Month: January 2021

NOTICE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC – SALE OF LANDED PROPERTIES

IN THE MATTER OF THE BANKS AND SPECIALISED DEPOSIT-TAKING INSTITUTIONS ACT, 2016 (ACT 930)  IN THE MATTER OF THE RECEIVERSHIPS OF THE 347 MICROFINANCE COMPANIES AND THE 23 SAVINGS & LOANS AND FINANCE HOUSE COMPANIES NOTICE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC SALE OF LANDED PROPERTIES As you may be aware, pursuant to Section 123 (1) of the Banks and Specialised Deposit-Taking Institutions Act, 2016 (Act 930), Bank of Ghana (“BoG”) on 31 May 2019 and 16 August 2019 revoked the operating licenses of 347 insolvent Microfinance Companies and 23 Savings & Loans and Finance House Companies respectively. BoG in accordance with Section 123(2) of the Banks and Specialised Deposit-Taking Institutions Act, 2016 (Act 930) appointed Eric Nana Nipah, a Director of PricewaterhouseCoopers Ghana Limited (“PwC”), as the Receiver for the purposes of winding down the affairs of these institutions. A key component of the Receiver’s mandate is to secure all assets of the resolved companies and maximise their realisations for the benefit of creditors. Accordingly, the Receiver wishes to inform the general public that he is requesting for firm bids from potential buyers to acquire some Landed Properties of the resolved companies for his evaluation. Potential bidders who want to inspect the Properties or have enquires may visit the receivership website on www.ghreceiverships.com or contact the Receiver’s representative Michael Vondee on michael.nat007@gmail.com or 0244977797 to reserve an inspection appointment. Details of the condition for the sale of these properties are set out in a sales memorandum which can be assessed on the website above. All bids are to be submitted on or before 4pm on Friday, 26 March 2021. Interested bidders should submit their bids in a signed and dated formal letter to the following address: The ReceiverNo. 54 Olusegun Obasanjo High WayOpposite Accra Girls Senior High School Accra Tel: +233 (0) 302761500Attention: Eric Nana NipahSGDERIC NANA NIPAH CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD SALES MEMORANDUM

GH¢21 BILLION SPENT ON BANKING SECTOR CLEAN-UP – AKUFO-ADDO

The government expended GH¢21 billion to clean up the banking sector, the President, Nana Akufo-Addo has announced. Delivering his final ‘State of the Nation’ address to the 7th Parliament, he said “an amount of GH¢21 billion was used to fund the cleaning up exercise. These are painful lessons we all have to imbibe” The Bank of Ghana embarked on a banking sector clean-up, recapitalization, and other regulatory reforms from mid-2017 to end-December 2018 in line with its mandate to promote the safety, soundness, and stability of the financial system to support economic growth. A regulatory crackdown on poor business practices and weak capital positions in Ghana’s banking sector has resulted in a series of market exits since August 2017. The outcome is a smaller but more sustainable banking industry, though this has come at a price.  A similar clean-up process, which has already resulted in hundreds of license withdrawals, has also been applied to the Microfinance and Non-Banking financial institutions sector. According to the Banking of Ghana sector report for last year, the first major assessment criteria of the reform process is the growth of the banking sector. Although the recapitalisation process scaled down the number of banks to 23 in Dec-2018 from 33 in Dec-2016, the industry’s balance sheet indicators pointed to a stronger growth performance in the key performance matrix. Growth in total assets, a key measure of the size of the banking sector, almost doubled, to 22.8 percent in 2019 from 12.3 percent in 2018, supported in part by the sustained growth in deposits since 2017, and the rapid growth recorded in 2019. From 12.7 percent in 2017, deposits growth moved up to 17.3 percent and 22.2 percent in 2018 and 2019 respectively, in recognition of the renewed and growing confidence in the banking sector following the reforms. Another positive outturn from the reforms was repositioning of the banking sector to support economic growth through intermediation. There has been a strong rebound in credit growth since the reforms took effect. Banking sector credit increased to GH¢45.2 billion in December 2019 from GH¢36.5 billion in December 2018. Growth in new advances also recovered strongly to GH¢29.7 billion during 2019 from GH¢23.3 billion in 2018. The growth in credit was broad-based across all the various economic sectors.