National Bank of Angola
The National Bank of Angola (Portuguese: Banco Nacional de Angola) is the central bank of Angola. It is state-owned and the Government of Angola is the sole shareholder. The bank is based in Luanda, and was created in 1926, but traces its ancestry back to 1865. The National Bank of Angola is active in developing financial inclusion policy and is a member of the Alliance for Financial Inclusion.[2]
Seal of the National Bank of Angola NBA headquarters | |
Headquarters | Luanda |
---|---|
Coordinates | 8.810730°S 13.234070°E |
Established | 14 August 1926 |
Ownership | 100% state ownership[1] |
Governor | José de Lima Massano |
Central bank of | Angola |
Currency | Angolan kwanza AOA (ISO 4217) |
Reserves | $23,470 million[1] |
Preceded by | Bank of Angola |
Website | bna.ao |
History
In 1864, the Banco Nacional Ultramarino (BNU) was established in Lisbon, Portugal, as a bank of issue for all Portuguese overseas territories. The next year, it opened branches in several places, including Angola, which at the time was an overseas province of Portugal. In 1926, the Portuguese established a separate issue bank for Angola, creating the Bank of Angola (Banco de Angola). BNU transferred its branch in Stanleyville to this bank, which in 1934, transferred the branch to Boma, before closing it in 1947.[3]
When Angola gained its independence in 1975, the government nationalized the banking sector. Banco de Angola became Banco Nacional de Angola (BNA); Banco Comercial de Angola became Banco Popular de Angola, and is now Banco de Poupança e Crédito. The BNA continued to function as a central bank, bank of issue and commercial bank. The government also designated it as the only legal holder of foreign currency and delegated to it responsibility for all foreign transactions.
On April 20, 1991, a new law restricted BNA's role to that of a central bank, including being solely responsible for monetary policy and acting as issuing bank, banker of the Government and reserve bank. Beginning in 1999, the Central Bank began implementing reforms to meet international standards.
Bank of Angola is a member of the Alliance for Financial Inclusion and active in the financial inclusion arena.[4]
Financial fraud at BNA
In the largest financial fraud in Angola ever at the time, the Central Bank of Angola was victim of an alleged fraud case of about $160 million that were transferred to overseas accounts in 2009. It was discovered that from the Angolan treasury account at Banco Espírito Santo in London, were leaving several money transfers to bank accounts abroad, controlled by the suspects. When the bill reached the minimum values of the BNA, it was the BES London itself that warned the authorities of Angola for successive outflows of money. The case of fraud was revealed by the Portuguese newspaper Diário de Notícias in June 2011. Several individual are suspected to be involved, and several individuals at the Angolan Finance Ministry and the BNA in Luande were sentenced up to eight years in prison in 2011. There are still investigations going on in Portugal and Angola.[5][6]
In 2018, an even bigger fraud case was announced when the former president's son, José Filomeno dos Santos was charged with transferring US$500 million from an account belonging to the central bank to a bank account in the UK. Authorities in the UK froze this amount as it was a suspicious transaction and the money can now be returned to the central bank.[7][8]
Governors
- Gaspar Martins, 1976 - 1977[9]
- José Carlos Víctor de Carvalho, Jan 1978 - Dec 1982[10]
- Augusto Teixeira de Matos, Dec 1982 - Dec 1986
- António Inácio, Dec 1986 - May 1990[11]
- Pedro Cunha Neto, June 1990 - Nov 1990[11]
- Fernando Alberto da Graça Teixeira, Nov 1990 - 1991[12]
- Sebastião Bastos Lavrador, 1991 - 1993
- Generoso Hermenegildo de Almeida, 1993 - 1995[13]
- António Gomes Furtado, 1995 - 1996
- Sebastião Bastos Lavrador, 1996 - 1999
- Aguinaldo Jaime, 1999 - 2002[14]
- Amadeu de Jesus Castelhano Maurício, 2002 - 2009[14]
- Abrahão Pio dos Santos Gourgel, 2009 - 2010[15]
- José de Lima Massano, 2010 - 2015[16]
- José Pedro de Morais, 2015 - 2016[17]
- Valter Duarte Da Silva, 2016 - 2017[18]
- José de Lima Massano, 2017 -
References
- Weidner, Jan (2017). "The Organisation and Structure of Central Banks" (PDF). Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek.
- "AFI members". AFI Global. 2011-10-10. Archived from the original on 2012-02-20. Retrieved 2012-02-17.
- Mambu ma Khenzu, E. 2006. A Modern History of Monetary and Financial Systems of Congo, 1885-1995. (Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen), p. 132.
- Member list retrieved 21 February 2012
- Mendes, Candido (2011-08-02). "Angola Sentences Former Central Bank Officials to Jail for Fraud, RNA Says". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2014-08-03.
- Milhões do Banco de Angola deram a volta ao mundo ("Millions of the Central Bank of Angola on the way round the world") Diário de Notícias, 3 February 2012, page 19 (Portuguese)
- "Angolan ex-leader's son accused of fraud". BBC News. March 26, 2018.
- "Angola charges son of ex-president dos Santos with fraud". CNBC. March 27, 2018.
- "The Angolan Mission Observer". The Mission. May 2, 1996 – via Google Books.
- "Legislação". www.lexlink.eu.
- Central Banking Directory. Central Banking Publications. 18 April 1993. ISBN 9780951790311 – via Google Books.
- "Legislação". www.lexlink.eu.
- "Legislação". www.lexlink.eu.
- "Angola Press - ANGOP". m.portalangop.co.ao.
- "Legislação". www.lexlink.eu.
- https://www.bna.ao/Conteudos/Artigos/detalhe_artigo.aspx?idc=170&idsc=178&idl=1
- "Legislação". www.lexlink.eu.
- "Legislação". www.lexlink.eu.