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Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise - Politics - Nairaland

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Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by newmaster(m): 5:11am On Mar 01, 2010
The banking consolidation exercise carried out by the then governor of the central bank Prof. Charles Soludo has come under fire from the current CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi who said the exercise was a sham and that many of the banks never raised the capital which they claimed they did.

Sanusi in a 23-page convocation lecture titled, “The Nigerian Banking Industry: What Went Wrong and the Way Forward” he delivered at the Convocation Square of Bayero University Kano on Friday said the consolidation  helped to create bigger banks while it failed to overcome the fundamental weakness in corporate governance in many banks.

The governor said, “A lot of the capital supposedly raised by these so-called ‘mega-banks’ was fake capital financed from depositors’ funds. 30 per cent of the share capital of Intercontinental Bank was purchased with customer deposits. Afribank used depositors’ funds to purchase 80 per cent of its IPO. ”

He added, “The CEO of Oceanic Bank controlled over 35 per cent of the bank through SPVs (Special Purpose Vehicles) borrowing customer deposits. The collapse of the capital market wiped out these customer deposits amounting to hundreds of billions of naira.”

Sanusi also disclosed that while all the unethical practices were going on in the banking sector, the CBN which had a process of capital verification at the beginning of consolidation which was targeted at avoiding bubble capital stopped the check mechanism for unexplained reasons.

He noted that SPVs furnished bank executives with a leeway to lend money to themselves for stock price manipulation or the purchase of estates all over the world. “One bank borrowed money and purchased private jets which we later discovered were registered in the name of the CEO’s son. In another bank the management set up 100 fake companies for the purpose of perpetrating fraud,” he said.

He further said that some banks even engaged in manipulating their books by colluding with other banks to artificially enhance financial positions and therefore stock prices, adding that practices such as converting non-performing loans into commercial papers and bank acceptances and setting up off-balance sheet special purpose vehicles to hide losses were prevalent.

According to the CBN boss, the unethical practices took place under the watchful eyes of the former Governor Soludo, whom he said conducted governance at the apex bank in a “laissez-faire” fashion. He said under Soludo’s reign, internal processes were unstructured and this compromised the CBN’s ability to supervise the industry. Board agendas were set by the governor and consequently reflected his priorities, and there were inadequate committee structures and processes to ensure the CBN board’s independence in assessing whether the CBN was fulfilling its mission.  He also explained that of the 373 circulars issued by the CBN since 2008, only 44 addressed issues relating to the crisis, stressing that “none addressed the issue of corporate governance.

http://www.elombah.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2995:soludo-is-a-fraud-sanusi&catid=57:sanusi-lamido-sanusi&Itemid=79
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by naijaking1: 5:59am On Mar 01, 2010
No need to get into Sanusi vs. Soludo---history will take care of that after their tenure.
However, the governor's suggestion and impication that somehow the money used to form and build these banks were somehow not real money is simply a cheap attempt to succeed at his core objective- the reduction of shareholders equity in these banks.
Even if these shareholders used monoploy money to form these banks, they don't need to be pushed out to make way for people who couldn't invest at the begining.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by safeact(m): 6:39am On Mar 01, 2010
The above claims and statement by Sanusi is not guaranttee for him to cal his boss a fraudster. Without sentiment, i think he is suffering from inferiority complex. Upon all manipulations he is doing yet he has not been recognised by any international organisation let alone be included in the G8 or whatever. Soludo had more pressing issues at hand then and he could not have shared himself into pieces to see through everything at tha time. I still repeat that sanusi should desist from making such remarks against soludo as d both can not be compared. As a risk manager, he should try and manage d bank in such away that it will impact positively on d economy and people will be happy with him, dis d former did and that attracted some investors and business flourished. We dnt care how he did it as a long as he gave us we wanted even beyond our expectations, sanusi should better resign if he feels soludo has set a big standard for him instead of rubishing his works, afterall he is not half way to d international bodies that praised soludo even after their scrutiny. In conclusion, i think he is so afraid because the end time is near, his northern agenda will soon crupt and be made public. Lets see hnw it goes, excuse me pass, jare.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by biina: 7:18am On Mar 01, 2010
While I dont approve of Sanusi taking shots at his predecessors, his description of what happened during Soludo's tenure is accurate. Soludo was aware of the problems in the sector from the moment he took office, and for whatever reasons, simply failed to tackle (talk less of solving) them. If Sanusi feels Soludo acted inappropriately, he should forward whatever evidence he has to the efcc and let the law take its course.

@safeact
Soludo is not Sanusi's boss and your argument for development at any cost is saddening.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by texazzpete(m): 7:29am On Mar 01, 2010
As far as I can see, sanusi never called Soludo a fraud.
naijaking1:

No need to get into Sanusi vs. Soludo---history will take care of that after their tenure.
However, the governor's suggestion and impication that somehow the money used to form and build these banks were somehow not real money is simply a cheap attempt to succeed at his core objective- the reduction of shareholders equity in these banks.
Even if these shareholders used monoploy money to form these banks, they don't need to be pushed out to make way for people who couldn't invest at the begining.

you're always keen to cast aspersions on sanusi's character and motives. Why no comment on Soludo's actions as described by Sanusi?
It's clear your interest lies not with the economy, but with flagellating Sanusi for his actions against one of your patrons.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by ojenew: 8:32am On Mar 01, 2010
NO! Not directly but he Implied he is fraud. What else can you call an attitude of taking another person's property without permission if not STEALING. I can say u took it my car without my permission but am implying you stole it but I never mention word STEAL. Get that straight young man.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by safeact(m): 8:41am On Mar 01, 2010
Well, time shall take its course and in this case, there must be a winner and a losser. Lets not crucify anybody yet until d day is ripe then we can now confortably diagnose d duo. None is guilty of d charges until proven otherwise. I rest my case. Court Order!!!
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by biina: 8:51am On Mar 01, 2010
safeact:

Well, time shall take its course and in this case, there must be a winner and a losser. Lets not crucify anybody yet until d day is ripe then we can now confortably diagnose d duo.  None is guilty of d charges until proven otherwise. I rest my case. Court Order!!!
'Time shall tell' applies only to Sanusi who is still in office. Soludo's tenure is over, and the evidence is available to judge his tenure in office. It is not a competition and so I dont see the need for winners or losers. When someone's tenure in office ends, we should be fair to credit him for what he did well, but also be objective enough to criticize whatever he failed to do or did wrongly.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by RoadStar: 9:07am On Mar 01, 2010
Mr Sanusi, you are now in charge, Just fix it !
I cannot help feel that this man has not been able to shake off the shadow of Soludo.
This I believe is due to the fact that people still look back to the days of Soludo with a lot of Nostalgia.

If he is doing a good Job we should start to realise the fruits in years to come.
I hope he is not conceding to the fact that this cannot be achieved.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by texazzpete(m): 9:25am On Mar 01, 2010
RoadStar:

Mr Sanusi, you are now in charge, Just fix it !
I cannot help feel that this man has not been able to shake off the shadow of Soludo.
This I believe is due to the fact that people still look back to the days of Soludo with a lot of Nostalgia.

If he is doing a good Job we should start to realise the fruits in years to come.
I hope he is not conceding to the fact that this cannot be achieved.

fix it, yes, but that doesn't mean the evils done in the past should be overlooked.

RoadStar:

This I believe is due to the fact that people still look back to the days of Soludo with a lot of Nostalgia.

If he is doing a good Job we should start to realise the fruits in years to come.


Is that so? We're reaping the ill fruits of Soludo's tenure right now, yet you still insist on looking back with rose-tinted glasses. Nostalgia my butt!

I don't see why Sanusi should be 'living in Soludo's shadow' as you put it. In Nigeria, what we need are people who can do the job they are being paid to do with little fanfare. We don't need superstars, we need good, competent and honest people who will do the job!
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by jupita: 10:03am On Mar 01, 2010
safeact:

The above claims and statement by Sanusi is not guaranttee for him to cal his boss a fraudster.
and how was he his boss? he never worked under soludo
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by Ibime(m): 10:54am On Mar 01, 2010
Sanusi needs to protect CBN at all times. . . .that means he should refrain from criticising Soludo, and cover him up if necessary. . . .CBN should be seen as a credible institution, not a institution prone to corruption and laissez faire regulation.


That said, it is not surprising that after consolidation in 2006, it only took 2 years for the banking bubble to burst. . . . this speaks of poor regulation. . . however, Sanusi will be well advised to protect Soludos legacy at all times.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by RoadStar: 12:03pm On Mar 01, 2010
Ibime:

Sanusi needs to protect CBN at all times. . . .that means he should refrain from criticising Soludo, and cover him up if necessary. . . .CBN should be seen as a credible institution, not a institution prone to corruption and laissez faire regulation.


That said, it is not surprising that after consolidation in 2006, it only took 2 years for the banking bubble to burst. . . . this speaks of poor regulation. . . however, Sanusi will be well advised to protect Soludos legacy at all times.
I agree that he should stop the mudslinging but cover up Soludo, I dont agree.
He should point out the lapses in the previous activities of the CBN.
But on these allegations are weak and ill- motivated.

This blueprint for the banking industry has been trashed as incoherent and ambiguous
.
And then he picks a fight with his predecessor.

Is he trying to discredit the the consolidation exersice as unnecesary or is he agreeing for the need for consolidation but pointing out that it was not properly done ?

The Consolidation was not a target but a means to achive a taget of a stronger banking industry.

We all know that a lot of banks used the option of using depositors funds to raise capital still weren't able to.

It was never a hidden fact that capital was raised using depositor funds as one of the sources and Soludo will not deny knowledge.
It was widespread. During the consolidation saga it was eveident as all banks were competing for depositors.

Even the same Soludo came public with the fact that he wanted to extend a 30bn cash loan to Bank of the North.
Even that was even more unethical/inappriopriate than using depositor funds, he only withdrew it because of the unmarketabily of a bank with such huge debts.

Soludo will tell you that the consolidation exersise was done to converge the banking industry to a fewer number of Banks which will give them an improved potential for growth.

That doesn't necessarily mean that banks need 25bn to operate.

And can the same Sanusi Justify why he let Unity bank of the hook during his last audit exercise citing a high level of depositor funds, even when their capital base had been eroded like all the other penalised banks  undecided

Isn't this a case of kettle calling pot black ?
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by gugus1(m): 12:21pm On Mar 01, 2010
So we should not credit soludo for anything but all credit goes to sanusi who has only scared investors away so far so good, 
His always in the media complaining he should do his job without hunting people with EFCC , talking of selling banks,and hanging of CEOS.
SO MUCH TERROR, come to think of it, he could come to terms&agreement with this banks, and still become a tough boss if he wants.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by chidichris(m): 1:02pm On Mar 01, 2010
i am yet to confirm anyone who started and finished with obasanjo paecefully that has genuity of purposes.
without sanusi saying this, i had said that more than 20 different places in this forum that soludo is not real.
he served a govt that used the same banks to loot nigeria to her kneel.
the highest record of looting under any govt in the history of nigeria was 1999 to 2007 and the whole shits were done through these banks.
soludo had a purpose for his master and his reward was his annointed candidacy of anambra pdp gubernitorial election and to the glory of God, he failed.
apart from what sanusi mentioned, the so-called consolidation was bult arround raising professional prostitutes via our banks.
his immediate involvement with pdp in anambra state said it all.
he served the man who served him back.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by naijaking1: 2:28pm On Mar 01, 2010
texazzpete:

As far as I can see, sanusi never called Soludo a fraud.
you're always keen to cast aspersions on sanusi's character and motives. Why no comment on Soludo's actions as described by Sanusi?
It's clear your interest lies not with the economy, but with flagellating Sanusi for his actions against one of your patrons.

Thanks.
I see how your disoriented arguement is helping the economy shocked
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by MrCrackles(m): 2:28pm On Mar 01, 2010
This is serious. . . .
Soludo shocked shocked
A fraud shocked shocked
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by Nobody: 2:33pm On Mar 01, 2010
These are what the facts show
By June this year Sanusi will make about one year in office
Since Sanusi's entrance there has been mass sack of workers in banks
There has been drop in confidence in the economy
Businesses have been unable to borrow
Banks are so scared of playing their primary mediation role of lending and borrowing

With all of these scary records in our face all we are told is that anything we see in terms of negative records could have been worse if not for Sanusi. With that kind of standard or performance measurement even the woman who sells tomato & pepper at ojueleba market can run the CBN.

Now they are telling us that our economy will stabilise in 10years time and their 'Risk management' will begin to bear fruits in 10years. My personal worry is not whether the economy will stabilise but what it is they want to stabilise. Because you can achieve stability in Niger Republic and can also achieve Stability in UK. The difference is the kind of economy you stabilise.

You have to create an economy first before you risk manage it. otherwise you will have nothing to risk manage. Why Sanusi can not understand this simple concept is shocking. Our economy at the moment is hugely dependent on oil. Until we diversify we will continue to have a volatile economy and no amount of misguided IMF Textbook Risk Management Principles will change much. So the question is how do you diversify if banks are so scared to lend to Enterpreneurs? How do you diversify if the CBN Governor spends the better part of his time in office calling Nigerians thieves and fraudsters thereby scaring away foreign investors?

I am no longer interested in this debate. Sanusi should grow up and own his own failures and do something to correct them rather than claiming that he is preventing some imaginary catastrophe which only exists in his head.

There is no where else in the world where people glorify public officials for setting the standards for themselves this low.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by netotse(m): 2:38pm On Mar 01, 2010
MrCrackles:

This is serious. . . .
Soludo shocked shocked
A fraud shocked shocked
homie. . .that sounds like someting mama-gee would say. . .abi they've hacked your acct?
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by naijaking1: 2:44pm On Mar 01, 2010
mikeansy:

These are what the facts show
By June this year Sanusi will make about one year in office
Since Sanusi's entrance there has been mass sack of workers in banks
There has been drop in confidence in the economy
Businesses have been unable to borrow
Banks are so scare of playing their primary mediation role of lending and borrowing

With all of these scary records in our face all we are told is that anything we see in terms of negative records could have been worse if not for Sanusi. With that kind of standard or performance measurement even the woman who sells tomato & pepper at ojueleba market can run the CBN.

Now they are telling us that our economy will stabilise in 10years time and their 'Risk management' will begin to bear fruits in 10years. My personal worry is not whether the economy will stabilise but what it is they want to stabilise. Because you can achieve stability in Niger Republic and can also achieve Stability in UK. The difference is the kind of economy you stabilise.

You have to create an economy first before you risk manage it. otherwise you will have nothing to risk manage. Why Sanusi can not understand this simple concept is shocking. Our economy at the moment is hugely dependent on oil. Until we diversify we will continue to have a volatile economy and no amount of misguided IMF Textbook Risk Management Principles will change much. So the question is how do you diversify if banks are so scared to lend to Enterpreneurs?

I am no longer interested in this debate. Sanusi should grow up and own his own failures and do something to correct them rather than claiming that he is preventing some imaginary catastrophe which only exists in his head.

There is no where else in the world where people glorify public officials for setting the standards for themselves this low.

You said it all!
In psychiatry, I think they call his action--projection. He's projecting his failure to everybody and anybody, thereby diverting attention from himself. This technique can be used to fool a whole lot of people, but it doesn't change the facts. A lot of people have been fooled, and here too.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by nduchucks: 3:04pm On Mar 01, 2010
naijaking1:

You said it all!
In psychiatry, I think they call his action--projection. He's projecting his failure to everybody and anybody, thereby diverting attention from himself. This technique can be used to fool a whole lot of people, but it doesn't change the facts. A lot of people have been fooled, and here too.

Well done o. I suppose the following fall under your so-called projection:


“The CEO of Oceanic Bank controlled over 35 per cent of the bank through SPVs (Special Purpose Vehicles) borrowing customer deposits. The collapse of the capital market wiped out these customer deposits amounting to hundreds of billions of naira.” shocked shocked shocked

Sanusi also disclosed that while all the unethical practices were going on in the banking sector, the CBN which had a process of capital verification at the beginning of consolidation which was targeted at avoiding bubble capital stopped the check mechanism for unexplained reasons. shocked shocked shocked

“One bank borrowed money and purchased private jets which we later discovered were registered in the name of the CEO’s son. In another bank the management set up 100 fake companies for the purpose of perpetrating fraud,” he said. shocked shocked shocked

Source: http://www.news.dailytrust.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=14911:soludos-banking-consolidation-a-sham-sanusi-&catid=46:lead-stories&Itemid=140
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by Nobody: 3:15pm On Mar 01, 2010
Utomi Faults CBN's Action On BankPHB , launches Two Books

Michael Eboh



Professor Pat Utomi has faulted the actions of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on BankPHB, disclosing that the situation in the bank was not as grave as the CBN painted it.

Speaking during the Centre for Values and Leadership's (CVL) Seventh Annual lecture, with the theme, 'African Rising' and launch of two books, written by Professor Utomi and Kola Olutimehin, in Lagos, Friday, Utomi stated that the current crisis faced by the bank was as a result of the way the apex bank handled the issue, especially in its making of the announcement.

He said, "The bank was not in a disaster shape before the CBN action. But when the noise started, naturally, it will lead to a run on any institution. But what is important now is that we get out of this situation and that is what all of us have committed our energy to doing.

"I was assured by the new managing director that the bank was not playing in the Expanded Discount Window. I think there was one occasion or something. During that whole period, there is none that I know of and the MD has assured me that nothing has happened since.
Relevant Links

   
"The bank was not acting recklessly in the window, maybe, only on one or two occasions that I know of.

"But I don't want to quarrel with the CBN because I want the whole system to recover. At a point, BankPHB was cleared. The first set of people who came went back, the bank was okay, and they were asked to return to the bank. They now claim that they have amnesia, that they forgot some of what they saw.

"There were some people whose loans were considered completely bad in BankPHB, were considered okay in some other banks, so you wonder.

"The position that I am in, presently, is to allow everything to move forward. We obviously saw people respond in ways that I would not have responded"

http://allafrica.com/stories/201002080544.html
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by Nobody: 3:24pm On Mar 01, 2010
DONALD DUKE's view on Sanusi

We saw the first banking reform that focused on consolidation but it seemed the consolidated banks are no longer strong as we were being made to believe.

As someone who does business now, how do you think the crisis in the banking sector has affected the economy?



Banking, finance and the economy are based on perceptions. The US is the biggest debtor in the world but there is a perception that it has tremendous capacity so despite their huge debts, China and the rest of the world are falling over to loan them money because they are banking on the resourcefulness of the country. A couple of months back, 12 Nigerian banks featured among the list of one thousand largest banks in the world. It was all based on perception. I support what Sanusi has done but I think it could have been done differently. You don’t create a panic in your economy. There are LC transactions originating from Nigerian banks and certified by a prime U.S. bank still not being accepted internationally.

There are more cash transactions now because Letters of Credit are not being accepted. So the protection the letter of credit affords you is lost. But certainly the banks had gone overboard from the facts we have today but, we should have done it mindful of the larger impact it could have on the economy. We also erred in not protecting our stock market. Virtually everyone was in the stock market then and when there are a mass of people under a roof protect the house. One thing that gives us confidence in our nation is wealth and government ought to strive to secure this. But when we do nothing about it and when it crashes it has a ripple effect. An immediate effect of the crash was a run on bank stocks because a lot of them had dwindled and after that a housing crisis and housing prices crashed. Assets that were created over the years now amount to nothing. So all of us in the country are losers because wealth has devalued.

Government cannot sit back and wash its hands away from these institutions because even though the stock market is private it’s a measure of public wealth and confidence in the economy.
It is all about jobs and people. The banks are also laying-off people and there are social consequences. If one is laid off from a bank he’d probably have to move homes and relocate his kids from school. Lifestyles change and it has a ripple effect. That is why western governments provide social security. Criminality has a bearing with unemployment.”

http://nigeriavillagesquare.com/forum/main-square/47313-revealing-interview-donald-duke.html
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by nduchucks: 3:27pm On Mar 01, 2010
mikeansy:

Utomi Faults CBN's Action On BankPHB , launches Two Books


Professor Pat Utomi has faulted the actions of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on BankPHB, disclosing that the situation in the bank was not as grave as the CBN painted it.


What do you expect? Pat Utomi was one of the named debtors with bad loans.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by Nobody: 3:36pm On Mar 01, 2010
ndu_chucks:

What do you expect? Pat Utomi was one of the named debtors with bad loans.

Are you talking about his name appearing in the wrong list published by CBN which when the list was corrected his name was no longer there and CBN appologised?

trust me Sanusi is more of a sham than anyone else.

I for one does not subscribe in the theory of Sanusi pursuing a sectional agenda. I just think Sanusi has no clue what he is doing. He just does'nt Know.

Pat Utomi is an economist of repute and not some lucky banker who rose through the ranks because he is a prince of Kano. It would have been nice to see how Sanusi will run First Bank as boss first before giving him the huge task of running the CBN. The job is too big for him. Sanusi has proven to be a light weight,
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by pcicero(m): 3:58pm On Mar 01, 2010
My humble opinion is that Sanusi is confused and what he only does now is double-speaking without any concrete agenda for the economy.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by naijaking1: 4:01pm On Mar 01, 2010
ndu_chucks:

What do you expect? Pat Utomi was one of the named debtors with bad loans.

Interesting to see how folks who have no genuine point to add to the converstaion always quickly go personal.
Even if Utomi was named as a debtor, what has that got do with his professional opinion?
I mean professional opinion, because I doubt whether you, Sanusi, and other blind supporters on this forum understand that.
If you don't enough professional opinoin to counter his(Utomi) argument, there is no need to resort to cheap personal attacks and wild allegations to sway the public like Sanusi does all the time.

pcicero:

My humble opinion is that Sanusi is confused and what he only does now is double-speaking without any concrete agenda for the economy.

He's not confused. He's already saying that the benefits of his crazy action will start bearing "fruits" in about 10 years. Soludo never had 10 years, but it's obvious that despite the current finacial tragedy caused by Sanusi, the man is already eyeing the extension of his term to another 4-5 years. So, he's not a fool my brother, but just an outright politician operating in an environment manned by his fellow Katsina mafia folks, and with nobody to challenge him.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by Nobody: 4:12pm On Mar 01, 2010
CBN's Unusual Reform Tactics

Augustine Mukoro

31 January 2010


Lagos — In the last few months, there's hardly a Nigerian who has commanded media visibility of the frequency and scale of new Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, Lamido Sanusi. His pronouncements have generally been guaranteed of sensational headlines while pictures of him in his trademark three piece suits adorn the newspapers on a daily basis.

Sanusi is on a reform mission. So, he has told the country. At the beginning, very few disbelieved him. In a country that has been rendered prostate by corruption and inefficiency, actions like the kind Sanusi has taken over the last few months coupled with tough-talk are all it takes to get the public to your side. Sanusi won public acclaim very quickly. Indeed, a few days after his sack of the first set of bank chiefs, the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, apparently carried away by euphoria, during a visit to the President commended the initiative and requested that it be replicated in other sectors of the economy.

Today, it would appear that the scales are gradually falling off people's eyes. What sort of cleaning mission is it that upsets an economy in the way Mr. Sanusi is upsetting Nigeria's? Did he rigorously think through the "reforms" he is carrying out? Was there a robust plan of action that had painstakingly evaluated the different scenarios that are playing out? Was there a strategy to evaluate potential fall-outs and how to manage them? Was there a strategy to communicate properly with all stakeholders and enable them fully appreciate what is going on? Sanusi's shoddiness so far, shows that none of these took place. As one commentator has said, the man appears to have been working from the answer to the question.
Click to learn more,

Upon conclusion of the bank audits, Sanusi threw out executives of eight banks in controversial circumstances. All the bank chiefs allege that they were not availed of a fair hearing. Indeed, in one instance one of the bank chiefs alleges that upon completion of the audit, the CBN examiners returned a verdict of not guilty on the bank, as the volume of non-performing loans did not warrant a CBN intervention. The CBN had however, turned around to accuse these same CBN-appointed examiners of "memory loss", forcing them to include an amount that shot up the non-performing loans to a level that warranted the intervention that the CBN intended.

While these are all allegations at the moment, one wonders why Sanusi would choose the medium of a press conference to remove bank chiefs. Apparently, in the quest to be seen as some savior of the banking industry, the CBN rushed off to the media to demonize key players in its industry, completely forgetting the impact which this could have on public confidence not just pertaining to the affected banks themselves, but of the entire banking sector. The media lapped up the stories and got Mr. Sanusi generous editorial and photo publicity.

Not done, the CBN took another unprecedented step. It proceeded to publish a list of what it termed non-performing loans. Many people have said that this was an unethical thing to do, but I differ. In a country like Nigeria where people borrow and deliberately refuse to pay up, perhaps an unconventional step of this nature to embarrass and intimidate debtors to pay up may have indeed been in order. But in its shoddiness, the CBN demonstrated that again, it had been less than painstaking in its approach. Its main objective, it appeared, was the news headline.

Consequently, an Aliko Dangote was quoted in newspaper headlines, in place of Ali Dangote, a son to Sani Dangote. Anthony Anenih, top politician was quoted in place of Anthony Anene. Even Ndidi Okereke-Onyiuke was quoted as a debtor, whereas she only serves on a Federal Government appointment as non-executive chairman of Transcorp. Pat Utomi, social critic was also quoted as debtor on account of being a non-executive chairman of a company that took a loan years before he was appointed. The list of embarrassingly wrong names is long.

What unfortunately, the CBN did not tell Nigerians was that the biggest debtor of all, is the Federal Government, indebted to its suppliers, mainly the fuel marketers to the tune of hundreds of billions of Naira. Because the Federal Government had defaulted in its obligations to the fuel marketers, they in turn had been unable to service their loans obtained from the banks. Other suppliers to which the Federal Government is indebted are contractors working on Independent Power Projects.

In the heat of the furore caused by the CBN's negative publicity, hordes of depositors rushed to the affected banks to withdraw their deposits. Having gotten a clear impression from the CBN that some banks were troubled, this was a natural reaction. Indeed, many depositors rushed off to Guaranty Trust Bank which was one of the few new generation banks that had been given the clear by the CBN. Saddled with an upsurge of far more deposits than it could cope with, GTB's systems malfunctioned repeatedly in the concluding months of 2009 and its banking halls were perpetually choked with customers.

Today, despite the supposed cash injection into the affected banks, they continue to perform poorly. Depositors are hard to find, as the CBN has by its regular pronouncements and actions considerably impaired public confidence in these erstwhile vibrant institutions. To make matters worse, these banks which used to be employers of last resort for just about any university graduate of whatever academic persuasion have begun to shed employees on a scale that is unprecedented in this millennium.

In less than 6 months, thousands of young Nigerians have been rendered jobless, in so doing depriving not only them and their immediate families but extended family chains of their means of livelihoods. The social pressures including crime and prostitution which this will instigate in the years to come, are perhaps not yet fully understood by Nigerians.

In addition, banks are no longer expanding to rural and sub-urban places. It would appear that the model to be adopted now is the conservative model of the opportunistic foreign banks which were perfectly content to set up one or two branches in the most urban cities - Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt. Banks like Oceanic and others which at great cost to themselves made efforts to expand the reach of banking to the rural poor and unbanked have been requested to discontinue such expansion and indeed close down "unprofitable branches".
Relevant Links

In the midst of the problems that the CBN has caused by demonizing bankers and borrowers, banks have practically put a stop to lending. Today, fuel queues, once a denominator of the misrule of the Babangida and Abacha years, are back. Nigerians are spending precious man-hours in the queues searching for petrol.

Recently, Aliko Dangote at great cost to himself but in an apparent attempt to free his name and reputation from potential damage on account of indebtedness to any local bank, paid up all his debt to Nigeria's banks. Even though this is a most ridiculous development as banks exist to fund industry, its wider implication appears lost on Nigerians.

What kind of country is it that takes one step forward and several backwards? When will the CBN, in its quest to appear "reformist" stop dragging our economy backwards?

http://allafrica.com/stories/201002011016.html
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by naijaking1: 4:30pm On Mar 01, 2010
^^^
---still waiting for ndu-chucks, texaspette, and other blind supporters to show up and defend the indefensible.
Maybe the allafrican reporter's name was also published as debtor to one of the banks undecided
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by nduchucks: 4:31pm On Mar 01, 2010
@naijaking1 & mikeansy;  Given the passion with which you are attacking Sanusi, one would have thought you'd have had the guts to comment on this post https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-405869.0.html#msg5607155

One would have expected you to agree that the issues raised in that post by Sanus, are noteworthy, at the very least.  You conveniently ignored the post.

Something tells me that you, naijaking1, are either the personal physician/consultant of Cecelia's, you are her neighbor in DC, or may be named a co conspirator during her trial. Rakumin dajij.
Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by nduchucks: 4:40pm On Mar 01, 2010
@naijaking1, Sanusi has the law on his side, I remember you all ranting about the illegality of Sanusi's actions. Sooner or later, your people will go to jail. Let's hope you've read about this. The usual suspects refused to publicize it in the newspapers they own:



[size=16pt]N620bn bailout: Court strikes suit against Sanusi[/size]

A Federal High Court in Lagos has struck out a suit challenging the decision by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to disburse about N620 billion to some ailing banks as bailout funds.

The suit filed last year by a member of the House of Representatives Femi Gbajabiamila had the CBN and its governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi as defendants.

Although the judge, Justice Binta Nyako, held that the plaintiff has the locus standi to file the case, she identified some defects in it, which formed the basis of her decision.

As against the defendants’ argument that the plaintiff lacked the right to sue having failed to show that he suffered any special injury different from that suffered by other members of the public, the judge held that he could sue in view of his status.

Justice Nyako held that as a member of the National Assembly who swore to protect the Constitution, he had the right to sue in challenge of the defendants’ action where it is felt that such action constituted a breach of the Constitution.

The judge struck out a substantial portion of the affidavit supporting the originating summons on the ground that the information contained therein offended certain provisions of the Evidence Act.

In striking out the suit, Justice Nyako held that having struck out a substantial part of the affidavit supporting the originating summons, there was nothing left for her to determine in the substantive suit.

The plaintiff had urged the court to determine whether the CBN Act and the Banks and Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA) authorised the defendants to raise money and disburse same without the consent of the National Assembly.



Re: Sanusi Criticizes Bank Consolidation Exercise by jumobi1(m): 4:44pm On Mar 01, 2010
just being an e-Diot.
Shouldn't this be in the money section?
I honestly see no reason not to like Sanusi. The financial sector in naij is bad and he seems to always be doing something about it. Until it is proven he has an ulterior agenda, i have no wahala with the malam.

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