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GTCO Slammed with N1.49bn Fine by Regulators in H1 2024

Guaranty Trust Company (GTCO) has been sanctioned by regulators to the tune of N1.49 billion in the first half of 2024.

Ravenewsonline gathered that this penalty was imposed due to various infractions committed by the financial institution, which failed to meet regulatory requirements.

The regulators, tasked with overseeing the activities of financial institutions in the country, took this decisive action to ensure compliance and maintain the integrity of the financial system.

Read Also: GTCO to write off Aiteo loan, switch to aggressive recovery plan

The N1.49 billion fine serves as a warning to GTCO and other financial institutions to adhere strictly to regulatory guidelines and avoid such penalties in the future.

This development which highlights the regulators’ commitment to enforcing compliance and upholding the highest standards in the financial industry.

GTCO has been given a clear directive to rectify the identified infractions and prevent future occurrences.

The regulatory body will continue to monitor GTCO’s activities to ensure full compliance with regulatory requirements.

This action demonstrates the regulators’ dedication to maintaining a stable and trustworthy financial environment.

According to the report, Banking sector regulators in Nigeria, Ghana and Rwanda imposed N1.49billion sanctions on Guaranty Trust Holding Company Plc (GTCO) in half year ended June 2024.

From the audited H1 2024 results, the lender in its Ghana subsidiary was imposed N1.3 billion sanction for breaching foreign exchange market operational guidelines.

Our Source reported that in early March, Ghana Central Bank suspended foreign exchange licence of Guaranty Trust Bank Ghana Limited (GTBank) for involvement in fraudulent documentation of foreign exchange transactions.

A statement from the Central Bank said the suspension was as a result of various breaches of the foreign exchange market regulations, including fraudulent documentation.

The statement indicated that the licence of the two banks would be restored at the end of the one-month suspension, once the Central Bank was satisfied with effective controls for strict adherence to the foreign exchange market regulations.

However, the group in Nigeria was sanctioned an estimated N188million over four market infractions.

Read Also: GTBANK Suffers Security Issues As Fraudsters Hack Customers, Empties Bank Accounts

Our source reported that GTBank was sanctioned N8 million for failing CBN’s foreign exchange examination on the bank, N54 million in respect of consumer protection regulations and N124 million for failing 2024 compliance related/bank e-mail returns. In addition to the group sanction in Nigeria, a sanction of N2 million was imposed by CBN for failing mystery shopping exercise on the bank.

In Rwanda, the group sanctioned N560,000 and N311,000 for non-compliance noted with respect to the Bank taking fees which are not allowed by the regulator and non-compliance with the exchange rate applied by commercial banks, respectively.

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