The Bank of Ghana has suspended the foreign exchange trading licences of First Bank of Nigeria (FBN Bank) Ghana Ltd. and Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB) Ghana Ltd. over malpractices.
This suspension will last for a month, according to a statement obtained from the Ghanaian financial regulator’s website on Tuesday.
The two banks are both subsidiaries of First Bank of Nigeria and GTBank Nigeria.
READ ALSO: GTB Has No Explanation for N3.1m ‘Stolen’ From Customer’s Account 11 Months Ago
Fraudulent documentation in violation of the country’s foreign exchange market regulations was the major offence mentioned in the statement. Their suspension can be lifted after a month, depending on how well they satisfy the regulator’s control measures.
“Bank of Ghana has suspended the Foreign Exchange Trading Licences of Guaranty Trust Bank Ghana Limited (GTB) and FBNBank Ghana Limited (FBN), effective 18th March 2024, for a period of one (1) month, in accordance with section 11 (2) of the Foreign Exchange Act 2006, (Act 723),” the statement read in part.
“This is as a result of various breaches of the foreign exchange market regulations, including fraudulent documentation in their foreign exchange operations which have come to the attention of Bank of Ghana.
“The licence will be restored at the end of the one-month suspension period once the Bank of Ghana is satisfied that they have put in place effective controls to ensure strict adherence to the foreign exchange market regulations.
“By this statement, we caution foreign exchange market players to adhere strictly to the applicable forex market regulations and guidelines.”
READ ALSO: UK Fines GT Bank £7.6m Over Poor Measures to Prevent Financial Crime
For GT Bank, this is the second reported incident of violating a foreign country’s banking regulations in one year. FIJ had reported that its UK subsidiary was fined £7.6 million in January 2023 for violating anti-money-laundering systems and controls.
“These weaknesses were repeatedly highlighted to GT Bank by internal and external sources, including the FCA, but despite this, GT Bank failed to take appropriate action to fix them,” the UK Financial Conduct Authority said.
Subscribe
Be the first to receive special investigative reports and features in your inbox.