Sale of Keystone Bank, a boost – AMCON

Following the recent sale of keystone Bank, the Managing Director of Asset Management Corporation, Mr. Ahmed Kuru, has said the sale, at N41 billion to new investors, really helped the corporation’s performance. According to him, AMCON was set to deal with the top assets in the Bank’s portfolio and would take steps to recover its debts.

He said AMCON’s obligors, especially politically exposed individuals and business heavyweights, who hitherto thought they were untouchable, would not be spared in the enforcement by the recovery agency.

He added that AMCON had acquired 12,537 Non-Performing Loans worth N1.7 trillion from 22 financial institutions, following the 2009 banking crisis.

“Gross earnings also increased by 23 per cent to N341.8 billion, a 21 per cent increase in interest income to N42.6 billion, and AMCON has released its 2017 Audited Accounts as per the N41 billion sale of Keystone Bank,” he said.

According to him, as a result of the new recovery strategy, the corporation is restructuring its processes to enable it go after recalcitrant debtors in a manner that has never been witnessed before.

He assured the public that AMCON would not engage in any illegality, reiterating that AMCON would pursue every obligor, especially the 350 debtors of AMCON, who account for almost 80 per cent of the over N5 trillion huge debts.

The debts, he said, must be recovered because AMCON borrowed to buy the Eligible Bank Assets during the first and second phases when it bought over the bad loans from the banks.

He noted that AMCON would deal with some of the key assets very soon; such as the Peugeot Nigeria Limited in Kaduna, CDL, Aero Contractors, Arik Air and a host of others.

“As we close in on these individuals and entities that owe us, I want you to know that they will call us names, they will blackmail us, they will threaten us, malign and harass us. However, I can tell you that, hard as they will try, we will not be deterred in going about our normal duties as mandated by the law.

“But as we do, we ask ourselves first: if the action will stand right before God Almighty; secondly, will the action be in our national interest? And, is our action within the rule of law? If the answer to these three guiding principles is yes, AMCON takes decisions. It is nothing personal.”

On the 2017 Audited Account, which he described as better than that of 2016, he said though the corporation was not established to make profit like commercial banks, it could still return to profit this year after losses last year narrowed as the economy rebounded from its worst contraction in more than two decades.

The loss for the year through December improved to N16.4 billion ($45.3 million) from N164.9 billion the previous year.

“What that means is that, if the economy continues with a positive outlook as it experienced in line with the expectations of the Federal Government, AMCON would be expected to return to profit at the end of the 2018 financial year,’’ he added.