General News of Saturday, 15 September 2018

Source: classfmonline.com

Be calm; we're being refined to make us 'good as gold' – Menzgold

Nana Appiah Mensah is CEO of Menzgold Nana Appiah Mensah is CEO of Menzgold

Gold-trading firm, Menzgold Ghana Limited, has said that its current travail can be likened to the refinery process that gold goes through to bring out its final beauty.

“We all know that gold and other precious metals have to go through a rigorous process of refinement to bring out their beauty.

“We do believe that this process Menzgold is going through at the moment can be likened to a refinery process that will only make us better and stronger”, the company said in a statement it issued on Friday to call on its sympathisers in Kasoa, Central Region, who staged a solidarity demonstration on Friday, 14 September 2018, to remain calm as it dialogues with the country’s business regulation authorities to streamline its gold investment operations.

Menzgold said: “We do appreciate the love, loyalty and support that our customers, patrons and sympathisers have shown.

“However, we would like to appeal for calm as our management, legal partners and other leading stakeholders engage with the right authorities to bring a fruitful finality to all issues.

“We, unfortunately cannot stop those demonstrating from doing so. We can, however, reiterate our appeal to you to remain calm as we work diligently to resolve the issues.

“Once again, Menzgold is eternally grateful for your loyalty, love and dedication to our business and our brand”, the statement signed by Head of Communications, George Quaye, said.

The demonstrators, belonging to the Coalition of Concerned Youth of Ghana (COCYOGH) hit the streets to express their dissatisfaction about what they describe as the harassment of Menzgold and its CEO Nana Appiah Mensah (NAM1) by the Bank of Ghana, the Precious Minerals Marketing Company (PMMC) and the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC).

They carried placards with inscriptions such as: “Leave NAM1 alone”, “why do we hate our won”, “Menzgold’s business is legit”, “No Menzgold, no vote”, “Stop the witch-hunt”, “Ghanaians love Menzgold”, among others.

“We are here to lend our support to your good cause. You are fighting a good fight,” the chief of the area told the youth. The demonstration comes a day after Menzgold’s lawyer, Kwame Akuffo, alleged that the Bank of Ghana is colluding with commercial banks to collapse the gold-trading company.

“I know for a fact that the central bank is telling banks not to do business with us; that wouldn’t be proper for an economy which thrives on free market, can that be proper?” Mr Akuffo asked in an interview with Accra-based Starr FM’s Ibrahim Alhassan, adding: “The central bank wants to find a way to cripple us, which is untenable”.

Mr Akuffo said even though he would not want to jump to conclusions on mere suspicions that the financial regulators are going after Menzgold so as to shore up liquidity in the banks, “…There is reasonable grounds from other informed members of society that Menzgold is attracting lots of gold deposits and that they are taking away money from the banks”.

Menzgold, on Wednesday, 12 September, announced that it was temporarily halting its extra value payments and any new business related to its Gold Vault Market.

“The halt takes effect from Thursday, 13 September and will be in place for 6 days, by which time we believe all pending issues related to the Gold Vault Market Product would have been ironed out,” management of the company said in a statement.

“We are certain this halt would not go beyond the 19th day of September, 2018,” the statement added.

This followed a letter by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) instructing the gold-trading firm, to stop forthwith, all investment trading in gold without a licence.



In the 7 September 2018 letter signed by Deputy Director General, Paul Ababio, the SEC said: "In September 2017, the SEC issued a public notice indicating that it does not regulate Menzgold. The SEC began further investigations into the activities of Menzgold in July 2018. In August 2018, the Commission called for an inter-sectoral meeting that involved the Minerals Commission, Bank of Ghana and the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Meeting concluded that it is evident Menzgold’s activities appear to go beyond the mandate authorised in its licence".

The SEC added: "It is our expectation that being your licencee, MINCOM, would call Menzgold to order and direct it to conduct its business in accordance with the licence issued to it by MINCOM".



The SEC directive followed several warnings from the Bank of Ghana to the local gold-trading firm, to stop trading in gold without a licence.

The central bank, on 7 August 2018, issued a public notice, the fourth of many, that it was in discussions with relevant regulatory authorities to sanction Menzgold for engaging in “solicitation, receipt of money or investment and the payment of dividends or returns to its clients” without a licence to do so.



The BoG, in an advertorial in the dailies signed by Mrs Caroline Otoo, Secretary to Governor Dr Ernest Addison, said in spite of several of cautions to Menzgold Ghana Company Limited to desist from the act, it persists in its deposit-taking activity in breach of section 6(1) of the Banks and Specialised Deposit-Taking Institutions Act, 2016 (Act 930).