Cape Times

Main VBS stakeholde­rs to co-operate

- Kabelo Khumalo

THE PUBLIC Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), which holds a majority stake in VBS Mutual Bank (VBS), yesterday pledged to work with the bank’s curators after the SA Reserve Bank placed it under curatorshi­p on Sunday.

The PIC said it had noted the decision of the central bank to place VBS under curatorshi­p after it experience­d liquidity challenges

“The PIC will work closely with the appointed curator, SizweNtsal­ubaGobodo, and all other stakeholde­rs, to assist the bank navigate this difficult situation, and hopefully emerge much stronger,” PIC said.

The central bank said the bank’s liquidity problems emanated from the maturity of a large concentrat­ion of deposits from municipali­ties, and was exacerbate­d by the terminatio­n of other sizeable deposits and the inability to source sufficient funding timeously.

VBS is registered with the central bank as a mutual bank. It was establishe­d in 1982 and initially operated as the Venda Building Society in the former Venda homeland. The bank was granted a permanent mutual bank licence in 2000.

VBS took the spotlight last year when it gave ex-president Jacob Zuma a R7.8 million loan to pay off his Nkandla debt.

The move to place VBS under curatorshi­p was backed by new Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene, who said the move would “nurse the bank back to health”.

However, the Black Management Forum (BMF) yesterday hit out against the move, saying the curatorshi­p process should not have been the first method of interventi­on in assisting the bank with its liquidity challenges. “The BMF will seek to engage with the management, shareholde­rs, relevant key stakeholde­rs of VBS, as well as those from Treasury to get the full details and context on this matter and a decision taken,” the BMF said.

“The BMF hopes the outcome of the consultati­ons with the relevant parties concerned will get VBS back to a fully operationa­l board…

“The BMF urges that the VBS commercial licensing applicatio­n process is expedited to ensure that they do not wait the normal 12 to 18 months review period.”

The decision also drew the ire of trade union federation Cosatu, which said the move was further evidence of why the bank should be nationalis­ed.

Cosatu spokespers­on Sizwe Pamla said the Reserve Bank’s decision to place VBS under curatorshi­p was a reminder that the Reserve Bank had no appetite to see the financial sector transforme­d.

“The Reserve Bank keeps reminding us why it is a bad idea to have monopolies and a privately owned Reserve Bank… By removing the central bank from democratic ownership and control, they place it in a position that makes it easy for conglomera­te elites to co-ordinate their private interest,” Pamla said.

The last bank to be placed under curatorshi­p was African Bank in 2014, as part of a rescue plan that included an R10 billion capital injection.

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? PIC chief executive Dr Daniel Matjila. The PIC, which holds a majority stake in VBS Mutual Bank, pledged to work with the bank’s curators.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) PIC chief executive Dr Daniel Matjila. The PIC, which holds a majority stake in VBS Mutual Bank, pledged to work with the bank’s curators.

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