The Agricultural Development Bank
(adb) says it is on course to list on the Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE)
this year to enable it raise additional equity to deepen its operations.
The move, though yet to be
endorsed by government which is the majority shareholder, will enable
the bank to finance capital-intensive businesses in all sectors of the
economy -- including the oil and gas sector.
“Our plans of going to the stock
market for recapitalisation and expansion programmes this year is very
much on course,” Adam Sulley, Head of Marketing & Client
Service of the bank told B&FT at an interview in Accra.
“There has been discussion for
some time now, and there are still a lot of discussions with the Finance
Minister in terms of reporting, structure, among others. A lot depends
on the Minister now, but there is goodwill -- even from the Bank of
Ghana which is very much willing,” he added.
adb prides itself on being a bank
dedicated to financing agriculture, but concerns have been raised about
whether its current structure and operations give the needed thrust to
the agricultural sector, with many commentators asking for the bank to
be repositioned to upscale its agriculture business.
Ghana’s agricultural sector employs
approximately 42 percent of the working population, according to census
data. The sector is often said to be growing below potential with
farmers facing perennial problems such as the unavailability of modern
equipment, erratic rainfall, and expensive credit.
Nana Soglo Alloh IV, chairman of the
bank’s board of directors, stated that adb’s key plan is the injection
of additional capital into its business through the planned public
floatation.
The additional capital, he said, will
be used to expand the bank’s business frontiers, open more branch
locations, venture into new channels and make its banking products
accessible to more Ghanaians.
Currently, the bank is in the initial
stage of its follow-up strategic plan for the 2014-2016 period --
designed to ensure sustainable growth and profitability and build on the
key successes achieved in the previous strategic plan that was
completed in 2012.
“We are committed to leveraging our
skills, resources and risk expertise to build an efficient policy-led
agricultural-financing institution of choice and contribute to the
building of a strong national economy,” the board chairman said.
Minister of Finance and Economic
Planning, Seth Terkper, whose address was read on his behalf by his
Deputy, Kweku Ricketts-Hagan, said: “The country’s medium-term objective
and strategic direction is to expand opportunities for all and
reinforce the foundation for socio-economic transformation in
partnership with the private sector”.
He said the strategy of agricultural
modernisation is pivotal, and government is working to harness all
resources toward achievement of this objective.
“For this reason, an efficient credit
delivery system to the sector remains one of the high points of
government’s economic policy. Government will therefore implement
measures that will enhance the role and efficiency of financial service
providers in the agriculture sector.
“adb as an indigenous banking
institution has contributed immensely to the government’s development
agenda, especially its role as one of the closest partners of government
in prosecution of the country’s agricultural development,” he said.
He commended the bank for its
involvement in all national agricultural development programmes,
projects and schemes undertaken by the government and various local and
international donor organisations over the years.
“Since 2009, the bank has undertaken
transformational restructuring with a view to repositioning itself in
the face of the challenges of operating as a universal bank,” he said.
adb, which was set up in 1965 by Act
286, is wholly public-owned -- with government holding 52% of the
shareholding while the remaining 48% is held by the Financial Investment
Trust on behalf of the Bank of Ghana.
It provides a full range of banking products and services in retail, commercial, corporate and investment banking.
Despite its limited support, the bank
continues to remain the number-one financier in the agricultural sector.
In 2011, the bank’s total lending to the agricultural sector amounted
to GH¢142million. It also made some new interventions in the
agro-processing sub-sector and invested a total of GH¢84.5million.
In the same year, the bank transferred
GH¢25million to its stated capital account, which increased its stated
capital from GH¢50million to GH¢75million.
This enabled it to fully comply with
the regulatory minimum capital requirement of GH¢60million ahead of the
31st December 2012 deadline given by the Bank of Ghana for full
compliance by indigenous Ghanaian banks.
Thursday, January 23, 2014
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