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Bank chief reassures clients and investors

Bank of the Bahamas’ (BOB) managing director has reassured customers and its 4,000-plus shareholders that it has a robust capital position matched by adherence to “sound banking principles that are consistently tested and validated by internal and external authorities to ensure the highest standards of prudence.”

Paul McWeeney pointed to the bank’s growth over its brief 25-year history and the positive returns it has earned for investors since going public.

“Since our establishment as Bank of the Bahamas in 1988 and becoming a publicly-held institution six years later, BOB has paid out more than $50 million in dividends, including more than $26 million to the majority shareholder, the Government of The Bahamas,” said Mr McWeeney.

“In 25 years of existence, we have gone from one branch to 13, from one island to seven, from handling checking and savings accounts to being a full service financial institution with products that range from a junior savings account a parent can open with as little as $10, to managing pension funds and trust assets for high net worth clients.

“We have gone from $90 million in assets at launch in November 1988 to $890 million in assets as of June 30, 2013. We have gone from a few dozen staff to a full-time complement of 358 with more than 20 additional temporary employees”

Mr McWeeney said the bank’s governance structure relating to lending practices is not only based on sound banking principles but creates a careful and deliberate segregation between the executive and administrative arm of the bank, on the one hand, and credit risk management and loan approvals, on the other.

“In order to comply with international accounting standards and regulatory requirements, past due loans go through various classifications including so-called ‘write-offs’ for accounting purposes only,” Mr McWeeney said.

“However, such accounting classifications do not mean that delinquent customers have their indebtedness forgiven. On the contrary, collection and enforcement actions, which are totally separate from accounting classifications, are not affected -- they continue aggressively against delinquent customers.

“Our practices in this regard are consistent with industry norms and regulatory requirements. In fact, our capital position exceeds that required by regulators.”

Comments

ohdrap4 10 years, 3 months ago

on the heels of the closure of their US branch, bob does not look good these days.

i believe the tabloids are more than 50% correct

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proudloudandfnm 10 years, 3 months ago

Obie and Pleasant pay their 2 million back yet? How much of my money did BOB lend those two jokers?

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ThisIsOurs 10 years, 3 months ago

Sound banking principles? "Pseudo" slush fund seems like it.

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banker 10 years, 3 months ago

And a 31 million dollar bail-out from the government called a shareholder capital injection. This accounting would make Enron accountants look like altar boys.

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