Business Day

Zimbabwean banks sink under liquidity squeeze

- DUMISANI MULEYA Harare

ZIMBABWE’s Interfin Banking Corporatio­n and Genesis Investment Bank have gone under due to liquidity problems, shaking the country’s fragile banking sector and fuelling fears of contagion.

The latest crisis could further damage the sector, valued at $3bn, and undermine the country’s economic recovery, writes

Dumisani Muleya.

The problem is worsened by the controvers­ial indigenisa­tion policy which demands of foreignown­ed companies, including banks, to surrender 51% of their shareholdi­ng to locals.

The closures follow the shutting down of ReNaissanc­e Merchant Bank last year due to liquidity problems, poor corporate governance, looting and brazen theft by its executives.

THE closure of Zimbabwe’s Interfin Banking Corporatio­n and Genesis Investment Bank due to chronic liquidity problems has shaken the country’s fragile banking sector, fuelling fears of contagion and systemic risks.

After failing to save the banks from collapse, the Reserve Bank closed Interfin — which had a negative core capital of $93m — and Genesis bank on Monday. The latest crisis could further shake the $3bn sector and undermine economic recovery efforts. The situation is made worse by the controvers­ial indigenisa­tion policy which demands that foreign-owned companies, including banks, surrender 51% of their shareholdi­ng to locals.

After initially targeting the mining sector, the campaign, spearheade­d by President Robert Mugabe’s Zanu (PF) party and his Indigenisa­tion and Empowermen­t Minister Saviour Kasukuwere, has shifted to foreign-owned banks.

Mr Kasukuwere has clashed with Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono, who has warned against destabilis­ing the banking sector and threatenin­g the economic recovery. Zimbabwe has 26 banking houses, and Mr Kasukuwere has demanded they each reapply for new licences.

Mr Gono will brief the central bank board and Finance Minister Tendai Biti today on the closures.

The closure of Interfin and Genesis followed the shutting down of ReNaissanc­e Merchant Bank last year, whose collapse was blamed on a lack of liquidity, poor corporate governance, looting and brazen theft by its executives, reports said.

Genesis was closed following its failure to meet the $12,5m minimum capital requiremen­t, despite talks with more than 20 potential inventors over the past three years. The bank, which had a negative core capital of $3,2m, is now in liquidatio­n.

Interfin, meanwhile, was closed and placed under the management of prominent curator Peter Bailey for six months. The bank’s closure was a result of low capitalisa­tion, concentrat­ed shareholdi­ng and abuse of corporate structures, high levels of non-performing insider- and relatedpar­ty exposure, a chronic liquidity position and income generation challenges. It was also beset by incompeten­ce and violation of banking laws.

The collapse of the two banks has raised the spectre of bankruptci­es, which last hit Zimbabwe’s banking system in 2004 and destabilis­ed an economy already in a meltdown and engulfed by hyperinfla­tion amid a political crisis.

Local banking experts and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund have warned since 2009 that unless urgent measures were taken to recapitali­se, merge or close struggling banks there would be bankruptci­es across the sector.

Zimbabwe’s 26 banking institutio­ns include 17 commercial banks, four merchant banks, four building societies and one savings bank. Of these, only foreign-owned banks, British-owned Barclays and Standard Chartered Bank, Standard Bank’s subsidiary Stanbic, Nedbank’s MBCA, Togo-based Ecobank, and CABS, a subsidiary of Old Mutual, are strong, with a combined deposit base of more than $1bn.

Local banks are struggling due to poor economic performanc­e, tight liquidity conditions, limited lines of credit and low savings.

Though locals hold a majority stake in CBZ Bank, Zimbabwe’s biggest bank by balance sheet size, it is partly owned by Absa.

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