Friday, June 12, 2009

NDB individual depositors to get money back

Atleast its a little relief for the depositors of Nepal Development Bank (NDB) after a stressful week of uncertainity. Individual depositors of the troubled Nepal Development Bank (NDB) need not worry as according to Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB), NDB has Rs 16.5 million cash and Rs 160.3 million bank deposit -- including Rs 95 million deposit in Nepal Cooperative -- Rs 95.7 million savings deposit, Rs 84.9 million fixed deposit and Rs 193.5 million other deposits.
"The findings of NRB show that except institutional depositors -- Employee Provident Fund (Rs 331.4 million) and Nepal Army (Rs 180 million) -- individual depositors need not worry as they will get their deposits back," the central bank said. The NDB has not been able to return the Nepal Army's and Employees Provident Fund's (EPF) term deposits -- even after maturity -- and they might lose their deposits. Nepal Army and EPF have been asking for their money back repeatedly but the bank is unable to return it.
On June 2, NRB decided to ask NDB why should it be not sent into liquidation. It sent a letter on June 3 to NDB asking why it should not be liquidated.
According to clause 86 of the Nepal Rastra Bank Act, NRB has given a 15-day deadline for the clarification to NDB. If the clarification is not satisfactory, NRB will file a case at Patan Appellate Court under clause 74 of Banks and Financial Institutions Act (BAFIA) to begin the process of NDB's liquidation.
After seeking clarification, NRB seized all the cash, cheques and securities of the bank and froze its accounts in various financial institutions.
NDB -- Nepal's first development bank -- started operations in 1998 and has a paid-up capital of Rs 320 million but its accumulated loss is more than double the paid-up capital, Rs 690.2 million by the end of mid-March. Its non-performing assets (NPA) is at 55.09 per cent and capital adequacy ratio (CAR) at a whopping 48.31 per cent. A bank must maintain its CAR at 11 per cent.
The NDB top brass has blamed NRB for taking biased action. "NRB has treated other financial institutions and NDB unequally," blamed NDB chairman Amar Gurung.
However, NRB governor Dipendra Bahadur Kshetry said that other financial institutions obeyed the NRB directives and have been improving. "Over the last four years, the NDB board never followed NRB's directives," Kshetry said adding that had NDB paid heed to the directives the condition of the bank would have improved.
The central bank has declared it a 'problematic bank' on October 11, 2007 after NDB and its board repeatedly flounted the central bank's directives. "NDB board members constantly failed to abide by NRB directives, were involved in personal gain and put depositors' money at risk," said NRB. "Financial institutions are custodians of public money and they have no right to put public money at risk."
Nepal Bankers' Association (NBA) has suggested NDB come up with a concrete plan within 15 days to revive itself. "NDB still has time to furnish its explanation with a convincing business plan to save itself," said Sashin Joshi, president of NBA and CEO of NIC Bank. NBA has also recommended a bottom-up approach in distributing deposits to depositors.

3 comments:

  1. I am grateful for your post. I would like to say that the expense of car insurance varies from one
    coverage to another, due to the fact there are so many different issues which give rise to the
    overall cost. By way of example, the brand name of the vehicle
    will have a huge bearing on the price tag. A reliable ancient
    family car will have a more affordable premium when compared to a flashy performance car.


    my weblog :: cyber sex

    ReplyDelete
  2. I have seen a great deal of useful issues on your site about desktops.
    However, I've the impression that laptops are still more or less not powerful more than enough to be a sensible choice if you often do jobs that require plenty of power, just like video editing and enhancing. But for internet surfing, word processing, and most other typical computer work they are just fine, provided you never mind the screen size. Thank you sharing your notions.

    Feel free to visit my web site :: fuck book

    ReplyDelete
  3. Whats up this is somewhat of off topic but I was wanting to know if
    blogs use WYSIWYG editors or if you have to manually code with HTML.
    I'm starting a blog soon but have no coding knowledge so I wanted to get guidance from someone with experience. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

    My website ... adult finder

    ReplyDelete