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Help retrieve monies owe us by gov't – GN Bank to BoG

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The Chairman of Groupe Nduom, and owner of now defunct GN Bank, Dr. Papa Kwesi Nduom, says they are looking forward to an assurance by the Bank of Ghana (BoG), to help them retrieve monies owed his nonfunctioning bank by government to strengthen their finances, following the downgrade of their GN Bank to a Savings and Loans Company.

According to him, the bank would have been strengthened financially if Government paid all the monies owed the bank.

Dr. Nduom also disclosed that, there were extensive discussions between BoG and GN Bank to ensure the payment of all the monies Government owed the bank in order for the bank to meet its liquidity targets, but all such discussions failed to materialize.

Dr. Nduom however, did not disclosed the amount Government owes his bank.

He was however, of the view that the bank which is now a savings and loans company should be able to operate successfully, if government pays all the monies owed them.

The Bank of Ghana last Friday, January 4, 2019, announced that the GN Bank had failed to meet the GHS 400 million minimum capital requirement by the 31st December 2018 deadline, thus approved a downgrade of the Bank to a Savings and Loans company.

Meanwhle, a statement from the Shareholders, Directors and Management of GN Bank wish to inform customers and the public that GN Bank will remain Ghanaian, with a national retail network, to promote financial inclusion.”

The statement which was copied to gbcghanaonline, said the doors of the bank will remain open for business as usual in January, 2019 and beyond.

“We have started the transition process. Our immediate objective is to find the liquidity needed to service the needs of our customers.”

Below Is The Full Statement:

 

PRESS RELEASE ON GN BANK

“GN Bank Will Remain Ghanaian, With A National Retail Network, To Promote Financial Inclusion.”

The Shareholders, Directors and Management of GN Bank wish to inform our cherished customers and the general public that we have elected to continue our operations as a Savings & Loan Institution.

This means that our doors will remain open for business as usual in January, 2019 and beyond. We have started the transition process. Our immediate objective is to find the liquidity needed to service the needs of our customers.

This means that as a licensed deposit taking institution, customer funds remain safe with us.

The decision allows us to concentrate on ensuring maximum liquidity to sustain the business, instead of raising funds for additional capital as a universal bank.

We operated in the recent past successfully as a Savings and Loan Company for eight years, so we can assure our customers that with our attention back to managing the business, instead of combing the world for additional capital, we are poised to deliver products and services beyond excellence.

It is necessary for us to also point out that in the process of looking for additional capital, we made a conscious decision not to sell our bank to mostly foreign interests.

These investors wanted the retail network we have built, but with the intention to abandon our vision of promoting financial inclusion and serving the needs of ordinary Ghanaians.

We have been honest about who we are – a Main Street Bank and not a High Street Bank.

We formed the company and started looking for a license in 1997 to create a national bank for all Ghanaians wherever they may live, capable of ensuring financial inclusion and bringing the unbanked into the formal sector.

It took the founding shareholder, Coconut Grove Beach Resort, nine years and a lot of effort, to obtain a license from the Bank of Ghana on May 8, 2006 to operate as a Savings and Loan Company under the brand name, First National Savings & Loans Company Limited.

Coconut Grove was joined by another Ghanaian shareholder, BB Acquisitions. Other shareholders have subsequently invested in the company.

Our financial institution has two intertwined branches – traditional banking and Micro-Enterprise business.

The power of the two makes us unique and special. It took hard work to be where we are, with 1.2 million customers and 20% of the Ghanaian banking retail outlets in Ghana

We invested heavily in opening offices in all the ten regions of Ghana. When we opened our doors, the unbanked population was 80%.

Today, it has fallen to 55%. Our continued existence will ensure that the percent of the population that is unbanked will reduce further.

From the very beginning, Our Vision has been, “To be a truly National Bank for the Ordinary person namely; Farmers, Professionals, Students, Workers, and Small and Medium Scale Entrepreneurs in Ghana.”

We will continue to be a financial institution with a difference – go where others are not willing to go, to bring banking to people currently excluded from the formal banking sector throughout the country.
Signed

Frank Owusu-Ofori

Head, GN Corporate Affairs

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