Category: Money

  • Telcos need licence for mobile money banking, says GTBank boss

    Telcos need licence for mobile money banking, says GTBank boss

    Time there was when banks flaunted their numerous branches as a measure of their size or bigness. Not so, anymore, at least for Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank) Plc. The Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of GTBank, Segun Agbaje, believes that expanding the branch network should not be done in isolation, but as is necessary to drive banks service delivery to customers.

    Agbaje, who spoke over the weekend in Lagos at a forum with Business Editors, said the branch network is the most expensive platform for servicing customers, adding that in growing your branches, you should be careful not to put more branches that will increase cost and reduce profitability.

    He said: “I do not believe that the solution to serving your customers better lies alone in increasing your number of branches. I believe that the solution lies in finding an optimum amount of branches that are supportive of your alternative channels, and that neither one by itself works, they need to mix together.”

    Nevertheless, he said GTBank has lined up plans to add 45 branches this year to its existing 207 branch network.

    While speaking on the direction the bank is heading in the 2013 financial year, Mr. Agbaje said GTBank is eyeing the East African axis. In his words: “The bank will continue its expansion in Africa. We would like to go to East Africa,” arguing that East Africa is more of an Economic Zone than most other parts of Africa. “Its always been there. There has always been a close economic relationship between Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda. They also have a sizable population, they are about 20 million. The GDP growth is very good and you also have good infrastructure. So I believe in my perspective, East Africa is a nice economic zone,” he added.

    The GTBank helmsman, said the bank’s desire to explore the East African market does not mean that the indigenous market is being relegated to the background. He said Nigeria is where the bank makes most of its profit. “Nigeria is where I make most of my money. I don’t think the opportunities in Nigeria and East Africa are mutually exclusive. I think we will continue to pursue both,” Agbaje stated.

    On mobile banking, Agbaje spared some kind words for the telecom operators who are clamouring to be co-players with the banks in the delivery of the service, He said as a money instrument, a banking licence would be required.

    His argument: The mobile money banking network is a banking instrument. So if the telcos want to do mobile money, they have to go get a banking licence because you have to regulate the deposits and protect the depositors and the public. So its really not about the banks or the telcos. It’s about the process. If you want to run a banking product which has KYC (Know Your Customer) and has inherent risks, then to do that, you have to get a banking licence,” the GTBank boss, stressed.

    He denied claims that the bank has restricted its partnership with the telcos to about one, or two operators. “We are partnering with all the telcos in our mobile money banking business,” he said, adding that “the platform we have built today is the one that allows us to partner with everybody, so we’re not restricting ourselves.”

    He said in the few months that GTBank started the service, it has registered thousands of subscribers. He said: “We are already approaching about 100,000 active users, and we’ve only been at it for two months, and we are not despondent,” he said.

    Agbaje painted a glowing picture of mobile money banking in the near future. His words: “But one thing I can assure you is that mobile phone is going to become a great focal point of banking, no matter how slow it starts. I see a situation that by 2015, there will be more mobile devices than we envisage, and the cheaper these handsets become, the more the penetration. That is where most of the banking is going to be done.”

    He, however, acknowledged the associated challenges bedevilling mobile banking, saying: “We all know the telephone challenge, we have infrastructure challenge, I think we will get better, just as we have the ATM challenge. It will get better.”

    On the power sector reform, Mr. Agbaje said banks have expressed sufficient interest in the sector. He said every bank has a power sector desk, adding that what is at stake, is whether the banks have the expertise to really understand the power sector. “We all need to move cautiously, it’s a good thing with strong initiative, and we will see how the first round of the privatisation goes, and we will see whether the money to back it is available. We are all moving with cautious optimism in that regard,” he stated.

    Agbaje staved off suggestions that the bank might opt to buy, or acquire any bank, including any of the bridged banks. He said there was no remote possibility of such a union. As put it: “Our DNA is not best suited for acquisition. We’ve never married any other bank in our 22 years of existence, We’ve always been by ourselves, we’ll probably remain so.”

    He underlined the relevance of the Credit Bureaux, saying any insinuation that their relevance has waned, is imaginary. “We are not allowed to give a loan without a credit reference from a Credit Bureau,” he said, adding however that there are challenges of identification. “One of the challenges that Credit Bureaux are having, is the fact that there are no credible means of identification. So even when credit reports come, they are not full proof because people change names. But the truth is, CBs are still very relevant, and you are not allowed, even by CBN regulation to avail a credit without having done a check on the company,” he explained, adding that adopting the bio-metric method will help advance the credibility of the process and make it a lot more robust.

    Agbaje said GTBank’s doors are open to all without any ceiling whatsoever as to minimum balance. His words: “We don’t have a minimum balance. My take on that is, if people want to bunk, we should encourage them.”

    He explained that the reality of where banking is going is that we are going to have frictionless internet banking which is a more robust social banking, and that coupled with strong ATM network, the need for such requirement is no more paramount.

    He said GTBank will continue to leverage on its chosen sectors, which he listed as oil and gas, maritime, construction, the retail segment and telecoms to drive its business.

    On the economy, Agbaje said Nigeria’s economy continues to enjoy a steady smooth, with the real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) averaging 7.1 per cent, adding that the growth in Foreign Exchange reserves which grew by 33 per cent in the review period, is expected to continue with the trend this year. He said the single digit inflation rate would prevail in 2013.

    Agbaje said with a profit of N103 billion in 2012, GTBank is the first Deposit Money Bank in Nigeria to post over N100 billion in profits.

    He listed Profit After Tax of N87.30 billion, representing an increase of 68.72 per cent; Return On Equity (ROE) of 33.98 per cent; Francophone expansion with GTBank Cote D’Ivoire and complete divestment from all Non-Bank subsidiaries as some of the major achievements of the bank in the review period.

    Specifically, the bank came tops on Return On Equiity (ROE), posting 23.60 per cent in Nigeria and Africa, while it occupied the second position in BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) and other peer countries.

    Among its achievements are: Best Bank in Nigeria-Euromoney; Best Bank in Nigeria-World Finance, UK; Best Commercial Bank in Nigeria- World Finance, UK and Best Financial Institution Brand Award-EMEA Finance, UK, while Agbaje, the CEO, was voted the African Banker of the Year by African Banker.

     

     

     

  • ‘Nigeria should target Diaspora investors’

    ‘Nigeria should target Diaspora investors’

    THE government has done enough in its effort to woo investors from the Diaspora to invest in the local economy, Director, Nigeria Development and Finance Forum (NDFF), Jide Akintunde, has said.

    Speaking ahead of the NDFF Conference in Washington DC, United States from June 4 to 5, he regretted that there is no policy known to exist to encourage Nigerians living abroad to invest in the country except ‘wooing’ them through road shows.

    He noted that there are barriers to investing in the country which especially affect the participation of Nigerians living abroad, compared to global or emerging market investors looking to invest in Nigeria.

    He said Diaspora Nigerians have more psychological closeness to the country, and so they have more awareness of the high level corruption dynamic in getting a deal done where government officials are involved in the process.

    He said the event is aimed at drawing these investors into investing in the country. “However, a global investor with experience in the emerging markets knows how to deal with the rough terrain of business in Nigeria. Indeed, his behaviour is constrained by legislations in his home country which prohibit payment of bribes while doing business abroad. But this is not necessarily the case for a Nigerian abroad who has no emerging market exposure or experience,” he said.

     

     

     

     

     

    He said the programme of privatization of the State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) could have been used to stimulate Diaspora investment.

    Akintunde however insisted that to be able to do that requires more transparency in the programme than we have. We also need innovative policies to make it happen. “When we look at the financial outlay for the purchase of government assets, they are very high; perhaps too high beyond what a unit of business controlled by an individual could muster. That might explain why the multinationals and investment vehicles promoted by foreign governments are the more visible foreign businesses in the country. However, the planned floatation of Diaspora bonds by Nigeria and a few other African governments can help address this barrier,” he said.

    He said that with the Diaspora bond, Nigerians abroad could now invest in the Nigerian infrastructure sector with their pooled financial resource. This, he said, mitigates the risk of an individual or few individuals taking on both management responsibilities and operating risks of investing in Nigeria.

    “Some years ago, the federal government had mooted the idea of creating a technology parks with the involvement of Nigerians abroad, to incubate IT businesses in the country. But the commitment to push the policy to fruition has been lacking. Thus one of the proposed locations for the project, the former Federal Secretariat complex in Ikoyi, Lagos, has remained unoccupied for years,” he said.

    He said that the engagement of Nigerians abroad should not be merely for political posturing. “We must fashion a policy that will facilitate technology transfer by creating opportunities for Diaspora Nigerians to come and invest in the country. This is a more realistic process to bridge the technology gap as opposed to the expectation that some foreign entities will come and transfer their know-how to us,” he said.

     

  • Access Bank, Friends Africa partner

    Access Bank, Friends Africa partner

    Access Bank is partnering with Friends of the Global Fund Africa (Friends Africa) to host a high-level stakeholder Engagement Forum tagged: Sustainable health financing in Nigeria in Abuja.

    In a statement, the bank’s Group Managing Director, Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, said: “The bank is committed sustainably to the eradication of the AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. This informed the initial donation of $1million to the Global Fund to fight this pandemic and the partnership of the Bank with Friends Africa to host the Sustainable Health Financing Forum in Nigeria.”

    Aig-Imoukhede stressed that the Global Fund’s “Gift from Africa project” was designed to “provide the African private sector with an opportunity to provide responsible leadership and demonstrate to the world that Africans are prepared to play an active part in solving the continent’s challenges.”

    Executive Director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, Mark Dybul, said double-digit declines in mortality from the three diseases could be jeopardised if donors fail to top up the fund.

    Friends Africa is committed to financing of prevention and treatment of the AIDS virus and other global killers will use the forum to urge top donors to provide an additional $15 billion to fight infectious diseases over the next three years or risk reversing a decade of advances in care.

     

  • Experts laud keeping of reserves in Chinese Yuan

    Nigeria’s decision to put 10 per cent of its $47 billion reserves in Chinese Yuan has been described as wise and strategic by global investment experts. Other currencies in the basket are Euro, Pounds and Riyal.

    Speaking at a trade and investment in global market forum in Lagos, Amro Zakaria, Managing Director, Market Trader Academy (MTA) in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, said China is one of the biggest trading partners of Nigeria and such diversification would protect the naira from currency war going on between Japan, Europe and America. Japan’s plan to devalue its currency to give its economy a boost is being opposed by Europe and America.

    Zakaria said aside reserves diversification, Nigeria should also diversify the economy away from oil, having discovered that its biggest buyer, the United States will achieve energy independence by 2020.

    He said though the country may identify new buyers of its crude oil, the most dependable and trusted buyer, the United States, may not be there anymore.

    He said Nigeria’s best resource remains its youths, adding that with proper education, the country’s development will no longer be dependent on oil.

    The expert said the company is committed to educating the youth on how the global market works. Besides, he said there is need to carry the campaign to schools and higher institutions. He said it is also imperative for the youth to tap into the global market and explore opportunities there. This, he said, can only be possible if there is improvement in education and communication among the youths.

    The expert explained that learning about global markets and economic trends through education will afford Nigerians the opportunity to diversify their investment portfolios and to compete effectively in an ever globalised world.

    Describing Nigeria as an emerging market with lots of potentials, he advised that trading and investments in global equities, precious metals, forex, etc will further empower the people and improve their chances in mitigating adverse effects caused by current and future global events.

    Chief Business Development Officer, World Wide Markets Limited (WWM), in the United States, Steven Santamouris, who spoke on Learn to trade and invest in global markets, described World Wide Markets as one of the leading brokerage firms offering access to global markets including “exchange traded US equities.”

    Santamouris said clients should be armed with a true and detailed understanding of how the FX Brokerage business operates from the inside out.

    He described WWM partnership with the Market Trader Academy as strategic, saying it would provide the Academy with the necessary technical expertise for traders to navigate the volatility of the markets through knowledge of those markets as well as risk management strategies.

     

  • ‘Whistle blowing vital to risk control’

    ‘Whistle blowing vital to risk control’

    The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) and the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) have called for whistle blowing as a means of promoting sound risk management and corporate governance in organisations.

    Speaking during the IOD Centre for Corporate Governance workshop in Lagos, NSE Chief Executive officer, Mr Oscar Enyema, said by disclosing sensitive information anonymously, workers can help promote sound risk management practices.

    Onyema, who was represented by NSE Director, Bola Adeeko, said some staff of the NSE had signed a code of conduct agreement that act as a check and balance on their activities. This, he said, is to ensure that personal interest of each employee is not in conflict with that of the organisation.

    Also, CAC Registrar-General, Mr Bello Mahmud, represented by the Assistant Director, Compliance, Adaguusu Moses, said there was need for entrepreneurs to consider the characters and reputations of persons they want to partner with in business, especially if such persons are to become directors.

    One of the participants, Olayimikah Soetan, said organisations are confronted by events that affect the execution of their strategies and achievement of their goals, which he said, can have negative impact (risks), a positive impact (opportunities), or an both risk and opportunities.

    “The goal of risk management is to create, protect, and enhance shareholder value by managing the uncertainties that could either negatively or positively influence achievement of the organisation’s objectives,” he said.

    He said although organisations’ face various types of risk, much of the focus of risk management have traditionally been on fluctuations in interest rates, exchange rates and stock indices as well as management of hazard risks.

    He said: “Another mistake which many organisations make, is dealing with risk in a piecemeal fashion. Typically, within the same company, different functions, such as finance, treasury, human resources and legal cover risks independently. Now, the traditional approach to risk management is giving way to an integrated approach.”

    He explained that integrated risk management is all about the identification and assessment of the risks of the company as a whole and formulation and implementation of a companywide strategy to manage them.

     

  • FITC to unveil products

    The Financial Institutions Training Centre (FITC), a special purpose professional services firm owned by the Nigerian Bankers’ Committee, is billed to introduce new products soon.

    The products include FITC Virtual Learning, FITC E-recruitment, FITC Virtual library and the Nigerian version of the IFC Corporate Governance & Board Leadership Training Curriculum.

    In a statement, the firm said the products, which will be launched in Lagos on May 17, are part of the organisation’s transformation agenda started late 2009.

    “The products are aimed at enhancing FITC’s service delivery in line with emerging situations of its stakeholders as well as on-going reforms in the broader Financial Services Sector and national economy, for global competitiveness,” it said.

    Managing Director, FITC, Dr. Lucy Surhyel Newman, said the introduction of the new products is part of the transformation agenda being implemented by the management of the organisation.

    “The first phase of the transformation, which started since 2009, involved FITC’s internal capacity and brand alignment to deliver on its brand promises to internal and external stakeholders, thus making FITC a high impact special purpose organisation nationally, regionally and globally,” she said.

    Explaining the rationale for the introduction of the products, Newman said the virtual learning will serve as an alternative medium for delivery of some of its training programmes in a timely, convenient and more accessible manner while the e-recruitment portal is designed to enable job seekers submit their resume online to the organisation’s website and facilitate faster candidates’ selection process at optimal cost and from any part of the world.

    The library will provide avenue for its users and those interested in the e-library facility to have access to approved journals and books online.

     

  • How firms can spread risks

    How firms can spread risks

    Businesses need to work harder to spread responsibility for risk management, according to a report from the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA).

    The survey of over 2,000 members found that accountants have vital role to play in successful risk management.

    The survey, it said in a statement, also found a statistical link between the use of accounting practices that contribute to managing risk and lower occurrences of fraud. It also found differences in the perception of a company’s exposure to risk between those at board level and those accountants working below board level.

    ‘Risk happens at all levels of business. Risk management needs to be something that is undertaken by everyone in an organisation so it is fully integrated. The survey shows that accountants have an excellent grasp of the risks faced by their organisation and the steps needed to manage those risks. The survey also shows clear support amongst accountants for ‘challenging senior people’ as being part of good business culture,” it said.

     

  • Free trading confab

    Free trading confab

    ForexTime Ltd has held a free money trading conference entitled: New paradigm in online trading in Akure, Ondo State. It focused on trading and opportunities in the forex industry.

    The firm, in a statement, said issues, such as online marketing, proper perspectives to forex marketing, effective trading, and tools on how to maximise trading opportunities were discussed. Others include training and forex trading networking.

    Speaking at the event, the Chief Executive Officer, Fore  ForexTime, Mr Olga Rybalkina, said: “This conference provided a valuable opportunity for investors, high net worth individuals, agents, investment managers, commodity traders, entrepreneurs, brokers, portfolio managers and venture capitalists to exploit and advance their knowledge of the market.”

    He said the market is dynamic, adding that the programe was organised to enable traders among other stakeholders broaden their horizons.

     

  • Tax revenues favour oil sector, says FBN Capital

    Tax revenues are heavily skewed towards the oil sector, FBN Capital, an investment and research firm has said.

    In January, the Federal Government earned N599.0 billion from oil receipts, which constituted 77.3 per cent of the total public revenue. The rise in oil receipts was attributed to increase in prices of crude oil in the international market.

    FBN Capital said 75 per cent of registered companies in Nigeria did not feature in the tax records, adding that 85 per cent of registered taxpayers had not filed returns for two years.

    “The weakness is in good part administrative. One reason for the sharp increase in tax collection in South Africa over 15 years has been the introduction and enforcement of a regulation that public contracts can only be awarded to companies, which are current with their tax obligations,”it said.

    Besides, the firm said there is a governance aspect of tax compliance, adding that taxpayers are less likely to meet their obligations if they question how the government deploys its revenues. “Taxation and representation together do not suffice. Taxpayers do have a vote but also have to have some confidence in their government,” it said.

    It said the Federal Government may be expecting a pick-up in total revenues once the petroleum industry bill is passed but the improvement on the non-oil side is set to be gradual.

     

  • Nigeria, Canada trade volume to hit $6b in 2015

    The Nigeria, Canada trade volume will double to $6 billion from $3 billion by 2015, the Canadian Minister of International Trade, Ed Fast, has said.

    This is contained in the Oxford Business Group (OBG) report for 2012, which indicated that Canada is working with the African governments to address issues relating to security.

    In a report obtained by The Nation tagged: Nigeria – 2013 Report on economic reforms, the firm said rolling out wide-range reforms in the economy is prompting investors to take a “fresh look” at the country.

    Fast said the privatisation and anti-corruption reforms would create better opportunities for investors.

    “These ongoing changes will create better opportunities for all Nigerians and for investors from around the world. Canadian businesses are taking a fresh look at Nigeria and the opportunities it presents. They see that the environment is good for business, including a fair and strong regulatory framework to support and protect them,” he said.

    “It is important that security threats are addressed, particularly because security and prosperity go hand-in-hand,” Fast said.

    The minister added that while Nigeria’s extractive industries remain a focal point of interest for Canadian businesses, other sectors, such as information and communications technology (ICT), were playing a growing role in bilateral trade and investment.

    “While diversified trade and investment are vital to our bilateral relationship, the extractive sector can also be an important driver of sustainable economic growth and poverty reduction in developing countries, provided that an enabling environment is created,” he said.

    The report was produced with research assistance from the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, the Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission, Cordros Capital Ltd and Price Waterhouse Coopers.