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RBC withdrawal may send Bahamas ‘rogue’

By NEIL HARTNELL

Tribune Business Editor

nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

The Bahamas could be perceived as having gone “rogue” if Royal Bank of Canada’s (RBC) pull-out drives Bimini and Spanish Wells residents to use web shops for mainstream financial services transactions, a local provider warned yesterday.

Paul Moss, Dominion Management Services’ president, told Tribune Business that the Bahamas’ financial services reputation and integrity could be undermined if web shops became “de facto banks” in Family Island communities.

While the web shop industry’s legalisation via the Gaming Act 2014 was intended to bring it and its finances into the formal economy, Mr Moss pointed out that all commercial banks - with the exception of Bank of the Bahamas - were accepting the sector’s funds and deposits.

As a result, he warned that the Bahamas’ anti-money laundering regime, and international regulatory standing, could be compromised if Family Island residents increasingly turned to web shops and the ‘underground’ economy to conduct their daily banking business.

“That is what is going to happen; it’s happening even now,” Mr Moss told Tribune Business of fears that web shops will fill the ‘vacuum’ created by the withdrawal of RBC and other commercial banks from the Family Islands.

“Web shops are going to see more financial banking business, and this is something the former Central Bank governor [Wendy Craigg] had concerns about.”

John Rolle, her successor, has publicly sought to bridge the gap between the web shop industry and Bahamas-based commercial banks through education, exposing the latter’s compliance departments to the stringent regulatory regime imposed by the Gaming Act 2014.

Mr Moss, though, reiterated that this has yet to result in commercial banks outside Bank of the Bahamas accepting web shop deposits, thus potentially leaving hundreds of millions of dollars outside the regulated, formal banking system.

“What we’re making now is a statement that the Bahamas might be a rogue in terms of its anti-money laundering regime,” he warned.

“What I’m saying is that, if left unchecked - if there’s no bank in Bimini or Spanish Wells, and the web shops are there - they will become de facto banks.

“We know commercial banks, apart from Bank of the Bahamas, are not accepting web shop funds because of the perceived high risk attached,” Mr Moss explained.

“If that goes unchecked, almost implicit in that is we have allowed Bahamians to participate in unsupervised and unregulated financial transactions, and that creates a problem for the whole jurisdiction. That’s something we’ve got to guard against.”

Web shops are already effectively used as money transmission providers, with Bahamians placing funds in their gaming accounts for pick-up on other islands.

However, concerns that they may be increasingly used for regular banking transactions have escalated since RBC’s announcement that it will shortly close four branch locations, including three in the Family Islands.

The Bimini and Spanish Wells pull-outs will leave both islands without a physical commercial banking location, and force residents to travel to Freeport and Harbour Island, respectively, if they need to access a branch.

RBC’s move has caused “uproar” among the residents and private sector on both islands, forcing Nathaniel Beneby, the bank’s Bahamas managing director, to meet with local government officials and some businesses on Bimini yesterday. Some complained, though, that they were unable to access the meeting.

RBC’s pull-out follows Scotiabank’s withdrawal from North Eleuthera and Long Island in 2015, as commercial banks seek to cut costs in a low-growth economy that has saddled them with a $1 billion-plus pile of non-performing loans.

The commercial banking industry is also trying to drive Bahamians to increasingly turn to electronic banking channels, such as the Internet and mobile apps, to conduct their financial services business rather than visit branches.

However, many observers feel the banks are trying to make Bahamians run before they can walk. This nation is still a cash-intensive economy, with many employees paid by cheque and requiring a branch to deposit and cash them, while many older Bahamians are not familiar with electronic banking technology.

Mr Moss said RBC’s pull-out would cause “tremendous hardship” for Bimini and Spanish Wells residents, and expressed surprise the bank would choose to exit the former island given its strong economy.

“Bimini, particularly over the last five years, has grown exponentially, with a number of Bahamians employed at the resort down there,” he said. “They have to use that bank because it’s the only facility there; they have to use it.

“It’s going to mean that people are going to have to use more cash, and it’s not good in any society where people can’t have the banking services they desire. It’s going to be tremendously hard.”

With many Biminites likely to have to travel to Freeport just to cash and deposit their pay cheques, Mr Moss added: “It’s crazy. It doesn’t make sense. Bimini is taking off.

“I think RBC is making a strategic move, but the move is backwards. Bimini is poised for more development. There are more people looking at Bimini.”

Mr Moss said “the difficulty” the Bahamas faced, especially with the Canadian-owned banks, was that branch closure decisions were taken either at Caribbean head offices or Toronto by persons who have “no appreciation for the situation on the ground”.

Arguing that banks played a vital role in sustaining Family Island communities, Mr Moss criticised what he described as a short-sighted “hands-off” approach towards ensuring financial services were available throughout the Bahamas.

He called for a proactive policy of promoting Bahamian bank/credit union development and ownership, and agreed that this nation look at legislative tools similar to the US Community Reinvestment Act.

This mandates that US-based banks not discriminate in the provision of financial services, and that these are provided to low income and remote communities on the same terms as received by more affluent persons.

It has also been used to require financial institutions to assist in the creation of credit unions, and savings and loan organisations, in neighbourhoods they have exited.

“This is what the regulators should already be doing. We are at the mercy of the banks,” Mr Moss told Tribune Business.

“We’ve had this hands-off approach to financial services. We stick our heads in the sand until we are forced to act. We’re going to get these results, quite frankly with this hands-off approach to empowering Bahamians to own banks.

“We should do that. Put the policies in place to make sure these banks don’t get away from their obligations. It’s an opportunity for the Government to look at policies so Bahamians can become owners of savings and loan institutions, or even fully-fledged banks.”

Comments

banker 7 years, 1 month ago

Too late -- already gone rogue with the webshops.

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JB357 7 years, 1 month ago

Commonwealth Bank.....HELP!!

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John 7 years, 1 month ago

There is a saying in Economics, "Bad money chases away good money." In this case it may be the reverse because if residents on the family islands have no choice but to do their banking thru the Web Shops, they they would have to embrace them as part of the community. Notice how every one keeps hitting on the web shops as being illegal and suspect when it comes money laundering but no one seems to notice that most of the recent persons busted for trying to take excess and undeclared currency to the US were persons who claim it was winnings from the casinos. Were there further investigations to confirm that the casinos were the source of the funds and it was not money from the sale of guns or drugs or from some other illegal source? The gaming industry has to be policed in its entirety and there cannot be singling out a chosen few (Bahamians) to whip them all soundly if only under suspicion.

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killemwitdakno 7 years, 1 month ago

We shops ought to separate this sector to legit Western Union or Reloadable cards and Payday advances. (Though that brand is much less distinguished than a global bank branch).

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Reality_Check 7 years, 1 month ago

Most Bahamians would be wise to do google, youtube and facebook searches on each of the following with the word "Bahamas" added to find out who in our society have sold their souls to the devil by doing the bidding of the racketeering thug Sebas Bastian:

Playtech Systems Limited

Brickell Management Group

Island Luck

Investar Securities Limited
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