Clients of 22 fund managers to be paid – SEC
Clients of collapsed fund management companies will start receiving their locked up funds before the end of the year, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has said.
This follows a relief granted the Official Liquidator, the Registrar-General, to liquidate 22 fund management companies (FMCs) whose licences the SEC revoked in November last year.
The 22 are part of the 50 FMCs whose licences were revoked “due to their inability to return clients’ funds, totaling GH¢8 billion, and significant breaches of applicable rules that created risks to financial stability”, according to the SEC.
A release issued by the SEC, the securities market regulator, said as of last Wednesday, August 26, 98,820 claims, valued at GH¢10.83 billion, had been received against 47 of the companies, with the remaining three having no claims against them.
The claims include GH¢4.65 billion filed against Blackshield Capital (formerly Gold Coast Fund Management Limited) by 82,204 clients, representing 42.93 per cent of the total value of claims and 83.18 per cent of the clients.
Claims filed against Firstbanc Financial Services Limited were 423, valued at GH¢800 million. While the clients represent 0.428 per cent of all persons making claims, the value of their claims accounts for 7.38 per cent, making it the second single largest FMC against whom claims had been filed.
However, the SEC explained, claims validation on Firstbanc Financial Services was yet to start because of its initial failure to cooperate with the commission, in addition to the filing of an application for an injunction pending appeal at the High Court.
The SEC said it did not have access to the records of five companies, against whom 489 clients had filed GH¢87 million in claims.
They are Kripa Capital, EM Capital, Omega Capital, Nickel Keynesbury and Heritage Securities (Future PIP Management Ltd).
“We are in the process of resolving the issues to get full access to the records of the remaining five firms,” it said.