THISDAY

Seven Banks Pay N144.99m as Fine in 2018

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Seven banks quoted on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) paid N144.99 million as fines to regulators in 2018 for various contravent­ions.

Investigat­ions by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) indicated that the fines were paid to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Financial Reporting Council and Corporate Affairs Commission.

The affected banks were Sterling Bank, United Bank for Africa (UBA), Zenith Internatio­nal Bank, GTBank, Access Bank, FBN Holdings and Fidelity Bank.

A breakdown of the figure as contained in the banks’ annual reports showed that FBN Holdings and its subsidiari­es, First Bank of Nigeria, FBN Quest Merchant Bank and FBN Insurance Limited, paid the highest fine of N32.65 million during the period under review.

UBA came second having paid N30 million to the apex bank for various offences.

Similarly, GTBank was fined N24 million during the period under review, while Access Bank paid N20 million.

Sterling Bank, Fidelity Bank and Zenith Internatio­nal Bank paid N15.33 million, N13.01 million and N10 million, respective­ly for various offences during the review period.

Commenting on the contravent­ions, Prof. Sheriffdee­n Tella of Economics department, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun, said the preference of banks to pay penalty instead of complying with CBN directive was an age-long problem.

Tella said, “Banks weigh the cost of complying against paying penalty and decide to pay if the former is quite high.”

“There was a time the banks would prefer to pay penalty than lend to the agricultur­e sector because of the failure of many farmers to pay back due to bad weather, long gestation period and possibly mismanagem­ent,” he added.

Tella, also attributed the developmen­t to delay in responding to requests by some banks due to unnecessar­y bureaucrat­ic measures.

“Increasing the contravent­ion fee may not be helpful but a meeting of the stakeholde­rs in the banking sector arranged by the CBN should also be helpful,” he noted.

The Publicity Secretary, Independen­t Shareholde­rs Associatio­n of Nigeria, Mr Moses Igbrude, told NAN that shareholde­rs were not comfortabl­e with the various fines paid by the financial institutio­ns.

Igbrude, said no company would decide to break the law in order to pay penalties.

“I don’t think any public company will deliberate­ly flout the law in order to pay penalties unless such act must have brought some unseen benefit.

“Otherwise why would management do that when they know the reputation­al risk associated with it and queries from shareholde­rs at Annual General Meeting?

“We shareholde­rs are not happy about these payments and we have been advocating that companies should employ compliant officers to monitor all regulatory requiremen­ts to avoid penalties and if such officers fail they should be the ones to pay the penalties for negligence.

 ??  ?? L-R: Chief Executive Officer, CSR-in-Action, Bekeme Masade-Olowola; Head, Sustainabi­lity, Access Bank Plc, Omobolanle Victor-Laniyan; Senior Special Assistant to the President on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire and Group Chief, Sustainabi­lity and Governance, Dangote Industries Limited, Ndidi Nnoli-Edozien, at the Access Bank Sustainabi­lity Summit held in Lagos…recently
L-R: Chief Executive Officer, CSR-in-Action, Bekeme Masade-Olowola; Head, Sustainabi­lity, Access Bank Plc, Omobolanle Victor-Laniyan; Senior Special Assistant to the President on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire and Group Chief, Sustainabi­lity and Governance, Dangote Industries Limited, Ndidi Nnoli-Edozien, at the Access Bank Sustainabi­lity Summit held in Lagos…recently

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