Category: Money

  • Ecobank unveils Omni Lite App

    Ecobank unveils Omni Lite App

    By Collins Nweze

    Ecobank Nigeria has launched an application known as Omni Lite App.

    It is targeted at enhancing the experience of its commercial banking customers.

    The app is an integrated e-banking platform designed to help clients manage their business accounts online in a secure, flexible, efficient and convenient manner. It is a fully integrated multi-geography, multi-lingual and multi-currency online, web-based cash management platform.

    READ ALSO: Ecobank unveils card-less ATMs

    The app is being launched by the Ecobank Group across 33 countries in Africa where the bank operates.

    Executive Director, Commercial Banking, Ecobank Nigeria, Carol Oyedeji, said the app is in line with the bank’s policy direction to meet and surpass customers’ expectations, noting that it will bring flexibility, safer and convenient banking to the users.

    She said it is available to Omni Lite users, urging them to download it from the Apple Store (IOS) or the Play Store (Android).

     

     

  • Access Bank secures $50m IFC loan to boost SMEs’ recovery

    Access Bank secures $50m IFC loan to boost SMEs’ recovery

    By Collins Nweze

    Access Bank is committed to helping Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) recover from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, its Group Managing Director Herbert Wigwe has said.

    He spoke after the bank secured $50 million loan from the International Finance Corporation (IFC).

    The funds, he said, would “help Access Bank Plc increase its liquidity to several Nigerian small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in navigating the economic challenges of COVID-19”.

    “In Nigeria, SMEs contribute over 45 per cent of national Gross Domestic Product, account for about 96 per cent of businesses and 84 per cent of employment.

    READ ALSO: Access Bank rewards 9,000 in DiamondXtraWins

    ‘’Access Bank, therefore, recognises the importance of SMEs to economic stability and is going the extra mile to ensure that such businesses are adequately financed to weather these testing times. IFC’s funding will not only enable us to extend financial relief to our clients across all sectors during the pandemic but beyond the COVID-19 crisis as well. Our partnership with IFC will help Nigerian businesses weather COVID-19 and set a course for recovery,” he added.

    The funds from the loan, made through IFC’s global COVID-19 ‘Fast-track Financing Support Package’ will enable Access Bank to provide increased trade financing and working capital lending to its business clients experiencing disrupted cash flows, supporting businesses and preserving jobs.

    IFC Country Manager for Nigeria,  Eme Essien Lore, said: “It is crucial to support smaller businesses to keep the wheels of Nigeria’s economy turning during  unprecedented economic challenge.

  • FMDQ lists N6.2 b LAPO Microfinance Bank Bonds

    FMDQ lists N6.2 b LAPO Microfinance Bank Bonds

    By Collins Nweze

    LAPO Microfinance Bank Limited has raised N6.2 billion capital through Series II Senior Unsecured Bonds issuance.

    The bonds issuance, which was oversubscribed by N200 million, is an unprecedented feat in the sub-sector, in spite of market uncertainties in the local and global economies.

    In a statement, LAPO MfB said the outcome of the bond issuance was a demonstration of confidence by investors given the strong corporate governance and fundamentals of the microfinance bank.

    The Series II Senior Unsecured Bonds was listed on the FMDQ OTC at 13 per cent fixed rate.

    READ ALSO: Foreign bond buyers stranded in Nigeria risk 100% loss

    Managing Director, LAPO Microfinance Bank, Cynthia Ikponmwosa,  reiterated: “LAPO Microfinance Bank Limited remains committed to its goal of economic empowerment of low-income households through access to finance.   This additional capital will be deployed to enhance our capacity to meet the needs of micro and small enterprises, especially actors in the rural economy.

    “The success of this journey is largely due to the support of African Local Currency Bond (ALCB) Fund (two-time anchor investor) and other parties to the Issue; FBN Quest Merchant Bank and Coronation Merchant Bank who served as Lead and Joint Issuing House/Book Runner.

    “LAPO Microfinance Bank Limited is already standing by owners of micro and small enterprises who are determined to overcome the set-back of the COVID-19 pandemic. From January to July the microfinance bank delivered N59.4 billion to micro and small enterprises.”

  • Banks ration forex as dollar scarcity bites harder

    Banks ration forex as dollar scarcity bites harder

     Collins Nweze

     

    BANKS and businesses are the worse hit by the continued dollar scarcity in the economy, analysts have said.

    Nigeria is facing one of its biggest dollar crunch in recent years with the impact hurting critical sectors of the economy.

    Banks have cut access to dollars for individuals and businesses as the foreign exchange scarcity poses long-term risks to markets.

    The foreign-currency shortage has pushed the economy to the edge.

    Already, banks have stopped honouring card payments making it difficult for many foreign investors to get their money out. Manufacturers are also unable to import vital raw materials as output hurtles toward a second contraction in four years.

    Relying on oil exports for half of its revenue, the Federal Government’s coffers have emptied after crude prices plunged in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

    There is also little prospect of a respite any time soon as Nigeria needs oil prices of $70 per barrel and daily production of two million barrels to balance its budget, but prices hover around $40 and OPEC curbs have restricted the nation’s output to about 1.4 million barrels a day.

    The evaporation of foreign income has forced the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to halt weekly interbank foreign-currency sales since March. Now the effects of the dollar shortage are seeping through to the economy.

    Read Also: ‘Banks’ loans hit N33tr in 12 months’

    Two weeks ago, the apex bank adjusted the official exchange rate from N360 to N379 to the dollar. The naira yesterday exchanged at N475/$ at the parallel market, creating N96 gap between the official and parallel market rates.

    “A lot of the members can’t access the amount of dollars they need from the banks,” said Eke Ubiji, executive secretary of the Nigerian Association of Small and Medium Enterprises. “That is constraining business.”

    GTBank, has cut the amount of foreign currency customers can spend on payment cards abroad to $100 a month from $3,000. Rules on what companies do with the dollars they receive have also been changed, said Emeka Mgbeahuru, who runs Tropitec Ltd., an importer of agricultural equipment from Italy and China with distribution links across West and Central Africa.

    In emailed notes to customers, First City Monument Bank served a notice on some adjustments.

    The bank said: “Please, be informed that the monthly spending limit on your FCMB Naira Mastercard/Visa card has been reviewed further from $300 to $100.

    “This means you can only spend $100 or its equivalent monthly for international transactions, available only for POS and Online transactions (ATM cash withdrawal abroad has been suspended).

    “If you require higher international spending limit, we encourage you to apply for a foreign currency card (Domiciliary Account required).”

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicts Nigeria’s economy will contract by 5.4 per cent this year, the most in four decades. The latest official job figures put the second-quarter unemployment rate at 27.1 per cent, the highest in a decade.

    “When you source your own dollars, they won’t let you pay in cash into your account and won’t let you transfer to your suppliers,” Mgbeahuru said.

    Many banks are following a template they used when they went through a similar contraction in 2016, which was to cut customers’ foreign payments and wait for crude prices to recover before raising the limits.

    “The challenge with dollar liquidity is an industry-wide problem,” said Bridget Oyefeso-Odusami, a spokeswoman of Stanbic IBTC Banks, which cut its customers’ card spending to $500 monthly.

    The shortage of foreign currency is forcing some companies to consider closing down, said Ubiji.

    “If that happens, it has a ripple effect, which is loss of jobs. We wish the situation changes for the better”, he said.

  • Sanusi for Oxford University

    Sanusi for Oxford University

    By Collins Nweze

    Immediate past Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, will from October, start a fellowship programme at the prestigious Oxford University in the United Kingdom (UK).

    The Management Committee of the African Studies Centre, University of Oxford, okayed Sanusi’s request for a Visiting Fellowship (Academic Visitor) at the Centre for the 2020/2021 academic year.

    Oxford University’s African Studies Centre is one of the world’s leading centres of African Studies.

    The centre has trained graduate students who are  holding important positions in various spheres of social, economic and political lives in Africa and other parts of the world.

    The centre notes that Sanusi, a former Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) intends to use the period of his affiliation to write a book around the theme: ‘Central Bank Response to Global Financial Crisis: A Case Study of the Central Bank of Nigeria 2009-2013.’

    Read Also: Where is Sanusi Lamido Sanusi?

    This will be based on his experience as CBN Governor and as a banker and public intellectual.

    Sanusi, an economist and banker served as the Governor of the CBN from 2009 to 2014. The Banker magazine recognised him as the 2010 Central Bank Governor of the Year, for his reforms and leading a radical anti-corruption campaign in the sector, the first of its kind during the financial crisis.

  • Nova Merchant Bank records zero NPLs

    Nova Merchant Bank records zero NPLs

     Collins Nweze

     

    NOVA Merchant Bank Limited’s Non-Performing Loan (NPL) ratio has remained at zero per cent.

    Its Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Anya Duroha, who  made this known during virtual interactive session with reporters in Lagos, said the bank did not take any forbearance from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to restructure its loans.

    He said the bank has a sound risk management structure, good understanding of the business environment and  customer base.

    Duroha said despite the economic crisis triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare businesses and their value-chain were  thriving.

    He advised financial institutions to embrace innovation, while understanding the businesses they are funding.

    He added: “The traditional ways of doing business cannot suffice. Therefore, every bank or financial institution needs to get very creative about the products they sell and how they offer these services in the market.”

    He pointed out, however, that despite the pandemic, there are sectors that are doing in the market. He listed these to include information technology, fintechs and healthcare.

    “Therefore, banks would need to refocus and support those industries clearly, even while fulfilling their role of working with the sectors that are not performing very well, to bring them back on stream. It is something we take very seriously. One of the things we do at the advisory side of our business is also to work with industries we had identified that are struggling to see how we can work with them,” he said.

    According to him, since inception, Nova Merchant Bank has been an information technology-driven bank. This, he said has placed the bank above its peers in the industry.

    Speaking about the bank’s recent bond offering that was 300 per cent oversubscribed, Duroha said: “As part of Nova’s strategy, we knew that at this point we needed to get long-term funds to be able to finance long-term assets. Being a merchant bank, we would like to do a lot more developmental financing and you need long term funds to do that.

  • ‘Business rises in four months’

    ‘Business rises in four months’

    By Collins Nweze

     

     

    The private sector returned to expansion last month, after three months of decline, the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for the period has shown.

    Business activities and new orders increased, but the severity of the coronavirus (COVID-19) downturn meant that spare capacity remained evident, leading to a further reduction in employment.

    The surge in prices extended into the second half of the year, with overall input prices rising at the sharpest pace in the survey’s history. In response, firms also raised their output prices at the fastest rate since the survey began in January 2014.

    Readings above 50 signal an improvement in business conditions on the previous month, while readings below 50 show a deterioration.

    The headline PMI posted 50.4 in July, up from 46.4 in June and above the 50.0 no-change mark for the first time since March. That said, the reading signalled only a slight improvement in business conditions following a severe downturn due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    An Economist at Stanbic IBTC Bank, Gbolahan Taiwo,  said: “Business activities in the private sector returned to expansion territory for the first time since March as output and new orders improved.

    “The PMI rose to 50.4 in July from 46.4 in June. Recall the government started to ease the COVID-19 containment measures in early May and that has brought about some resumption to economic activities albeit slowly.The output and new orders sub-index expanded for the first time in four months at 52 and 52.5.

    “Although we expect business activities in the Nigerian private sector will continue to improve over the coming months, the overall economy will likely still fall into a recession as some parts of the economy, particularly the services sector will still struggle to recover perhaps until a vaccine is found”.

     

  • Ecobank unveils card-less ATMs

    Ecobank unveils card-less ATMs

    By Collins Nweze

     

    Ecobank has introduced cardless Automated Teller Machines (ATMs).

    The bank’s Xpress Cash enables users to withdraw cash from ATMs using only a mobile phone.

    The solution is seamless, secure and is driven by the use of a code (e-token) by an account holder via the bank’s USSD code *326# or mobile app, Ecobank Mobile.

    The e-token can be sent to customers, non-customers and  people without bank accounts for cash withdrawal at Ecobank’s ATMs nationwide.

    Head, Consumer Banking, Olukorede Demola-Adeniyi said: “Digital payments are fast evolving. Customers want seamless experience across channels. We are committed to providing suitable options for our customers. Forgetting your card at home should not be a showstopper when you need cash.”

    Read Also: Ecobank unveils special loan for female entrepreneurs

     

    She explained: “With Xpress Cash, our customers can send money to their loved ones who are not even banked. You can send money to your domestic servants or unbanked staff just by generating a code and sharing the code.’’

    “As a bank, we are not only keen to make our services accessible, but also affordable.

    ‘’Xpress Cash attracts only a flat charge of N50. Our USSD code, *326# offers zero session charges; and transfers of N5000 or less using our digital channels are absolutely free of charge. Also, people abroad who need to send money to their loved ones can do so without paying transfer charges using the Rapidtransfer app.”

     

  • Wema Bank launches collateral-free loans for SMEs

    Wema Bank launches collateral-free loans for SMEs

    By Collins Nweze

     

    Wema Bank has launched collateral-free SMEs’ loans to assist businesses negatively affected by the coronavirus pandemic.

    In a statement, the bank said the product is in line with the bank in its quest to support the fight against the global health crisis.

    The SME loan products support businesses in need of working capital finance up to N10 million without collateral.

    This facility is available for business owners who are in segments, such as trade/general commerce, schools, pharmacies, hospitals, clinics and diagnostic centres.

    Also, in the bank’s quest to enhance reach and accessibility of these facilities, it has made it available to both new and existing customers of the bank, including those doing business with their personal names.

    “The bank is also offering up to N5 million without collateral and up to 12 months repayment period to businesses that are doing trading or general commerce while school owners can get up to N10 million without collateral with also 12 months repayment period.

    Read Also: Wema Bank builds training school

     

    “Health sector businesses like Pharmacies, hospitals, clinics and diagnostic centres can also get up to N5million without collateral with up to 12 months repayment period to meet working capital needs. In an earlier communication, the bank had stressed how critical it is to support players in the health sector, especially with the realities of the time.

    “For us, we will continue to put the health of Nigerians and the safety of our communities first,” said the Managing Director/CEO Wema Bank, Ademola Adebise.

    He added: “It is our joy to see players in the health sector grow during this difficult time and we encourage them to take advantage of all our support programmes to keep their businesses afloat.”

    Recall that the bank earlier suspended loan repayments for SMEs for three months with effect from April 1st, 2020, to mitigate the crippling effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on small and medium scale business across the nation.

     

  • CBN asks banks’ boards to deepen oversight, innovation

    CBN asks banks’ boards to deepen oversight, innovation

    By Collins Nweze

     

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has advised boards of financial institutions to strengthen their oversight functions and boost innovation, especially during crisis.

    CBN Deputy Governor, Financial System Stability, Aishah Ahmad,  made this known during the Financial Institutions Training Centre (FITC) webinar entitled: “Building effective board dynamics in a time of crisis”.

    She said  in the modern world of business, one of the most critical determinants of success or failure is the board of directors.

    The board, she said, is responsible for setting strategic goals for the organisation, protecting shareholders’ interests, and establishing policies for management, among others.

    Also, in periods of crisis where a wide range of events could threaten organisations, it is the directors that strengthen governance functions, working with the management to ensure the survival and resilience of the company.

    Consequently, there was the need to be proactive, and the first step to this is in garnering the required level of skill and knowledge to make effective decisions, she added.

    Ahmad added: “A crisis is a period of great change and uncertainty for an organisation. In periods, such as this, businesses are required to come up with strategies not just to survive but also stay ahead of the competition,” she said.

    Read Also:Fund BDC to stabilise naira, Sanusi tells CBN

     

    Managing Director/CEO, FITC Chizor Malize said the world is in a period of uncertainty owing mainly to the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic and its resultant economic challenges.

    He said: “Organisations are having new challenges to deal with, but the success of any organisation lies enormously with the Board and Board leaders.”

    ‘’FITC continues to design and deliver well researched and valuable knowledge content that equips Board Members to play their role effectively with sustainable success.’’

     

    She explained, “To remain competitive beyond the crisis, organisations with significant business model disruption must move the board’s overall effectiveness beyond oversight and maximising shareholder value, to actively driving growth, innovation and value creation.”