The role of accountant in managing and liquidating distressed banks
Table Of Contents
- TITLE PAGE
DEDICATION
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
PROPOSAL
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter ONE
INTRODUCTION
- 1.1BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
- 1.2STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
- 1.3OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY
- 1.3LIMITATION OF THE STUDY
- 1.4SIGNIFICANCE OF STUDY
- 1.6RESEARCH QUESTION
Chapter TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
- 2.0LITERATURE/ESSAY DEVELOPMENT
- 2.1THE ORIGIN OF MODERN BANKING
- 2.2NATURE OF BANKING
- 2.3HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT OF BANKING IN NIGERIA
- 2.4THE NIGERIA BANKING SYSTEM/HOW IT OPERATES
- 2.5DISTRESS IN BANKS
- 2.6POSSIBLE CAUSE OF DISTRESS IN BANKS
- 2.7THE ROLE OF ACCOUNTANTS IN DISTRESSED BANKS
- 2.8THE ROLE OF ACCOUNTANTS AS LIQUIDATOR OF DISTRESSED BANKS
Chapter THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
- 3.0FINDINGS
- 3.1CONCLUSION
- 3.2RECOMMENDATION
- 3.3BIBLIOGRAPHY
Thesis Abstract
The abstract for the research project is as follows This research project explores the critical role of accountants in managing and liquidating distressed banks. In times of financial crisis, banks may face insolvency or significant distress, requiring expert intervention to manage the situation effectively. Accountants play a crucial role in this process by providing financial expertise, analysis, and guidance to navigate the complexities of bank distress and facilitate an orderly liquidation process. The study delves into the specific responsibilities of accountants in managing distressed banks, including assessing the financial health of the institution, identifying key risk factors, developing restructuring plans, and overseeing the liquidation process in compliance with regulatory requirements. Accountants leverage their financial acumen and expertise to evaluate the bank's assets and liabilities, determine the best course of action to maximize recovery for creditors, and ensure transparency and accountability throughout the liquidation process. Furthermore, the research examines the challenges and ethical considerations accountants face when managing distressed banks. Accountants must navigate complex legal and regulatory frameworks, balance the interests of various stakeholders, and maintain integrity and objectivity in their decision-making process. Ethical considerations such as conflicts of interest, confidentiality, and professional skepticism are paramount in ensuring the fair and equitable liquidation of distressed banks. The study also highlights the importance of effective communication and collaboration between accountants, bank management, regulators, and other stakeholders in managing distressed banks. Accountants serve as trusted advisors, providing valuable insights and recommendations to guide decision-making and facilitate a successful resolution of the bank's financial distress. In conclusion, the research project underscores the indispensable role of accountants in managing and liquidating distressed banks. Accountants bring specialized financial expertise, analytical skills, and ethical integrity to the table, enabling them to navigate the complexities of bank distress and ensure a fair and transparent liquidation process. By fulfilling their responsibilities diligently and ethically, accountants play a pivotal role in safeguarding the interests of creditors, depositors, and the broader financial system when banks face financial turmoil.
Thesis Overview
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</p><p><strong>INTRODUCTION</strong></p><p><strong>1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY</strong></p><p>Banks plays crucial roles in the process of economic development by mobilizing funds from the surplus spending units into the economy, and by on. Lending such funds to the deficit spending units from investment, banks increase I the process. The quantum of national savings and investments through an appropriate investments multiplier, the volume of goods and services produced in an economy increases overtimes as a result of the investment projects embarked upon through banks funds.</p><p>Also through banks direct and indirect contributions towards the growth of the national economy, they (banks) succeed in promoting an efficient payment system, and in creating banking habits and in developing the society at large.</p><p>I intend to look at the possible reasons for bank distress and the effects of such failures on the rest of us before looking at “The Role of Accountant in Managing and Liquidating a Distress banks”.</p><p>A various times over the past five years of the structural adjustment programme (SAP) the banking industry had to cope with different types and forms of difficulties, all in a bid to record and sustain what one may call impressive performance we have for instance been at different times, the removal and late re-introduction of selling on interest rates.</p><p>The seemingly nectarous and dreaded stabilization securities have also become one source of treasury management policy devotement that banks have learnt to live with.</p><p>The term “distress” means great pains discomfort or serious sufferings caused by wants of money or mismanagement of money by bank officials which as we know is a complete relation of the trust reposed I them by innocent investors.</p><p>The role of accountant in managing and liquidating a distress banks are too much and cannot be over emphasized when liquidating a distress banks.</p><p>Accountants has to see that all the assets and liabilities of distress banks are being valued by expert values.</p><p>The accountant has to be fully involved in appointing an expert liquidator who would then sell the assets and liabilities of the distressed bank by means of auction to the general public.</p><p>In this case, it is not only that the property of the bank is being liquidated but also, the property of the debtors of the distressed bank. The liquidator has to fall back on the assets which the debtors of the bank used as their collateral when borrowing money from the bank.</p><p>The money being recovered from the proceed should be used to settle the creditors of the distressed banks. This is so because the bank has been turned “DISTRESS” by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) as a result of its inability to meet up with the stipulated guidelines of having of capital and non-marketable assets base.</p><p><strong>1.2 STATEMENT OF PROBLEM</strong></p><p>There are many problems which could eventually lead to bank distress just as there are many possible causes of death of a human being.</p><p>Some of the problems are stated here but they are in no way exhaustive.</p><p>i. Bad management<br>ii. Inadequate capital<br>iii. Risk asset portfolio<br>iv. Assets and liabilities management<br>v. Boardroom crisis<br>vi. Inability to adapt to changes<br>vii. Fraud<br>viii. Planning etc.</p><p><strong>1.3 OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY</strong></p><p>The researcher is precisely focusing mainly on the objective of the managing and liquidating a distress bank in the sense that she carried out her study which intend to ascertained how the property of the distress bank should be disposed as a way of recovering in full or part of the money deposited by the customers during the banking operation.</p><p>The study is also designed to highlight the consequences of liquidating a distress bank which include how exactly the asset should be valued to make sure that the auctioneer does not pay less or making a pledge of paying later.</p><p>In order further, this course of study the following aims are being considered as some of the objectives of managing and liquidating a distress bank:<br>a. Distress bank</p>
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