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HomeBanking & FinanceN4.4tr: AMCON gives debtors 30-day timeline  to submit  repayment plan

N4.4tr: AMCON gives debtors 30-day timeline  to submit  repayment plan

The Management of AMCON led by Ahmed Lawan Kuru, as MD/CEO asked the debtors to come forward with a repayment proposal or risk the embarrassment of having their names in the media spaces as recalcitrant debtors as directed by the 9th National Assembly of the Federal Republic of Nigeria

The Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) has given debtors owing it N4.4 trillion to submit  their debt repayment plan. About 83 per cent of the debts are owed by 350 debtors. 

In a statement released yesterday, the AMCON said debtors that failed to bring their debt repayment plan between December 6, 2021 and January 5, 2022 will have their names published in national dailies.

The  AMCON Act Section 50B. (1) as amended states that, “Notwithstanding any rule or contractual obligation as to confidentiality, the Corporation may publish, in the national daily newspapers, a list of debtors that have failed to meet their debt or other repayment obligation to the Corporation in connection with any Eligible Bank Asset acquired by the Corporation…”

The AMCON said it has concluded arrangements to publish the full list of the names of individuals, institutions as well as their Directors on its Non-Performing Loans (NPLs) portfolio in national newspapers. 

“This followed Chairman Senate Committee on Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions, Senator Uba Sani (Kaduna Central) directive to the  AMCON to publish again, the names of all debtors including prominent Nigerians who are frustrating the effort of AMCON at fulfilling its debt recovery mandate,” the statement said. 

“The Management of AMCON led by Ahmed Lawan Kuru, as MD/CEO asked the debtors to come forward with a repayment proposal or risk the embarrassment of having their names in the media spaces as recalcitrant debtors as directed by the 9th National Assembly of the Federal Republic of Nigeria”.

The AMCON is saddled with the statutory responsibility of recovering all troubled debts owed the Corporation through the purchase of Eligible Bank Assets (EBAs) from Eligible Financial Institutions (EFIs) during the different phases of EBA purchases when the Federal Government established AMCON in 2010.

Only recently, the AMCON CEO told both the Federal House of Representatives and the Senate that the non-performing loan portfolio of AMCON is currently N4.4 trillion, with about 83 per cent of the debt owed by just 350 debtors. 

AMCON will not be blamed having taken the pain to warn the debtors ahead of the planned publication. AMCON Head of Corporate Communications Jude Nwauzor said the Corporation will have no choice than to carry out the directive of the National Assembly. 

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