Former uniBank management to seek arbitration over BoG takeover

Business News of Friday, 23 March 2018

Source: citibusinessnews.com

2018-03-23

Unibank TakeoveruniBank has been under the administration of KPMG since the takeover

Former Managers of uniBank have indicated that they will work to reverse the takeover, of the bank by the Bank of Ghana, a report by Reuters News Agency has said.

According to Reuters, a legal adviser to uniBank, Dominic Ayine stated that the bank will go for arbitration.

“We intend to go for arbitration,” he said, according to Reuters.

The governor of the Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr. Ernest Addison on Tuesday announced that the central bank has appointed KPMG to manage the uniBank and directed the management team to step aside.

According to Dr. Addison, the move was necessary to save uniBank from collapse as it faced liquidity challenges.

The governor also stated that the bank maintained a capital adequacy ratio (CAR) below zero (currently negative 24%), making it technically insolvent, contravening the 10% minimum CAR required

Here are the 10 major reasons why the central bank took over uniBank.

1. uniBank persistently maintained a capital adequacy ratio (CAR) below zero (currently negative 24%), making it technically insolvent. This contravened the 10% minimum CAR required.

2. uniBank suffered liquidity shortfalls and consistently breached its cash reserve requirement. As a result, UniBank relied extensively on liquidity support of over GHS 2.2 billion from the Bank of Ghana over the past two years to meet its recurring liabilities.

3. uniBank conducted its credit administration in a manner that has jeopardized the interests of depositors and the financial sector as a whole.

4. uniBank failed to comply with a directive of the Bank of Ghana dated 26th October, 2017, under section 105 of Act 930, prohibiting the bank from granting new loans and incurring new capital expenditures.

5.uniBank failed to comply with several other regulatory requirements, including Lending to a number of borrowers in excess of its regulatory lending limit (single obligor limit).

6. uniBank was borrowing from the inter-bank market without the written approval of the Bank of Ghana when its CAR was less than the prescribed ten percent (10%), in breach of the BoG laws.

7. uniBank was outsourcing a number of services such as those of tellers, receptionists, and security, to affiliate companies without the prior approval by the Bank of Ghana, contrary to BoG Laws.

8. uniBank refused to cooperate with the Bank of Ghana in the performance of its supervisory responsibilities, including deliberately concealing some liabilities from its balance sheet, and failing to submit documents and records for supervisory inspection.

9. uniBank was engaged in poor corporate governance and risk management practices which rendered the bank vulnerable to macroeconomic shocks.

10. uniBank was generally conducting its affairs in a manner detrimental to the interests of depositors and the financial system as a whole.

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