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The Central Bank of Barbados announces a further tightening of its monetary policy stance. The policy change will be applied to the Barbados Dollar securities reserve requirement ratio for commercial banks licensed under Part II of the Financial Institutions Act and it will be implemented in two phases.

Effective December 1, 2017, commercial banks will be required to hold 18% of their domestic deposits in stipulated securities. From January 1, 2018, commercial banks will be required to hold 20% of their domestic deposits in stipulated securities.

This is the second increase for the year and complements the fiscal initiatives introduced by the Minister of Finance in his Financial Statement and Budgetary Proposals earlier in the year.

The cash reserve requirement for commercial banks remains unchanged at 5%. The reserve requirements for deposit-taking trust and finance companies, and merchant banks also remain unchanged.

Central Bank news release 2017-10-31

The news that commercial banks have significantly reduced interest rates on deposits has not come as a surprise to the BU household. Banks are reportedly paying any where from .01% to .25% on deposits. Clearly if banks are about creating shareholder value- like any good public commercial enterprise states as an objective- why do Barbadians expect the banks to pay interest on deposits if there is no avenue to lend excess funds?

When the central bank conspired with commercial banks to remove the minimum interest rate in April 2015 as a strategy to create demand for 5.5% yielding government savings bonds and reduce the cost of servicing domestic debt, the decision confirmed to BU, Wild Coot  and a few others that the economy was in free fall read deep dodo. It appears Barbadians are not as bullish in buying savings bonds and credit unions, insurance companies and other non banking institutions have benefited from deposit placements.

One of the downsides to a protracted low interest rate climate is the impact  on institutional investors. This is important in the Barbados context because of the limited options available to invest AND the role commercial banks play in the domestic market to satisfy the risk appetite of fund managers. It is no secret that the Barbados investment climate lacks sophistication and can be characterized as a closed market. Although credit unions are promoted as a viable option in the local market, the current legislative framework does not position the movement as a significant player, this is reflected in its asset penetration compared to the banking sector.

Earlier this year when the central bank increase the % of deposits commercial banks are statutorily required to hold to 20%, again Wild Coot, BU and a few others wondered about the response from the banks. Minister Chris Sinckler is on record confirming that the commercial banks have significantly reduced  takeup of government securities ostensibly because of sovereign risk exposure linked to 20+ credit rating downgrades. By ‘forcing’ banks to hold more funds on reserve there was bound to be a price to pay for the extra-risk being carried by the banks. A reminder of Newton’s third law – for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

Where do we go from here?

The market is in a hold position until the next general election is called. No significant decision will be taken by the market to inject significant investment whether local or foreign. Investment from Maloney/Bjerkham is the one exception given the fact they have replaced Leroy Parris and CLICO has the key campaign financier of the incumbent DLP government.

The possibility exist for banks to further signal discomfort to the market by introducing a negative interest policy.


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109 responses to “Falling Interest Rates in ‘Lockstep’ with the Economy”


  1. Another CLICO

    IMF CONCERNED ABOUT POOR SUPERVISION OF SAGICOR

    Added by Marlon Madden on December 18, 2017

    A new report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) paints a frightening picture of the impact that “the failure or near failure” of this island’s most dominant insurance company could have on Barbados and the Caribbean, hinting that it could be worse than the CLICO collapse.

    And while stating that “a brief review” of the Sagicor’s financial statements and actuarial reports “did not reveal any untoward or serious financial or risk-related issues”, the IMF warned that the Sagicor group (SG) “poses systemic risk” for Barbados and the Caribbean region.

    The IMF is concerned about ‘weak’ supervision of Sagicor by the Sir Frank Alleyne-led FSC.

    “The size and complexity of the SG operating in 21 countries throughout the Caribbean, and holding assets equivalent to about 50 per cent of the GDP [gross domestic product] of Barbados, is larger than CLICO before it collapsed,” it said in the 16-page report from an October 9 -13 mission here by its monetary and capital markets department.

    Worryingly, the Washington, DC-headquartered international organization, which was invited here by the Financial Services Commission (FSC) to review the current supervisory framework which it uses to supervise Sagicor Life Inc, found that the FSC was not in a position to conduct group-wide supervision, “and solo supervision is weak”.

    “The group structure, business philosophy and operations are in many ways similar to those of the CLICO Group, another Caribbean financial conglomerate which failed ten years ago, and resulted in substantial losses. Notwithstanding the acknowledgement of the systemic relevance of the group resulting from its size and interconnectedness, no formal college of supervisor exists, nor is the group subject to basic group-wide supervision,” it said in the executive summary of the report, a copy of which was obtained by Barbados TODAY.

    It said engagement in non-insurance activities, in particular real estate investments, imposed challenges for risk management oversight, while pointing out that “the complexity of the group could potentially masks significant risks, critical correlations, and assessment of contagion risk arising from interconnectedness”.

    “The Sagicor group poses systemic risk for the Caribbean region, which should be monitored on an ongoing basis,” the draft report stated of the company, whose holding assets total $13.1 billion.

    The report comes against the backdrop of Government’s decision to shell out $91 million to pay thousands of CLICO policyholders.

    The study found that the FSC, which was established in 2011 and is assumed to be the group supervisor of Sagicor, has neither developed, not implemented group-wide supervision processes and practices since its establishment.

    “Notwithstanding that the FSC is the home supervisor of the SG, the FSC conducts supervision of the group on a solo basis with focus, though not comprehensive, on the entities domiciled in Barbados. Group supervision is absent from the regulatory and supervisory frameworks, which is considered a major weakness, and also at variance with the expectations of the International Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS) Insurance Core Principles,” the report states.

    “International standards require, and other regional supervisors will reasonably expect, that Sagicor’s overall operations are being overseen by the FSC, and that Sagicor risks are being evaluated on a region-wide basis, which is not the case.”

    Sagicor last year re-domiciled its holding company, Sagicor Financial Corporation (SFC), to Bermuda. However, until a reinsurer under the holding company is established in Bermuda, home supervision would likely remain here.

    In this regards, the IMF found that home supervision for Sagicor was unclear, and made even murkier by the fact that the company has not disclosed the type of operation it envisions to establish in Bermuda.

    It said because of the size of the group, “it is quite possible that emerging risks or potential vulnerabilities exist or have not been detected.

    “Having successfully navigated and survived past crises and major catastrophic events appears to have created a false sense of security, and could potentially desensitized managerial assessments with regard to potential threats to the strength and resilience of the group,” it said.

    The three-member mission team of Ralph Lewars, Lawrie Savage and Rodolfo Wehrhahn identified several key concerns, including that the group has had the same external actuary over 26 years, depriving it “of a fresh look at the reserve requirements”; the absence of a consolidated actuarial report for the whole group, which “makes it difficult to ascertain a comprehensive assessment of the actuarial valuation of the group” and that the last on-site examination was conducted between July and September 2013 with an exclusive focus on Barbados operations.

    The report also said there had not been much in the way of ongoing monitoring and assessment since that time, and it pointed out that the FSC “does not receive any material supervisory information from the regulatory authorities in other jurisdictions where Sagicor operates”.

    The team found that the FSC “lacks the resources to undertake the effective supervision of the group”, with the regulator operating with a staff of 56 to fulfill a range of responsibilities, including an off-site insurance supervisory team of seven officers who are responsible for over 200 companies, and six specialists to conduct on-site supervision of over 100 registered entities.

    “The FSC’s current human and IT resources for insurance supervision are inadequate to effectively undertake the task of consolidated supervision of a large, and complex financial conglomerate such as Sagicor. Further, the Insurance Act does not include a provision for consolidated supervision,” the report said.

    It recommended that the state regulator be given adequate resources to address the current resource deficiency, and immediate enhancements in several key areas to improve supervisory oversight of the insurance sector, including liability valuations, risk-based capital adequacy standards, cross-border group supervision, and risk identification and assessment, as well as assessment of the effectiveness of corporate governance and risk management oversight practices.

    “The findings of this mission confirm the need for urgent progress in these areas, and most relevant for this mission, the implementation of group-wide or consolidated supervision of the Sagicor group,” it stressed, while adding that given the size and complexity of the conglomerate “there is urgency to develop a consolidated supervisory framework for Sagicor as a regional systemically important financial institution.

    “Given the size and complexity of Sagicor Life and its affiliated operations, and the enormously negative impact for the region and the economy of individual territories should Sagicor be unable to meet its obligations, FSC should designate Sagicor Life as a Regional Systemically Important Financial Institution (R-SIFI). The designation should entail additional, but necessary prudential requirements, and an intrusive supervisory regime to monitor its safety and soundness, and allow for its resolution in the event of failure,” the report said.

    marlonmadden@barbadostoday.bb


  2. Oh RH. You mean that Dodridge don’t give a shiite about much more than Florida, and Sagicor’s penetration of the US market, has suddenly become apparent?


  3. At least you cannot blame the old white dogs, cause they haven’t been around for years. Or possibly the lasting effect of demutualization has scarred the entire population?


  4. The FSC realize that they are in over their heads, they called in consultants who confirmed their worst suspicions.

  5. NorthernObserver Avatar

    @Sarge
    what are you suggesting? another home grown disaster? but wait, the Trinis own Sagicor?


  6. The recently appointed CEO at the FSC came over from the Central Bank, managing risk is in his DNA.


  7. @Northern

    The gathering storm

    Seems there is a problem with Caribbean based Corporations that operate in multiple territories, the Canadian Banks seem to handle it well, why can’t these other Financial Corps?


  8. IMF CONCERNED ABOUT POOR SUPERVISION OF SAGICOR

    This is the incompetence that I have been talking about for years. Our regulators and supervisors are poorly trained. Blame them for problems with insurance companies. The administrative class has failed the nation.

  9. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    “Oh RH. You mean that Dodridge don’t give a shiite about much more than Florida, and Sagicor’s penetration of the US market, has suddenly become apparent?”

    They will go to prison for sure screwing around in US markets, they cant play those shitty dishonest games they play in the Caribbean, without getting caught or serving prison time.


  10. The recently appointed CEO at the FSC came over from the Central Bank, managing risk is in his DNA.

    The central bank cannot even manage the foreign-owned banks. We need fresh blood, highly trained and independently professional.

  11. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    I am imagining the utter disaster and chaos at the dysfunctional supreme court should there be a partial or whole collapse of Sagicor or any other insurance company on the island, the mess that will ensue would be the stuff of legends…because of the current incompetence and decades old weakened state of that court.

    Alleyne thought he was being cute, but only ended up highlighting his own weaknesses, weak state and inefficencies…we , ong knew he was ineffective, too much political interference.

  12. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Thankfully, it is all coming to a head, it was bound to implode at some time, they ALL had a very long run, practicing decades of incompetence, yardfowlism, political interference and ineffectiveness. …that they can now no longer hide behind, cover up….or call those who have been exposing it for a decade, LIARS.


  13. David

    There is a time lag here

    While the CBoB is seeking to tighten, the FED made an approach but feared limiting the free money supply to the banks, of all types, may hasten a worsening of the economy.

    An economy where money is not invested in blocks and mortar but more and more into financial assets.

    In both cases CBs are trying to come to terms with a financialized economy. The FED has not been able to remove the punch bowl from the cash drunk banks and shadow banks but somehow the CBoB presumes it can successfully so do.

    It will fail to make any impression.

    We estimate a 2008 scenarios by the end of 2018, the beginning of 2019, but only much worse.

    Since the 1970’s end of the Gold Standard, central banks, throughout the world, have lost more and more control over money supply. Today they have little if any at all!

    We invite readers to check what some economists, including Rasmus, have to say on these matters.


  14. Oh Jesus Christ now!

    David

    The above article comes as no surprise to us.

    But while your resident actuary had a lot of cussing to deliver to the NIS public servants

    Not a rasssssoul word was directed to the Sagicor boys.

    We will have more to say later.


  15. #arewethereyet?

    On Tue, Dec 19, 2017 at 11:06 AM, Barbados Underground wrote:

    >


  16. Government’s high debt and 21 credit rating downgrades have made it difficult to access loans at cheap interest rates on the international and domestic markets and they could not continue with the ill advised “policy” of the Central Bank “printing money” to finance government expenditure. Bonds and securities have become unpopular with the public and other investors. As a result, government must explore other methods for financing expenditure.

    Excess liquidity in the market means commercial banks are essentially holding more cash reserves above the stipulated requirement ratio. Hence, higher cash reserves “translate” to higher money supply. ……. and an increase in money supply is one of the contributing factors leading to domestic price inflation.

    To remove or “drain” this excess liquidity from the system, government has the options of increasing the cash reserve ratio or sell government securities. As I mentioned previously, households and businesses seem unwilling to invest in government bonds and Treasury Bills.

    Therefore, the Central Bank had to use coercive measures forcing commercial banks to buy government securities. Hence, the Central Bank’s monetary policy of requiring commercial banks to hold 18%, and a subsequent increase to 20%, of domestic deposits in stipulated securities, was perhaps designed to “mop up” this excess liquidity through the purchase of Treasury bills or bonds and as “creative method” of borrowing from households.

    However, there is a cost attached to selling these securities, because the government must pay interest on bonds/bills that are used for monetary policy purposes.

    And since the Central Bank relinquished control of determining interest rates, the commercial banks are free to pay whatever rate suits them, as demonstrated by Bank of Nova Scotia informing customers that, effective January 7, 2018, interest rate on savings deposits will be reduced to 0.01%.


  17. No surprise with Sagicor. We manage by” ASSUMPTION”. We assume that certain people are born to manage. Sooner or later their incompetence had to be revealed.


  18. Wunna late…
    Look back at Bushie’s assessment of Sagicor for YEARS now…


  19. Bushie
    You’re different
    Unlike the mere mortals you are not only a technician but you are grounded in master narrative.

  20. Caswell Franklyn Avatar

    Politicians like to create statutory boards to assume functions of the Public Service. This then give the politicians a direct say in the recruitment of staff. As a result, these statutory entities become staffed at the senior level by party hacks, who in many cases cannot handle the job. This is what happened in the formation of the Financial Services Commission. For the most part, it was staffed at the senior level by people who had to learn their jobs on the job.

    Look what happened to Vernese Brathwaite, she stood up to CLICO and that was enough to reduce her to the status of the paid unemployed. A case of politicians looking out for the interests of their friends, rather than for the interests of Barbados. Vernese knows more about supervising insurance companies than all the staff at the FSC put together but that does not matter for politicians. They need mindless minions who would ignore the rules if the minister wants it done.


  21. The Barbados Today headline is enormously irresponsible! The report was about the deficiencies of the FSC, it neither looked for nor found anything wrong with Sagicor. Read the article. I wonder how much this will cost Parris?

  22. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    PLT…let not thine heart be troubled, all is well with the world and things are going exactly as they should.

    Let’s just call it…when crooks fall out and be glad and contented.

    Alleyne called for a report and he got it, if he was competently, effectively, honestly and efficiently surervising ALL the insurance companies on the island as is his job, where he collects a taxpaye’s a funded salary and has for years….he would not have needed to request a report nor would he had gotten the one he so richly deserves.


  23. @ Peter Lawrence Thompson ,

    Parris or Harris ?

  24. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Both….they are business partners.


  25. How can we discuss Sagicor without discussing the incompetence that led to the demutualising of the Mutual, in which the policyholders apparently paid to get rid of their investments?
    Again I call for an inquiry in to the sale of the Mutual. We must also look at the relationship between Sagicor, Sir Hilary Beckles and the UWI.


  26. @ Caswell
    Based on your 9.23 a.m., it is difficult to understand what point you were trying to make against Frustrated Businessman…
    You are saying here EXACTLY what he determines to be the problem, yet your ‘solution’ seems to be grounded in the same shiite system that cause the problem in the first place.

    Yuh shoulda BUP…..!!

    Hal is dead right about the largest scam EVER to be perpetrated agains black people in Barbados – the demutualisation of the Mutual.

    That marked the beginning of the ECONOMIC end for Barbados….. at least the black portion of Barbados.
    Added to that, it was enabled by the man with the then greatest potential to EDUCATE Bajans about their TRUE mirror image.

    That man became a modern Judas……
    When taken to the Hill and promised to be given dominion over all that he could see….. he did not have the balls to say ‘Kiss my donk….. oops …Get thee behind me”.


  27. @Bush Tea

    The Clico scam went regional.


  28. re all is well with the world and things are going exactly as they should.

    ALL IS CERTAINLY NOT WELL WITH THE WORLD………but things are going exactly as they should.

    as they say these days….AWESOME


  29. @Peter

    Agree, the Barbados Today article is about institutional strengthening at the FSC arising from the IMF report.


  30. @Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service December 19, 2017 at 6:25 AM

    How many Wall Street folks who were responsible for the 2007-2008 market meltdown went to prison?


  31. @PLT
    The Barbados Today headline is enormously irresponsible!
    +++++++++
    Agree the headline is problematic and the FSC to its credit realized its limitations either it doesn’t have the manpower or the skillsets or both to act as an oversight body of this Corporation for the entire region.

    However, because of the FSCs deficiencies I believe that Bajans should be concerned because we don’t know what we don’t know. There is enough meat in the brief analysis for us to step back and take a sober look. There are several things that one can query and one that raised a querulous eyebrow was the fact that its auditors have been unchanged stretching over two decades. Having the same organization examining your books for such a long period can lead to a serious issue of confirmation bias i.e. we never find anything so everything must be alright.


  32. However, because of the FSCs deficiencies I believe that Bajans should be concerned because we don’t know what we don’t know.

    This has never stopped Bajans from trying to punch above their weight, or expressing an opinion. The FSC is only responsible for Barbados, not the region.
    Regulators/supervisors must be familiar with the business model, must be capable of interrogating the actuarial assumptions, must challenge senior executives’ appointments and must test all proposed new products for customer suitability. It is a big test for any regulator/supervisor, and enormous for little Barbados.


  33. @Hal
    The FSC is only responsible for Barbados, not the region
    +++++++++++
    “The study found that the FSC, which was established in 2011 and is assumed to be the group supervisor of Sagicor, has neither developed, not implemented group-wide supervision processes and practices since its establishment.”

    As per the above there is/was an assumption that because HQ for Sagicor is in Barbados that the FSC should have some group Supervisory role.


  34. As per the above there is/was an assumption that because HQ for Sagicor is in Barbados that the FSC should have some group Supervisory role.

    Barbadian law is sovereign only in Barbados. The remit does not extend beyond our borders. Barbados law does not extend to other nations.
    I read that in the IMF report, it is either ignorance or a badly phrased sentence. I assumed the intent was that because the HQ was in Barbados supervision should have been more thorough. I agree.
    More particularly, even now, Caricom has failed to develop a cross-border regional regulatory regime. It is the failure of Caricom/Csme.


  35. We see why the Federal “experiment” came to nought.Who will bell this cat!Policyholders, beware these third world financial institutions which employ buccaneers in their boardrooms and have their friends in political positions to shield them from prying eyes.


  36. @Sargeant

    After the Clico debacle in 2008 a regional Caricom sub-committee was established to forge cooperation across borders to better manage pan Caribbean companies given the catastrophic regulatory failure. The then deputy Governor or the Central Bank Cleviston Haynes represented. Not sure about the workings of the body because there is no public sharing of a report to update the public.

    https://www.investbarbados.org/docs/New%20Framework%20on%20Regional%20Financial%20Regulation%20in%20the%20Caribbean.pdf


  37. @ David
    The Clico scam went regional.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++
    The CLICO scheme only stole money. Sagicor stole a birthright.

    The Mutual was the eldest son that had been groomed to take care of the brass bowl children of Barbados…and to protect the family legacy.
    Sagicor stole EVERY HOPE that (black) Barbados had to be successful when the demutualisation scam was executed.
    It is Mutual that should now own BARTEL, BL&P, BS&T, BANKS …..as well as a host of overseas investments.

    ….instead, the albino centric JAs that sat around there like parasites after the scam cannot even run a basic sugar cane plantation – something that uneducated white people had been doing for centuries successfully.
    All they can do is sell insurance…… after centuries of existence.

    Then at the VERY first sign of difficulties in the family, they packed up and moved house to Bermuda or some shiite place – this is of course LONG after the Dowdridge joker had packed up and moved to the high life in Miami.

    Hopefully uncle Trump will deal with his donkey down there….


  38. The financial expert @ 11:14 knows not what he speaks of.

    PLC
    Claims the report found nothing wrong at the SG.

    We suggest that the inability of the FSC to conduct a proper supervision is more than enough to be worried, given the economic environment and other dubious operations.


  39. @Bush Tea

    On a more positive note we should congratulate Charles Herbert and Anthony Alleyne for having successfully charter Goddards through a rough year.


  40. Bushie
    The history of the sugar industry is not the ))simplistic success story you paint.

    Indeed, for much of the time it was on a lifeline of subsidies, free labour, etc

    SG was infinitely easier to run up to the turn of the century.

    The nature of the financial services industry has now become far too complicated for the boys playing cricket at Windward, or Carlton, or Wanderers to approach.

    So compare apples with apples.

    Not that the people there now are any less incompetent.


  41. Am I right in saying Charles Herbert was involved with the Mutual?

  42. Well Well & Cut N' Paste At Your Service Avatar
    Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service

    Bajan in NY December 19, 2017 at 12:47 PM #
    “@Well Well & Cut N’ Paste At Your Service December 19, 2017 at 6:25 AM

    How many Wall Street folks who were responsible for the 2007-2008 market meltdown went to prison?”

    Bajans…in my opinion…not nearly enough went to prison or committed suicide…the information is just a key stroke away.

    “35 bankers were sent to prison for financial crisis crimes
    by Chris Isidore @CNNMoney

    April 28, 2016: 6:53 AM ET

    The idea that no bankers went to prison for crimes related to the financial crisis is a myth, according to the watchdog overseeing the federal government’s bailout fund.
    There have been 35 bankers sentenced to prison, said Christy Goldsmith Romero, the special inspector general for the Troubled Assets Relief Program (SIGTARP), in a report to Congress released Thursday.

    More than $400 billion in TARP funds were distributed to banks that were in danger of failing during the financial crisis. The TARP inspector general has been prosecuting cases of fraud in the use of those funds.

    Many of the crimes involved relatively small amounts of money at smaller banks, rather than massive fraud at Wall Street banks.

    But there are top executives who are sitting in jail for substantial sentences today. Edward Woodard, former CEO of the Bank of the Commonwealth in Norfolk, Virginia, was sentenced to 23 years after he was convicted of hiding $800 million in past due loans and making loans to straw borrowers to hide financial problems at his bank.

    There have been 59 bankers convicted of crimes, including two executives at NOVA Bank in Philadelphia who were convicted on Wednesday of fraud conspiracy related to TARP funds. An additional 19 bankers have been charged with crimes, with many awaiting trials.

    Goldsmith Romero said it’s wrong to say that bankers now in prison only came from small banks. She said that that some banks had assets of as much as $10 billion and were very big players in the states where they were based. Top executives at the so-called “too big to fail” banks have avoided any criminal charges, even as their banks paid tens of billions of dollars in fines to settle charges of wrong doing leading up to the financial crisis.

    Related: Feds wrestle with ‘too big to jail’

    “I certainly understand the frustration of the people who want to see accountability for those who brought on the financial crisis,” she told CNNMoney. “Some of these institutions where we are finding criminal conduct, the level of accountability stops at a lower level and doesn’t rise up.”

    “I would just add the word yet,” she said when asked about the lack of criminal charges at the big banks. She said her office is continuing to investigate hundreds of cases at institution of all sizes.

    “I don’t think anyone who committed a crime should think they’re in the free and clear,” she said.

    CNNMoney (New York)
    First published April 28, 2016: 12:07 AM ETc


  43. David
    How difficult is it to import goods, mainly, and add a margin.

    The time for praising the merchant class should be long gone!


  44. @Pacha

    Are you being fair to the Goddards Group? It appears to be a company with a diverse business mix.

    http://www.goddardenterprisesltd.com/br_.cfm


  45. The Canadian banks will soon leave Barbados. FCIB is already on the table.


  46. @David
    Yours @3.01pm

    Thanks for the info but as you noted there is no public sharing of information. Perhaps there was follow up and more information to be had but based on past events we in the Caribbean are good at setting up committees and a set of guiding principles after disaster strikes but we are lax at following through.


  47. @Hal
    Barbadian law is sovereign only in Barbados. The remit does not extend beyond our borders. Barbados law does not extend to other nations.
    ++++++++++++
    Why this reference to the laws of Barbados? This is a corporation domiciled in Barbados with operations in other places, the Canadian Banks send “Inspectors” down to the Caribbean annually to ensure that their branches are in compliance with the Bank’s operational/internal rules. Canadian laws don’t extend to Barbados but that doesn’t stop the Inspectors from performing their duties.


  48. Sargeant December 19, 2017 at 5:27 PM #

    Canadian laws don’t extend to Barbados but that doesn’t stop the Inspectors from performing their duties.

    You have answered the question yourself.

    Regulation is law, and Barbadian law only applies in Barbados. We cannot regulate outside Barbados.
    The Canadians may send down inspectors, but they cannot enforce Canadian law in Barbados. You and I know they have moral influence, which is different.
    What Barbadian regulators can do is if there is a problem with an overseas branch/subsidiary, they can move in on the Barbados offices and carry out an investigation.

  49. fortyacresandamule Avatar
    fortyacresandamule

    @Hal. You are right on point. The Caricom /CSME arrangement should have by now, a regional supervisory/regulatory arm to deal with those pan-caribbean financial conglomerates that pose a systematic risk to the region. Sagicor, is not alone in this. Guardian group and RBTT come to mind.

    It’s unreasonable to expect the FSC to carry out such enourmous and complex task given the limited resource at it’s disposal.


  50. @fortyacresandamule

    RBTT was sold to RBC not so?

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