The Central Bank of Nigeria has commenced the final processes to refund sums of money deposited by investors in pyramid schemes operating as fund managers that had, since July this year, declared as illegal fund managers by the Investment and Securities Tribunal (IST).
The CBN had in a letter of 15 October, 2008 signed by T.A Ikuyeju on behalf of the CBN’s Director of Banking Supervision, had given 17 commercial banks a maximum seven days, last week, Wednesday 22 being the last day, to forward to it (CBN) the account details of 28 companies now referred to as wonder banks.
The details of the account requested by CBN to assist it determine the status of all the investors’ fund according to the memo include the account numbers, number of accounts held, branches they were opened, names and addresses of the signatories to the accounts, the balances as at 4/12/07; 31/12/07 and 30/9/08.
The 17 Banks which also include a non banking financial institution that were listed as being repositories of funds from the wonder banks are: Access Bank, Diamond Bank, ETB, First Bank, FinBank, Guaranty Trust Bank, Stanbic IBTC, Kakawa Discount House Limited, Oceanic Bank, Sky Bank, Spring Bank, Sterling Bank, Union Bank, United Bank for Africa, Unity Bank, Wema Bank and Intercontinental Bank.
However, the prospect of a speedy verification of investors’ status by the CBN may be limited by the ability of the commercial banks to forward the account details of the wonder banks to the CBN as directed.
A source in the CBN told FORTUNE & CLASS Weekly by Thursday last week that about ten of the commercial banks were yet to properly hand over the details as required.
“Though we have not yet started in-depth analyses of the details the banks have sent to us, our preliminary review shows that most of the details are not updated as we required, which may slow down our job.”
The source informed that the CBN is willing to quickly dispense with the refund to depositors in view of the CBN Governor’s empathy with unfortunate investors that had their money tied down in the wonder banks.
While sounding optimistic of the capacity to conclude the verification within the shortest possible time, the source, nonetheless, explained that many depositors in wonder banks may not be able to get a refund of their deposits.
“The officials that sieved through the claims of wonder banks submitted to the inter-agencies committee set up by the government to receive petitions and claims by Depositors earlier in the year found that many of the depositors, in fact, deposited their money through agent investment schemes that were not among the 28 that the IST froze their accounts in December, 2007. For this category of depositors there is little the CBN can do to refund their money because their claims and the details available with the CBN will not match.” The source said.
Besides, the source further warned of the possibilities of confusion arising from the mismatch of details forwarded to the inter-agencies committee by depositors and those available to the CBN through banks and the wonder banks operators.
“I think it is important that depositors track the operators so that they can help them put their documents together properly. This is to enable them (depositors) present reasonable explanations to the officials that would handle the verification if it turned out that there were mix-ups in the details like names, dates deposits were made, bank branches payment were made and the authenticity of the receipts they collected after submitting their tellers to the wonder bank operators. The fact is that we have realized that there are different receipts for same transaction types for some particular wonder banks.” The source confided.
Wonder banks had flourished over a period of three years up till about November last year on the tempting offer of making more than 500 percent returns of deposits to participants in what investment experts describe as pyramid schemes clothed in exotic investment propositions like Forex Trading, Fixed Odd Betting and hedge fund investment.
Most participants in the schemes were persuaded of the legitimacy of the schemes because the operators presented the scheme as a joint venture between them (wonder banks) and commercial. Mostly, a participant was required to pay directly into a designated bank account in the name of the wonder bank domiciled with a reputable commercial bank, usually with a customized teller.
The Securities and Exchange Commission had, in response to public outcry when the wonder banks started failing in their payment dues, usually qualified as profit on deposit in an operational week, clamped down on their operations and instituted a suit against them in November 2007, accusing them of soliciting, advertising and inviting the public to deposit funds with them.
The 28 wonder banks on trial before the IST are: Art Master & Co. Ltd; Cyber International Ltd; Fortune Access Interlinks Network; Gold Power Unique Services Ltd; Gorutrans Nigeria Co. Ltd; Interglobal Investment Ltd; Money Field Ltd; New Freedom Diversified Investment Ltd; Open Gate Multipurpose Investors Ltd; Orion Express Global Services Ltd; Pennywise Investment Ltd; Positive Move International Nigeria Ltd; Precious Golden Profile; Real and Cool Wealth International Ltd; Shola Olanrewaju Ayinke (Sefteg Nigeria Company); Silvertrust Global Investment; Successpoint International Investment Ltd; Torid Investment Ltd; Treasured Fund Assets Ltd; Vikel Petroleum Ltd; Wealth Concepts Global Ltd; Wealthgage Multibiz Int. Ltd; Wealth Interlink Agency Ltd; Wealth Solution Ltd; Wealth Transfer and Logistic Ltd; Wilson O. Wilson (Doing business in the name and style of Wilamas Ventures); Wisdom Investments Nigeria Ltd; and Nospetco Oil and Gas Ltd.
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