Showing posts with label Banking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Banking. Show all posts

Saturday, December 16, 2023

Banking in Anguilla

 

Most nights, I awaken early, shaken by fear for the National Commercial Bank of Anguilla (NCBA). It boasts that it controls more than half of the banking business in Anguilla. This year, after only seven years of operating, it claims to have accumulated assets of over one billion EC dollars.

Each morning before the radio news, there is an advertisement for the bank. A perky female voice falsely claims that NCBA is the oldest indigenous bank in Anguilla. NCBA was in fact incorporated in Anguilla and commenced business only in 2016, making it the youngest bank.

Scotia Bank Anguilla was incorporated in Anguilla and commenced business as far back as the year 1989. As it is still in operation, it qualifies as the oldest indigenous Anguillian bank. It was acquired by Republic Bank of Trinidad in 2019 and changed its name, but by virtue of its incorporation in Anguilla in 1989 it qualifies as an indigenous bank and is by far the older.

National Bank of Anguilla (NBA) made the same boast of controlling more than half of the banking business in Anguilla up to the day it was taken over by the conservators in 2013 and ceased to do business. Its board of directors recklessly lent out the bank’s depositors’ money to borrowers who were rich in land but who had very little prospect of being able to pay back the loans: a mortal sin in banking business as any reputable banker will tell you.

At the time then, as now, there was little market for distressed properties, and attempts to sell the real estate of defaulting borrowers at full market value had no success. Yet, the directors continued to accept real estate as security for increasingly insecure loans, even as the bank approached bankruptcy. In my opinion, even today, only a badly advised and managed bank would make a loan backed only or mainly by real property in Anguilla.

Full disclosure, I was a founding member and the first legal adviser of National Bank of Anguilla from its formation in 1985 when I signed the Memorandum and Articles of Incorporation which I had drafted. I remained legal adviser until about 1995 when my law partner took over primary responsibility for that client. After I retired and we wound up the partnership in 1999, another law firm was retained as its adviser.

Edmund Lawrence was the bank’s banking advisor in the early days of the late 1980s. He admonished the directors, that it was unsafe to make a loan based mainly or entirely on Anguillian real property security. I recall he provided them with a policy paper to that effect. I now regret that during the time I was the bank’s legal adviser in the 1980s and 1990s, I did not repeatedly remind the directors of his advice. They appear to have entirely forgotten his warning by the time the central bank moved in.

By 2013, so many of the bank’s loans were in default that the Central Bank sent in the conservators, and it was effectively shut down and ceased to function. Indeed, up until the year 2013 I was unaware that nearly 50% of the bank’s loans were in default. At that time, the NBA claimed to hold assets and obligations of over a billion EC dollars. The directors lent out almost all the money deposited with the bank, or some EC$500 million of which some 49% was in default at the time it ceased to operate. At that time, the bank was worth a billion dollars on paper. My late mother and I owned 10% of the equity in the bank. Would somebody remind me what 10% of a billion is? Of course, the shares are now entirely worthless.

We do not know the details of the bank’s default at the time the central bank closed it down. The then Chief Minister, in resisting public demands for the forensic report on the bank to be published, explained on the radio that if he were to do so his main critics would be embarrassed. All Anguillians would learn that they were among the five elite families who were principally responsible for the bank’s failure. The directors awarded them huge loans secured only by land. They should have been aware the securities would never sell, and the loans could never be paid back.

An effective central bank would not tolerate a bank with bad loans of more than 5%, far less approaching 50%. That would be a breach of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision’s Core Principles for Effective Banking Supervision, issued in September 2012. Due to the absence of appropriate legislation in Anguilla the ECCB was unable to effectively supervise the NBA. As a result, the central bank was unable to rein in the directors of NBA prior to the take-over in 2013. That default was only remedied by a raft of new laws in 2015.

These Core Principles are the minimum standards applied to judge how sound are the prudential regulation and supervision of banks and banking systems in all the regions of the world. They are the benchmark used by the IMF and the World Bank for testing the quality of supervisory banking systems. There have been core principles for many decades. The 2012 version is merely the latest version.

The principal reason why land and houses in Anguilla are a bad security for a loan is that real estate is, by law and for all practical purposes, almost unsellable by a lender for its full market value. If distressed land is successfully sold at auction in Anguilla today, it is probably only because the auctioneer is taking the risk of being sued for not following the rules. Any purchaser of real estate at auction in Anguilla today risks having his purchase declared fraudulent and invalid. He succeeds only because Anguillian borrowers are reluctant to defend their interests, relying instead on the illiterate and superstitious victim of injustice’s frequently heard refrain when failing to seek legal redress, “I leaving he to God, I leaving he to God.”

By the Registered Land Act, a chargee (usually the lender) does not hold title to the land security, but only holds a “charge” over it. Common law mortgages have been abolished in Anguilla. A mortgage was a transfer of title to the lender, with the borrower holding a right to have the land transferred back to him after he paid off the loan. With a land mortgage, the lender could relatively easily foreclose on mortgaged property and sell it either privately or by auction. By contrast, a charge in Anguilla operates as a security only, and the lender obtains no title or right to foreclose on the borrower’s property.

In Anguilla, when the lender exercises his right of sale of a land security in the case of a default by the borrower, he is obliged by the statute to act in good faith and have regard to the interests of the chargor/borrower. This means that he must properly advertise the property to ensure that the best possible market price is obtained at the auction sale.

If a borrower challenges in court a successful auction, the bank must be able to show that it honestly attempted to obtain the true market value of the property. It cannot value it at a lower price or, even worse, as I observe from the newspaper advertisements it seems to be done today, advertise its auction with a very low reserve price, presumably merely the amount it is owed. If that occurred and the auction was challenged, such a sale would likely be held to be illegal and liable to be overturned by a court.

An additional restriction on the lender’s right to sell is that the statute does not allow it to engage in a private sale agreement with a purchaser, as he could under a mortgage. The sale must be by public auction only, by a competent auctioneer, and with the reserve price set at the true amount of the market value, unless a judge orders the amount to be reduced. I have known would-be purchasers privately offer a bank to purchase a distressed property, with the bank having to refuse the offer. The purchaser then attends the subsequent auction and wins the bid at half the price he offered privately. This was the case with Flag Luxury Properties a few years ago.

In Anguilla there was, when I practised law, no requirement for auctioneers to be professionally qualified. Nor was there any institute providing a qualification for licensing qualified land valuers. Local land valuers were then, and probably still are, unqualified and unregulated.

It was only in 2017 that the ECCB first published valuation prudential standards for licensed financial institutions under the Banking Act. It insisted that member banks of the currency region must use the services of qualified valuers such as members of the London-based Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS). Yet, so far as I am aware, there is no RICS valuer providing services in Anguilla. There does not appear to be any regional institute of similar reputation acceptable to the ECCB.

In my experience, our local “valuers” put up a good show, producing magnificent and expensive reports for their clients’ use. The reality is that they are generally unqualified, unlicensed, unregulated, and susceptible to pressure from their client to set either a higher or a lower price, depending on who they represent, and how ethical they are.

Any successful auction of charged property in Anguilla is liable to challenge if it is alleged that the bank is not obeying its statutory duty to the borrower. A sale of charged property by a bank can be stopped by a court order if the bank is unable to prove that it satisfied its obligations towards the owner/borrower.

The Virgin Islands have the same Registered Land Act as Anguilla. See the 2012 judgment of the Court of Appeal in the Tortola case of Hilda Elizabeth Stoutt v First Bank of Puerto Rico [HCVAP 2010/0016]. In that case, the consequence of an attempt to sell was that the court declared that the bank’s claim against an elderly widow, who had been unduly influenced by her son to use her land and house to secure his commercial borrowing, was unenforceable. Applying the principles of undue influence to the bank in this case, the court held that the bank was fixed with constructive knowledge of the existence of undue influence exercised over Mrs. Stoutt in her offering up her property as security for her son’s company’s indebtedness to the bank. The bank’s manager was the elderly widow’s relative and knew that she had no interest in her son’s business. As a result, the court deprived the bank of its right to sell her property that she had put up to secure his borrowing.

The ECCB is under an international obligation to implement the Basel Core Principles in our region. It is required to ensure that the regulatory framework, that is, the standards it demands of the banks it regulates, meet the minimum standards established by the Core Principles. Prior to the passage of the 2015 Banking Act, it failed to do so, and risked being categorised as a sub-standard central bank.

The 2015 Banking Act of Anguilla, like most modern Banking Acts, is based on the Core Principles. There are 29 Core Principles. They are divided into two areas. Principles 1-13 deal with the supervisory powers, responsibilities, and functions of central banks. Principles 14-29 deal with the expectations made of banks, emphasising the importance of good corporate governance, risk management, and compliance with supervisory standards.

Any international investor who does business in Anguilla knows that our professional standards are lax. Generally, the only professions and trades that are legally regulated are food handlers, liquor licence retailers, land surveyors, physicians and nurses, lawyers, accountants, and auditors. All other professions, so far as I am aware, operate on a caveat emptor basis. Anyone may with impunity call himself an architect, engineer, land valuer, real estate agent, auctioneer, or banker. None of these professions is by law in Anguilla subject to any form of professional licensing or regulation.

The Core Principles require that the legal system ensures that banks can unobstructedly exercise their rights over real estate put up as security for a loan in the case of a loan in default. Anguilla fails this test. In practice in Anguilla, a foreign purchaser of charged property sold at auction, must apply for, and be granted, a First World War era Aliens Landholding Licence.

This requirement places an insurmountable barrier in the way of a bank selling the property of a politically well-connected borrower. That obstacle was meant to be overcome by the creation of the Eastern Caribbean Asset Management Company (ECAMC), which would purchase the loan in default and sell the charged property free of the obstruction that binds the hands of the bank.

The law was passed by the House of Assembly in Anguilla since 2015, but as with most politically risky laws, has been in hibernation since the day it was enacted. So far as I am aware, the government has succumbed to public pressure not to allow this company to operate in Anguilla. Anguillians object to their lands that they put up to secure a bank loan being sold when they default.

Since we in Anguilla do not seem capable of or interested in correcting our professional and ethical deficiencies, it is hardly surprising that external agencies will force internationally recognised standards on us. If they don’t, then our banks will continue to fail. I fear that may include the National Commercial Bank of Anguilla Ltd.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Anguilla Blacklisted



On 2 December 2019 Gerald Darmanin, French Public Accounts Minister, announced that France is adding Anguilla to its blacklist.[1]  It appears this will come into effect on 1 January 2020.[2]  The present list includes Panama, Trinidad and Tobago, the US Virgin Islands, and twelve other countries.  Now, they will add Anguilla, the Bahamas, the British Virgin Islands and Seychelles.[3]  This French blacklist is additional to the EU list, which does not include Anguilla.
But why is Anguilla being put on the French blacklist when the EU appears to be satisfied with our compliance?
Generally, reasons for being on a European blacklist include classification of the country as an offshore regime; lack of tax transparency; base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) measures; or failure to investigate foreign aid fraud.  Although we do incorporate IBCs, we have not been a significant offshore regime for years.  More tax-free companies are formed in the State of Delaware or the City of London in a day than are formed in Anguilla in a decade.  Our taxes are heavy and transparent.  Anguilla signed on to BEPS in March 2018, and since then we have continued to implement BEPS minimum standards.  We have received no request to investigate foreign aid fraud.
Being on the French blacklist will result in certain additional punitive measures.  These include an enhanced withholding tax rate of 75% and rebuttal of application of the French participation exemption regime.  If you are a Frenchman living in Anguilla, your dividends will be taxed at 75%.  There will be a direct impact on your relationship with the French banking sector.  Your French bank will not permit you to transfer money that you need to live on, to pay your children’s school fees, or to conduct your business.  French tourists will not be able to access their funds through a local ATM or pay their restaurant and hotel bills with credit cards.
Other measures will include new liabilities for e-commerce platforms; enhanced penalties in relation to tax fraud cases; a ten-fold increase in penalties for auditors, banks, tax lawyers, tax advisers and other intermediaries accused of helping to put into effect certain fraudulent schemes and operations (and the burden of proof is shifted to the intermediaries to prove their innocence); the introduction of a naming and shaming process; and new plea and transactional procedures in tax fraud cases.
Jurisdictions can get added to the French blacklist if they do not provide information quickly enough, thus complicating tax investigations.  Or, the information provided may be insufficient.  France has been carrying out investigations into 500 companies following the Panama Papers scandal which exposed illegal practices in the offshore finance industry.  It seems 15% of the 500 cases were registered in Seychelles.[4]  It is not known what percentage, if any, were registered in Anguilla.
All efforts to find out from official sources the reason for Anguilla being on the blacklist have proven futile.  Some insight may be derived by looking at the published information concerning other French blacklisted countries.
Panama was originally on the French National List of Uncooperative States and Territories (ETNC), but it was removed in 2012 when it became fully compliant with EU demands.  It was returned to the list in 2016 after the release of the Panama Papers.  Despite the efforts of its government to explain that the Panama Papers is ancient history, it remains on the ETNC.
The official reason for including Seychelles on this list is the lack of information about some companies previously requested by French tax inspectors.  It is not known whether Anguilla has failed to respond to information requested by the French.
In 2017 American Samoa and Guam were added to the EU blacklist for failing to apply automatic exchange of financial information; not signing and ratifying the OECD Multilateral Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters; not applying the BEPS minimum standards; and failing to commit to addressing these issues by 31 December 2018.  They got themselves removed from the blacklist but have now been reinstated.  Presumably, this is because they failed in their undertakings.  It is not known if Anguilla is in the same category of failure.
The official reason France has given for adding the Bahamas to the blacklist is its failure to respond to requests for information in a manner that is satisfactory to them.  Yet, there is not a single French tax-information request to the Bahamas that remains outstanding or that has not been dealt with.  Additionally, France has announced this action while failing to invoke the dispute-resolution process contained in the relevant Convention.[5]  The Bahamas Minister of Finance has been raging against France’s announced move.[6]  What is the point in us engaging in these multilateral organisations if individual members take unilateral action without dialogue?[7]
Could the answer to the question at paragraph two above be that, because we have no direct income tax, we are thought of as a tax haven, an offshore regime?  Never mind that our customs duties, other indirect taxes, government fees and public utility charges are among the highest in the world!  Everything we consume must be imported from outside.  Just last month, the Water Corporation of Anguilla increased the cost of using 999 gallons from $40.00 to $72.98.  With new environmental levies imposed on us, even the air we breathe now seems to be taxed.
Could it be our failure to implement a register of beneficial ownership?  The Europeans have long threatened the British for failing to force us to establish such a register.  Meanwhile, a 2018 study by Transparency International reveals that the project is a failure in Europe.[8]  While companies in Europe are obliged to enter names on the register, no G20 country is properly implementing the High-Level Principles on Beneficial Ownership.  No European country has the capacity to verify the information on their register.  Without the ability to do this, the information by itself is useless.[9]  What, other than bullying, is the point of imposing this on Anguilla.
We know that Boris is responsible for making any declaration of war on Anguilla’s behalf.  But elections and Brexit have him distracted.  Meanwhile, can we ask our Premier to tell Gerald Darmanin to stick one of his new Barracuda-class submarines where it hurts?  At least, threaten him with a yellow vest!
Whatever we do, it appears there are more woes in sight next year for Anguilla’s embattled banking and financial system.



[5]      Tw wit, the Multilateral Convention on Mutual Assistance in Tax Matters, which The Bahamas signed in late 2017 to facilitate tax-information exchange and cooperation.