- GN Savings Revival Will Be Difficult Despite Licence Restoration – Joe Jackson Warns
Dalex Finance Chief Executive Officer Joe Jackson has warned that the restoration of GN Savings and Loans’ licence by the Court of Appeal does not automatically guarantee a smooth return to operations, arguing that rebuilding a financial institution after seven years of receivership will be a difficult process.
Mr Jackson said the legal victory may have restored the company’s licence, but a bank or specialised deposit-taking institution requires more than regulatory permission to function.
“A bank is not just a licence. A bank is a system. A bank is confidence. It is capitalisation. It is governance. It is liquidity. It is regulatory supervision. It is even just the public perception of who you are,” he stated.
His comments follow the Court of Appeal’s decision ordering the Bank of Ghana to restore GN Savings and Loans’ revoked licence and return the company’s assets to its shareholders. The ruling overturned an earlier High Court decision that had upheld the central bank’s 2019 revocation of the institution’s licence.
The Court of Appeal ruling represents a major legal victory for Groupe Nduom and its founder, Dr Papa Kwesi Nduom, who has repeatedly argued that the revocation of GN Savings and Loans’ licence during the financial sector clean-up was unfair.
But Mr Jackson cautioned against interpreting the court decision as an immediate operational comeback.
“Even though a licence has been restored, have all other things been restored?” he asked.
The warning goes to the heart of the practical challenge now facing GN Savings and Loans. After years under receivership, the institution will need to address questions around capital adequacy, liquidity, governance structures, asset quality, branch infrastructure, staff capacity, customer confidence and regulatory clearance before any meaningful return to business.
The Bank of Ghana revoked GN Savings and Loans’ licence on August 16, 2019, as part of the wider financial sector clean-up exercise. The company had earlier been downgraded from a universal bank to a savings and loans institution in January 2019.
The central bank had cited insolvency, liquidity challenges and regulatory breaches as reasons for the revocation, while Groupe Nduom maintained that the decision failed to properly account for government-related receivables and other claims affecting the company’s financial position.
Banking consultant Nana Otuo Acheampong has also cautioned that the case may not be over, predicting that the dispute could proceed to the Supreme Court if one of the parties challenges the Court of Appeal ruling.
That possibility adds another layer of uncertainty to GN Savings and Loans’ future. If the Bank of Ghana appeals or seeks a stay of execution, the practical restoration of the licence and return of assets could be delayed further.
For Dr Nduom, the ruling has been received as a moment of vindication. He has already pledged to rebuild the institution, saying GN Savings and Loans’ “second coming” will be bigger.
Yet the bigger test will be whether the company can regain public trust in a sector where confidence is the foundation of deposits, lending and long-term viability.
For depositors and former staff, the court decision may revive hope. But for regulators and market watchers, the key question is whether GN Savings and Loans can meet today’s prudential, governance and liquidity standards after years outside active operations.
The Court of Appeal may have restored the licence. But as Mr Jackson’s comments suggest, restoring the institution itself will require far more than a legal order.
The next phase is likely to be a difficult negotiation between law, regulation, capital and public confidence, and that may determine whether GN Savings and Loans returns as a functioning financial institution or remains primarily a symbol of the unresolved legacy of Ghana’s banking sector clean-up.
