BoG Shuts Down Illegal Finance Houses

The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has closed down three financial institutions for engaging in illegal activities and operating without licenses. The companies are CB Net Marketing Concepts, E-Finance and More and Diamond Investment Limited. A statement issued by the Central Bank said CB Net operates what is suspected to be a ponzi scheme in Accra, Tema and other vicinities. E-Finance and Diamond Investment operating in the Eastern and Brong Ahafo regions are offering attractive but non-sustainable packages to customers. Managers of the companies have been given one month to refund the deposits or face prosecution. In December last year, seven micro-finance companies in three regions have been closed down by the Bank of Ghana (BoG) for failing to meet licensing requirements, the acting Governor of the BoG, Dr Henry Kofi Wampah, has announced. The companies have been directed by the bank to refund all the money collected from their numerous customers and stop operations forthwith. The financial entities are Unity Trust Micro-finance in Somanya, Multi Credit Micro-finance in Cape Coast, Busy Fingers at Nima and Mfa Micro-finance at La, both in Accra. The others are Equip Susu Micro-finance, Emends Micro-finance and Divine Micro-finance, all in Kumasi, the Ashanti Regional capital. Dr Wampah told graphic.com.gh in an interview that the BoG had, earlier in 2011, given the micro-finance houses up to July 2012 to regularise their operations. By June this year, the finance houses had not secured operating licences from the BoG, for which reason they had been directed to refund depositors� money and cease operations, while reporting themselves to the regulator regularly, he said. Meanwhile, the BoG has cautioned the public to desist from dealing with micro-finance houses whose licences from the BoG are not boldly displayed in their offices. The bank has categorised micro-finance houses into four tiers and each group is required to meet a certain minimum requirement. Those in the first tier, which comprises the normal savings and loans companies, are required to meet a minimum capital of GH�7 million to operate. Tier two refers to micro-finance companies which mobilise savings and grant credit to the public and they require a minimum capital of GH�100,000 to operate, while tier three entities which do savings mobilisation or money lending must have not less than GH�60,000 as minimum paid-up capital. Individual susu collectors who constitute the fourth tier only require to join an association in order to operate. Officials of the BoG believe that the micro-finance landscape in Ghana is one characterised by unbridled and indiscriminate springing up of micro-finance institutions (MFI), with virtually no supervision. Speaking at the first annual general meeting of the Ghana Association of Micro-finance Companies (GAMC) in Kumasi earlier this year, Head of the Banking Supervision Department, BoG, Mr Franklin Belnye, catalogued some of the current challenges as inappropriate documentation, such as profiles of directors and key management personnel, and financial projections, among others, submitted by the MFIs to the BoG. Others were the rush by MFIs to establish branches even before the first office was firmly grounded and the offering of unsustainable returns to customers in order to attract and retain them, he said. The rest are the inability of the MFIs to employ qualified persons to manage their operations and increasing their risk appetite without providing the requisite capital to support such operations. �In recent times, micro-finance companies are springing up by the day. However, the rate of growth in the sector has brought to the fore the urgent need to strengthen its regulation and supervision to streamline its operations,� he said.