Saturday, June 7, 2025
NewsCenta
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Local
    • Education
    • Agriculture
    • World
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrities
    • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
NewsCenta
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Local
    • Education
    • Agriculture
    • World
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrities
    • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Opinion
No Result
View All Result
NewsCenta
No Result
View All Result

BoG set 10% NPLs by 2026, mandates write offs

BoG set 10% NPLs by 2026, mandates write offs

admin by admin
June 3, 2025
in Business
0
BoG, grows, assets

Bank of Ghana grows assets

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Bank of Ghana (BoG) is preparing to issue a sweeping new directive aimed at slashing high levels of non-performing loans (NPLs) that have plagued the country’s banking sector.

The move, which forms part of a broader five-part regulatory reform agenda, seeks to enforce sound lending practices, protect financial stability, and restore market confidence.

You might also like

BoG, grows, assets

BoG grows assets by 53% to GH¢215bn in 2024

June 6, 2025
Gold,oil, Bank of Ghana,

Bank of Ghana posts GH¢2.1bn forex losses from Gold for Oil

June 6, 2025

Mandatory write-Offs

As part of the directive, banks and other regulated financial institutions will be required to write off fully provisioned loans deemed to have no realistic recovery prospects.

However, write-offs related to loans involving related parties are explicitly excluded from this requirement.

The Central Bank’s decision reflects a growing concern that many financial institutions are maintaining unrealistic asset valuations by carrying bad loans on their books—often with no prospect of repayment.

The BoG believes that compelling institutions to clean up their balance sheets is essential to re-establishing trust in their financial health.

NPLs must be cut to 10% by end of 2026

The directive introduces a binding target: all banks must reduce their gross non-performing loans to no more than 10% of their total loan portfolio by December 2026.

This cap is designed to drive stricter credit risk assessment, improve underwriting standards, and minimise the long-term drag of bad loans on the economy.

While the move may pressure some institutions to accelerate recoveries or revise credit operations, BoG officials stress that this is a non-negotiable requirement aimed at fostering financial resilience.

Tougher rules on loan restructuring

In a bid to prevent window dressing of distressed assets, the Central Bank is tightening rules on loan restructuring.

Under the new measures, banks will only be allowed to reclassify a restructured loan as “performing” after there is sustained evidence of repayment.

This is to curb the practice where banks reclassify problematic loans prematurely, often to meet regulatory requirements or present a healthier financial position than actually exists.

The new standard seeks to ensure that restructurings reflect genuine recovery, not accounting gimmicks.

Enforcement of collateral recovery

The directive also emphasises the timely and effective recovery of collateral, especially for overdue and defaulted facilities.

Banks will now be required to demonstrate a structured approach to enforcing collateral claims, with an expectation that protracted delays and weak legal follow-through will no longer be tolerated.

This component of the directive aligns with BoG’s efforts to strengthen asset-backed lending practices and reduce the time and cost associated with collateral recovery in the Ghanaian market.

Risk governance under the microscope

Beyond asset clean-up, the Central Bank is calling for a renewed focus on credit risk governance.

Financial institutions will be expected not just to have credit risk frameworks on paper but to provide proof that they are effective in practice.

This includes documentation of risk oversight by boards, enforcement mechanisms, and feedback loops to adjust lending practices where necessary.

BoG insiders say that many recent credit failings have been the result of weak internal controls, rubber-stamp credit approvals, and poor monitoring—issues the regulator now wants banks to confront head-on.

Monthly NPL reporting and public transparency

To ensure closer supervision and investor awareness, the new regime introduces enhanced reporting obligations.

Banks must submit monthly NPL data to the BoG and publish sectoral breakdowns of their NPL portfolios in audited annual statements.

Most significantly, the directive will require banks to name and publicly disclose willful defaulters—borrowers who have the means to repay but choose not to.

These names must be listed in audited financial reports and will be shared with financial oversight bodies, effectively cutting off access to further credit within the regulated sector.

Public Naming of Willful Defaulters

According to the BoG, willful defaulters pose a unique threat to credit markets, distorting outcomes, weakening institutional credibility, and undermining responsible borrowing behavior. Publicly naming them, the regulator argues, will sharpen focus on systemic risk, improve due diligence by creditors, and send a clear message that strategic default will no longer be tolerated.

This “naming and shaming” approach is expected to stir debate in the industry, with some lauding it as necessary and overdue, while others may raise concerns about due process and reputational risk.

Reform agenda enters high gear

The NPL directive represents the fourth pillar in a wider reform effort initiated by the Bank of Ghana, targeting five key regulatory domains.

Earlier measures included improved reserve management for foreign and local currency deposits, digital lending guidelines, and transparency in cross-currency card transaction fees.

BoG reiterated its commitment to a fairer, safer, and more disciplined banking system.

Industry stakeholders have been advised to prepare for compliance and to take urgent steps in reviewing their credit books, risk frameworks, and governance structures ahead of the directive’s implementation.

Post Views: 111
Tags: Bank of Ghana
admin

admin

Related Stories

BoG, grows, assets

BoG grows assets by 53% to GH¢215bn in 2024

by admin
June 6, 2025
0

The Bank of Ghana (BoG) grows assets by a massive expansion of its balance sheet in 2024, increasing total by...

Gold,oil, Bank of Ghana,

Bank of Ghana posts GH¢2.1bn forex losses from Gold for Oil

by admin
June 6, 2025
0

The  Bank of Ghana  (BoG) has suffered cumulative foreign exchange losses of GH¢2.1 billion over the past two years as a...

Finance Mnister, Cassiel Ato Forson

Gold reserves of BoG rises to 32.16 tonnes in May

by admin
June 5, 2025
0

The gold reserves of the Bank of Ghana (BoG) have risen to 32.16 tonnes as of May 30, 2025, a...

Dr Johnson Pandit Asiama, BoG boss

BoG posts GH¢9.49bn loss in 2024

by admin
June 5, 2025
0

BoG posts GH¢9.49bn loss for the 2024 financial year, deepening the concerns around its financial sustainability, but showing modest signs...

Recommended

Woman,arrested,pouring, acid,former,boyfriend

30-year-old woman arrested for pouring acid on former boyfriend

June 6, 2025
Newly married man, trapped, death,

Newly married man trapped to death under haulage truck

June 6, 2025
NACOC, drugs,cannabis,

NACOC arrests suspected drug kingpin

June 6, 2025

Popular Story

  • Charles Bissue and SP, Kissi Agyebeng

    Bissue floors High Court and OSP at Supreme Court

    674 shares
    Share 270 Tweet 169
  • Monday, May 26, 2025 Newspaper Headlines

    652 shares
    Share 261 Tweet 163
  • Sickle Cell pioneer Prof Felix Konotey-Ahulu passes on

    630 shares
    Share 252 Tweet 158
  • Tuesday, June 3, 2025 Newspaper Headlines

    621 shares
    Share 248 Tweet 155
  • Wednesday, May 28, 2025 newspaper headlines

    617 shares
    Share 247 Tweet 154
NewsCenta

Newscenta is a Ghana-based news organisation publishing in print (The Newscenta Newspaper) and on a digital media platform (newscenta.com) dedicated to delivering timely and impactful news across various sectors, including politics, business, economy, technology, and culture.

  • About NewsCenta
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

© 2025 All Rights Reserved NewsCenta.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Politics
    • Local
    • World
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrities
    • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • Newspaper Headlines
  • Business
  • Agriculture
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Opinion

© 2025 All Rights Reserved NewsCenta.