The revocation of the license of defunct uniBank could affect the
savings of over 370,000 individuals, affecting their families, a report
by KPMG has said.
According to the document, uniBank’s financial position presents
significant systemic risks to Ghana’s financial sector’s stability given
the contagion effect it presents.
The license of uniBank was recently revoked by the Bank of Ghana after
the central bank appointed an administrator to manage it.
The report, which reveals how the board of the bank ignored corporate
governance rules stated that not only will the activities of the bank
affect individuals, but key institutions such as hospitals, universities
and other institutions partly owned by government.
In addition, some State Owned Enterprises are said to be exposed to the
bank while the bank is said to owe pension funds and non-bank financial
institutions to the tune of 850 million cedis.
It further warned of a total deposits of 4.1 billion cedis, 3.5 billion
which is expected to mature in the next 90 days requiring significant
short term funding guarantee.
It stated that uniBank also owes 71.8 million dollars to six
international institutions. The report warned that not paying these
balances could significantly erode investor confidence in Ghana.
It also added that Ghana’s credit risk ratings could be impacted,
placing further pressure on the financial sector and the wider economy.
The document also pointed out that the company was over-staffed
compared to others in the banking sector, causing a drain on its
financials.
According to the document, uniBank prior to the revocation of its
license had 811 permanent staff, 64 contract staff , 990 outsourced
staff and 79 National Service Staff for a bank with just 54 branches.
That was not all, the bank also had related entities whose staff depended on it for financial support.
In the breakdown, the permanent staff of the related entities were
1,284, contract staff of 244, outsourced staff 200 and 20 National
Service personnel.
In total, the employees that depended on the financials of the bank
were 3,692, even though the bank’s output was less, compared to the
total staff strength.
It is anticipated that most of these employees have been affected by
the revocation of the license of the bank, as they no longer work for
the bank.
Board of uniBank ignored corporate governance
It has also emerged that the board did not follow any of the key good
corporate governance rules outlined by the regulator of the financial
sector, the Bank of Ghana.
Even when the central bank had cautioned the board of uniBank not to
advance loans, the board went ahead and granted loans to parties related
to the company under circumstances that hurt the financial base of the
company.
“The Bank procured and paid approximately GHS57.6 million to related
entities for goods and services from January 2017 to date, without an
objective assessment for value for money after a BoG directive to cease
giving loans in October,” the document stated.
Source: citibusinessnews.com
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