
Audio By Carbonatix
The Director General of SSNIT, Ernest Thompson is now a member of the Ecobank board. Shareholders approved his membership on the 10 member board at an Annual General Meeting Thursday.
SSNIT had in the past complained about not having representation on the board despite being the second largest shareholder in the bank with about 17 percent stake.
Chief Finance Officer of Ecobank Edward Botchwey tells Joy Business his appointment was purely based on competence.
“Generally, appointment to the board are based on what the individual brings onto the board and we have demonstrated that those who are coming on board are able to come onto the board are able to come on with those skills that we need,” he said, “going forward, we think that the future is bright because of the structures that we have put in place.”
Ecobank last year recorded one of the best financial performance since it began operations in Ghana. Profit before tax witnessed 67 percent growth, to 446 million Ghana cedis , while the Bank’s total revenue hit 857 million Ghana cedis, whiles business segments exceeded expectations with each segment experiencing growth in income in face of competition .
Ecobank’s balance sheet went up by 23 percent to 5.7 billion in 2014. Customer deposits grew by 30 percent to 4.2 billion Ghana cedis. Following the bank’s sterling performance each shareholder is expected to get 79 pesewas as dividend for every share held, representing an 83.7 percent increase as against what was paid to shareholders in 2013.
Mr. Thompson holds an LLB (Hons) and a Barrister-at- Law Degree from the University of Ghana. He also holds a Masters Degree in Business Administration (MBA) from the University of Wales, Cardiff Business School in the U.K.
In addition, he has a Certificate in Finance and Investment Law from the North Western University of Chicago in the USA.
Mr. Thompson has worked with Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) since 1982, when he entered as a Legal Advisor. He also acted as the Solicitor Secretary for SSNIT, wherein he handled additional general legal matters and legal aspects of SSNIT investments, the’ breadbasket of a Pension Scheme.
He was instrumental in the conversion of the Social Security Provident Fund into a Pension Scheme in 1991, and led the SSNIT legal team that worked on the new Pension Law (Act 766).
Latest Stories
-
We will be losing twice if these commodities expire at the port – CSOs Coordinator warns
16 seconds -
Setting up national champions to fail: the case of Ibrahim Mahama and E&P
1 minute -
Rwanda’s capital embraces urban farming as development squeezes rare land
3 minutes -
Argentina passes bill loosening protection of its glaciers
3 minutes -
Sammi Awuku to question GMA in Parliament over vessel linked to alleged drug trafficking
16 minutes -
Trapped miner rescued from flooded Mexican tunnel after 14 days
25 minutes -
NPRA to prosecute employers over unpaid Tier 2 Pension contributions — Deputy CEO warns
30 minutes -
ACCPA calls for Africa’s strategic repositioning at NUS, Singapore
38 minutes -
Oil prices rise as concerns grow over ‘fragile’ US-Iran ceasefire
41 minutes -
Crude production hits 6-year low—PIAC calls for urgent investment plan
50 minutes -
NPP revises internal election guidelines to strengthen transparency and inclusiveness
2 hours -
NACOC set to issue licences to qualified applicants for cannabis cultivation – Deputy Director-General
2 hours -
Easter Outreach: Victory Bible Church offers free healthcare, NHIS support to hundreds
2 hours -
NPP cannot pressure Mahama to sign a bill not yet received—Solomon Owusu
2 hours -
MPs, institutions deepen support for Ghana Sports Fund with fresh contributions
2 hours