Diamond Bank was damaged by
a distressed oil and gas portfolio of $1.8 billion (N302.6 billion) it has
emerged.
According to a report
obtained by THISDAY yesterday, between December 2014 and June 2018, the
immediate past management of Diamond Bank under the leadership of Mr. Uzoma
Dozie as Chief Executive Officer, inherited a distressed oil and gas portfolio
of $1.8 billion (N302.6 billion).
Of this amount, the sum
under Watch list and non-performing loans (NPLs) stood at $406 million (N68.9
billion) and $73 million (or N12.3 billion), respectively.
In addition, the bank had
foreign currency balance sheet mismatch in excess of $883 million as at October
31, 2015, resulting from maturing trade obligations and customer transactional
instructions.
Similarly, Diamond Bank had
unpaid billions of naira to the federal government’s Treasury Single Account
(TSA), resulting to regulatory sanctions and negative public perception and
waning customer confidence.
The immediate past
management of the defunct bank preserved Diamond Bank’s licence by paying down
the inherited forex liquidity mismatch, it stated.
Furthermore, it showed that
the inability of Diamond Bank to repay the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation/Nigerian Petroleum Development Company Limited’s funds to the TSA,
“due to the application of those funds in the creation of long-term oil and gas
and power loans was a major threat to the bank’s corporate existence.”
Without external
management, the then management of the bank employed every legitimate means,
including strong negotiation and relationship management skills to have the
issue resolved.
According to the report, as
at the end of September 2018, this obligation had been fully extinguished.
While resolving this, the
Uzoma Dozie-led management built an enviable retail franchise that,
stand-alone, can generate sustainable profitability and low-cost deposits.
However, the value of the
retail deposit was hidden in bad corporate loans inherited by the then
management.
In addition, the management
then developed long-term sustainable relationship with global institutions,
which has helped to build thrust in its brand.
These included Women’s
World Banking, Bills and Melinda Gates Foundation, Afreximbank, International
Finance Corporation, Ecowas International and Development Bank, among others.
Commenting on the merger
with Diamond Bank, the Group Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Access
Bank, Mr. Herbert Wigwe, had said: “Together, we would have 27 million
customers, which is the largest customer base of any bank on the continent. We
would have 33,000 point of sale (PoS) terminals, 3,300 automated teller machines
(ATMs) and all of that.
“Access Bank has grown over
time and has built a very strong wholesale banking capability. We have also
shown significant expertise as far as treasury is concerned, risk management as
well as our capital management plan.
“We created and pushed a
very strong value chain strategy which was our own way of building our retail
business.
“This was because we
realised that the creation of a large diversified bank is critical, not just
for Nigeria, but in Africa and the world. If you go to any part of the world,
what you tend to see is that the top three or top five banks technically
control market share.”
Speaking further, Wigwe
said the combination of Access Bank and Diamond Bank would ensure that “we are
able to take and solve customers’ issues right from the wholesale end, down to
the man in the village, just because of the use of technology.”
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