arrangement was to enable customers to transact their businesses seamlessly.

    He said that all customers of Skye Bank shall be automatic customers of the new bank and their accounts and records duly purchased by Polaris Bank.

    NAN also reports that NDIC has sold Polaris Bank to the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) with the mandate to stabilise the bank as well as return it to profitability for the purpose of selling it to interested Investors.

    Consequently, AMCON will inject N786 billion into Polaris Bank to bring it’s net value to zero. (NAN)

  • CBN withdraws Skye Bank’s license

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has withdrawn the operating license of Skye Bank.

    CBN Governor, Godwin Emefile who announced the decision on Friday evening in Lagos said depositors funds remain safe.

    Polaris Bank has been established to assume ownership of the assets and liabilities of Skye Bank.

    The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation has injected N786bn in the new bank.

    The management of the defunct bank was however retained for its good performance.

    The defunct Skye Bank has been on CBN’s lifeline since July 2016 and the apex bank says it can no longer continue to intervene to keep the balance liquid.

     

    Details later

  • Customers praise Skye Bank’s Select Account

    Skye Bank customers have ex-pressed delight at being beneficiaries of the bank’s priority account – Skye Select Account.

    In a statement, the bank quoted an Aba-based industrialist, Sylvester Nwanyanwu, a Skye Select Account holder, as saying: “I was travelling with some of my business associates without knowing that being a holder of the Skye Bank’s priority pass card would give us a privileged advantage.

    “Imagine just hanging out at the general waiting area around the airport gate for eight hours with thousands of other travellers. The wait would have made our stop at Amsterdam uninteresting and tiring.”

    Another Skye Select Account holder, Mrs. Rashidat Makanjuola, principal partner, said: “I feel pretty excited about the perks my Skye Bank priority pass affords me, especially in creating for me a good experience each time I travel out of the country.”

    Also, the Group Head, Product and Innovation Group, Mr. Ndubisi Osakwe, said: “With a minimum opening and operating balance of N200,000, you are entitled to a free priority pass card, with free annual membership that also includes two free airport lounge usage each year, Zero monthly account maintenance fees, a MasterCard Platinum Debit card which offers luxurious discounts and privileges as well as cross border spending, you also get a higher spend limit with your card across various electronic channels and enjoy preferential access at all Skye bank branches nationwide.”

    Skye Select is an account for clients who require fast, efficient, convenient and value-added services.

     

  • Skye Bank delights customers with Select Account

    Skye Bank customers have expressed delight at being beneficiaries of the bank’s priority account named Skye Select Account.

    A statement from the bank quoted one Mr. Sylvester Nwanyawu, an Aba-based industrialist who operates a Skye Select account, as expressing his appreciation to the bank, said: “I was travelling with some of my business associates without knowing that being a holder of the Skye Bank’s priority pass card would give us a privileged advantage.

    “Imagine just hanging out at the general waiting area around the airport gate for eight hours with thousands of other travelers. The wait would have made our stop at Amsterdam uninteresting and tiring.”

    Another Skye Select Account holder had this to say: “As a frequent flyer,” Mrs. Rashidat Makanjuola, principal partner, ‘Events by Roshie,’ recounted her experience with Skye Select: “I feel pretty excited about the perks my Skye Bank priority pass affords me, especially in creating for me a good experience each time I travel out of the country.”

    In related development, the lender’s Group Head, Product and Innovation Group, Mr. Ndubisi Osakwe, while describing the features and benefits of the product, disclosed said: “With a minimum opening and operating balance of N200,000.00, you are entitled to a free priority pass card, with free annual membership that also includes two free airport lounge usage each year, zero monthly account maintenance fees, a MasterCard Platinum Debit card which offers luxurious discounts and privileges as well as cross border spending. You also get a higher spend limit with your card across various electronic channels and enjoy preferential access at all Skye bank branches nationwide.”

    Skye Select is an account for the discerning priority client who requires fast, efficient, convenient and value-added services.

    Skye Bank is Nigeria’s leading retail bank with wide-ranging electronic solutions promoting consumer lifestyle and e-commerce experience for its customers.