Antigua PM reiterates position regarding sale of Scotiabank

Prime Minister Gaston Browne says the Antigua and Barbuda government will not be held responsible for any run on Scotiabank as he reiterated his administration’s position in not providing a vesting order to facilitate the sale of the financial institution to Trinidad-based Republic Financial Holdings Limited (RFHL).

“What if there is a run on the bank? Whose problem is it? It will be the problem of Scotia Canada who will have to spend millions of dollars to fix the problem. If Scotiabank fails to provide some form of local participation then whatever happens to the branches here and the Caribbean is their problem,” Browne said at a ceremony in memory of the island’s first prime minister, V.C. Bird.

“I say here, we cannot be a coward people. When Sir Vere Cornwall Bird Senior and the 39ers were fighting the planter class they had to get involved in unconditional activities in order to fuel change.

“I say publicly without any fear of contradiction, that if Scotiabank fails  to provide some form of local participation then whatever happens to the branch here  and in the Caribbean that is their problem,” Browne told the audience.

A RFHL statement said that the banks being acquired are located in Guyana, St. Maarten, Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

It said that the purchase price is US$123 million, which represents US$25 million consideration for total shareholding of Scotiabank Anguilla Limited; and a premium of US$98 million over net asset value for operations in the remaining eight countries.

The Suriname-based CARICOM Competition Commission (CCC) says any impact the proposed acquisition of Scotiabank by the RFHL will be assessed in accordance with the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas (RTC) that governs the regional integration movement.

Antigua and Barbuda and Guyana have expressed reservations about the proposed acquisition, with St. John’s indicating that it would not be issuing a vesting order to facilitate the move.

Browne told the ceremony that also coincides with the birthday of V.C. Bird that the government was standing firm on its position that no vesting order would be granted unless a consortium of local banks is given the first right of refusal to acquire the bank’s operation in the country.

“We will not be issuing the vesting order unless we get a deal that is satisfactory to us. In that case they will have to go to court because we will not voluntarily do it,” Browne said, adding “we are doing so to ensure that we can get a piece of the pie, to build resilience within the indigenous banking sector to make our banks stronger.

“One of the reasons why our bank is not stronger is because we don’t have the type of economies of scale, the size and the scope.”

The St. Kitts-based Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB), which serves as a central bank for several countries in the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean states (OECS) including Antigua and Barbuda, has urged citizens and residents of the sub-region to remain calm, in light of the proposed sale.

The ECCB confirmed it had received an application from Republic Financial Holdings “seeking regulatory approval to acquire the Bank of Nova Scotia’s operations and businesses in the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU),” and that it has since commenced a review of this application, pursuant to the Banking Act.”

One thought on “Antigua PM reiterates position regarding sale of Scotiabank

  1. The PM of Antigua and Barbuda must realized that if his country does not have the money to buy out the Bank,he should just worked with the government of Guyana, or the person’s who acquire Nova Scotia Bank.He should never let prides gets in the way of progress at all,because his country does not have the money to buy out the Bank. I know he is feeling a bit disappointed that the Bank owner,is transferring to a different country as the main stakes owner.I know that the PM of Antigua and Barbuda is feeling a bit disappointed,but his country cannot afford to buy it,or operates the Bank.The is the way businesses goes,and he should not stands in the way of the new buyers. Because it may hurts his country economy, by closing down businesses, also putting some people out of a job.He should allowing the sales of the Bank, and just used the taxes from the operation of the Bank. To help with his budget, in the United States where I believed having the most Banks in the world, and since I am living there over 2decades.Some of those Banks has changed so many hands,that you just cannot keep up with it.So the PM of Antigua and Barbuda shouldn’t be ashamed that the Bank is changing hands, because richer countries doing the same thing. Because it is business as usual, and the owner it going for the highest bidder.So the Antigua and Barbuda government should just worked with it,more than standing in the new potential buyer, or buyers. Because he does not have the money to buy it out ,or to operate it.

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