Segun
Agbaje, the managing director/CEO of Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank), is not a
popular man. To many, he is aloof, too strait-laced, not your typical
run-of-the-mill Nigerian. As one of Nigeria’s foremost bankers, he has a
reputation for running a tight and efficient ship, is unflinching in his
pursuit and recovery of loans from the country’s systemically chronic debtors
who have a sense of entitlement believing that they can borrow depositors’
funds without paying back, and does not give a hoot about those critical of his
take-no-prisoners approach to banking.
In the
media space, he does not seek publicity, he lets his work speak for itself,
could not care less if his story or photograph makes the front page of the
newspapers, limits his bank’s advertising spend to what he believes is
necessary to market and promote GTBank to
a wider audience, and through NdaniTV
and Ndani Blog understands the power of the social media in reaching out to
youths that make a larger percentage of Nigeria’s and regional demographic
where the bank operates.
To me,
Agbaje is the ideal banker. He is not my friend and we only interact sparingly
and strictly professionally as the need arises. Yet, I cannot help but wish
that we had more bankers like him in this country. If we did, fewer Nigerian
lenders would have to make provisions for unpardonable impairment charges on
bad loans given to delinquent debtors, fewer banks would engage in reckless
insider lending that threaten their capital adequacy and liquidity ratios, more
banks would recognise that they have a fiduciary responsibility to manage their
customers’ deposits with care, and more banks would know how to sweat their
assets in the most cost-efficient manner to make the most attractive returns to
their shareholders.
In all the
key parameters used in defining the size of banks, GTBank, among the five Tier
1 banks in the country, is not by any stretch of imagination the biggest. In
terms of total assets, loans and advances, customer deposits, number of
branches, and presence on the African continent and beyond, FirstBank, Zenith
Bank and United Bank for Africa (UBA) stand head and shoulders above GTBank. By
Nigerian standards, the “big three” could be called banking behemoths and are
very difficult to supplant. Still, GTBank, with its cost optimisation strategy,
asset quality and stability ratios, among others, has over time proved to be
the most profitable bank in the country. Its stock has remained the bellwether
in the banking segment of the Nigerian bourse for years, signposting the
confidence institutional and individual investors have in the bank.
But this
article is not about GTBank’s financial performance. Its annual and quarterly
reports, including those of its peers, are public documents that can be readily
accessed for in-depth comparative assessment. What I have found more
interesting about the bank is its focus on corporate social responsibility
(CSR) and interventions in key economic sectors targeted at strengthening small
businesses through not-for-profit fairs and capacity building initiatives. For
two years in a row, GTBank has solely funded and hosted its Food and Drink Fair
and Fashion Weekends, making them social and tourist events that feature
prominently on Nigeria’s social calendar. That is not to say that the bank has
not focused on other areas of CSR. Its 2016 annual report showed that GTBank
spent about 58 per cent of the N449.62 million of its CSR funds on education
alone while community development accounted for another 30.8 per cent.
But it is
GTBank’s focus on food, drink and fashion that have been the most impactful
publicly, bringing together scores of promising, talented and recognised local
and international chefs and food vendors, drinks makers and merchants, fashion
houses, milliners, fashion accessory designers and leather goods makers in a
dizzying, well-put together and well-thought out extravaganza that leaves the
public yearning for more. Both events, which are open to the public, have been
attended by several thousands of people, including children, for two years
running that have left attendees breathless and wondering how the bank manages
to package the two fairs in areas where it has no competencies.
The trick,
says Agbaje, whom I had to hound to open up on the success behind both fairs,
is getting and attracting the best participants and controlling costs by
getting the bank to work directly with the contractors who have to build the
stalls, decorate the venue, create play areas and cooking classes exclusively
for children, and provide the music, etc., during both fairs; no middlemen or
consultants are used by the bank. For him, the fairs present an opportunity for
GTBank to deepen its footprint in the retail banking space and increase its SME
lending from 2 per cent of the bank’s loan book to 10 per cent over the next
five years.
With time,
he would also rather extend more loans to small and medium-sized businesses
that are more impactful on the economy and achieve a loan recovery rate of
70-80 per cent, than pursue Nigeria’s so-called “big men” with woeful credit
track records. Although he was demur about what it costs his bank to host both
events, he was emphatic that making money at this juncture is not the
overdriving objective, at least not in the short-term, but recognises the
long-term benefits not just for GTBank but other Nigerian lenders.
Beyond
this objective and given the magnitude of both fairs and their potential to
grow into annual events that could attract millions from across the global,
Agbaje’s vision is not one to be trifled with. Already, the GTBank Food and
Drink Fair and the GTBank Fashion Weekend create thousands of direct and
indirect jobs and referrals for hundreds of young Nigerians who have to build
the stalls, decorate the venue, and provide the music, entertainment, security
and other support services to make them a resounding success. And they have the
potential to create even more.
Aside the
suppliers, vendors and designers that make brisk business and achieve record
sales during the fairs, the Master Classes included in both events are helping
to build capacity and drive innovation in the creative industry that has proved
to be a major magnate for Nigerian and African youths. By bringing them under
one roof, GTBank has also provided a platform for shared services and given
them the exposure that help these small businesses to grow and create more
employment opportunities.
Without
doubt, both fairs are worthy initiatives. But they could be better. In the last
two years, GTBank has handled both fairs singlehandedly without support from
other institutions and/or the Lagos State government, a direct beneficiary of
the events and their spin-offs. In 2016, the food and drink fair
alone attracted 25,000 people; this year, it attracted 75,000 people. I do not
have the numbers for the bank’s fashion weekends, but I can imagine that the
number of visitors will not be far off from those who attended the food and
drink fairs.
Given the
swelling numbers, both fairs have already started to cause traffic gridlocks on
the days they are held. They are also attracting touts and hoodlums who mill
around the roads leading to the venue and try to pounce on unsuspecting
visitors as they alight from their cars or walk to the venue. On a positive
note, big and boutique hotels, restaurants and food caterers on the Lagos
Island experience an upsurge in occupancy rates and patronage by participants
and the international media who have flown in to take part or cover the events.
All these translate to more tourist dollars, taxes and revenue generation for
the federal and Lagos State governments.
The import
of this should not be lost on the federal and Lagos State governments.
They have
to do more than just show a passing interest in what GTBank has started. Given
the potential for both fairs to become global destinations for tourists and
visitors on the African continent, Lagos State in particular needs to improve
on its infrastructure in and around the venue where both fairs are held. It
must improve on traffic management and security to ensure that visitors can
move about with ease and feel secure. According to Agbaje, in terms of support,
the state government has not yet stepped up to the plate, nor has his bank
sought for any. But he does acknowledge that with time, GTBank will have to
reach out to Lagos State because of the interest both fairs are generating in
terms of attendance and participation.
Right now,
Agbaje appears to be satisfied with what his bank has accomplished in terms of
bringing both fairs to the public’s consciousness. But do the federal and state
governments understand the roles that they have to play in institutionalising
them and ensuring that they outlast his stewardship in GTBank? Cities like Rio
de Janeiro, London, Paris, New York and Melbourne that host major sporting,
fashion, carnivals, music and film festivals every year, attracting thousands
of visitors do not owe their success just to corporate sponsors but to the
municipalities, state and federal governments that understand their roles and
lend the required support to the private sector. As such, Lagos State needs to
buy into the GTBank fairs as a public-private partnership that can and should
work.
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