JUNE 4 , 2012
CURRENCY BUYING CENTRAL SELLING CFA KRONER EURO POUNDS RIYAL SDR FRANC DOLLAR WAUA YEN RENMINBI
0.2744 25.6468 190.6365 236.8604 41.2623 233.0845 158.7179 154.75 233.1661 1.9809 24.2927
0.2844 25.7297 191.2525 237.6257 41.3956 233.8376 159.2308 155.25 233.9195 1.9873 24.3716
0.2944 25.8125 191.8684 238.391 41.5289 234.5907 159.7436 155.75 234.6728 1.9937 24.4505
NDICATIONS emerged, weekend, that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) forced some banks to sell performing loans at a loss to Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) and this partly explains the huge loan loss provisioning posted by banks for the operating year ended December 31st, 2011. Meanwhile, a group of shareholders have dragged the CBN to court to compel the apex bank to disclose how much it has spent on the reform of the banking sector; the whereabouts of funds from the recovered properties as well as cash from Cecilia Ibru and how much it is paying to professionals handling cases on its behalf among other demands. The Progressive Shareholders Association of Nigeria (PSAN) is acting under the recently enacted Freedom of Information (FoI) Act. The hint that the CBN forced banks against their wish to sell performing loans to AMCON emerged at the 44th annual general meeting of First Bank Plc last week, where the Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Bisi Onasanya, explained to shareholders how the apex bank forced the bank to sell N100 billion performing loans to
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From left Vice-President, Euronet Worldwide and Managing Director for Middle East, Mr. Mohammed Abdallah; Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, FirstBank of Nigeria Plc, Mr. Bisi Onasanya and Director, Business Development, Euronet Africa and Middle East, Mr. Mohammed Mackway; during the launch of FirstBank RIA Money International Transfer Services in Lagos.
Shareholders sue CBN over cost of reforms, recoveries from Cecilia *As CBN forces banks to sell performing loans at a loss to AMCON By OMOH GABRIEL & BABAJIDE KOMOLAFE AMCON at a 10 per cent loss. “Our headline loan growth rate of just 9.2 per cent does not take into account active switching of a substantial portion of intra-group and money market lines into corporate loans and the sale of over N100 billion of eligible performing loans to the Asset Management
Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON), including 100 per cent of our exposure to Seawolf Oilfield Services (an action driven at reducing portfolio concentration and addressing single obligor concerns). Consequently, we recorded normalised loan growth of around 40.6 per cent year on year ”, he said while reviewing the operations of the bank in the operating year ended December 31st 2011.” When pressed by a shareholder on
the SeaWolf Oil Services transaction, he explained that the company was doing well and that the loan was performing but the CBN insisted that the loan should be sold to AMCOM due to its size because of the possible impact on the bank and the industry if the loans become non-performing. “So they forced us to sell the loan to AMCON and we took a haircut Continues on page 18