Tag: Banks

  • Banks mull foreign  partnership on fraud control

    Banks mull foreign partnership on fraud control

    Local banks are considering securing international partnership, especially with foreign banks to fight rising cases of fraud and forgeries in the banking sector, The Nation has learnt.

    The banks are consulting with their counterparts abroad on technology buildup, especially on banking software and new fraud techniques to keep perpetrators on check.

    The financial report of the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) released showed that the banking sector reported N28.40 billion fraud cases last year, representing 33.4 per cent rise from N21.29 billion reported in the previous year.

    The Chairman of the Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum (NeFF), Emmanuel Obaigbena, confirmed that that there is a plan by banks to partner with foreign lenders to fight fraud because of global dimension of the acts.

    Obaigbena said: “It is advisable for banks to give accurate data on fraud cases. They should not be scared of sharing statistics with each other.”

    He said the forum has set up a committee to sanction erring banks. The objective for this forum is for banks and the relevant agencies to share data to eliminate fraud in the industry.

    According to him, fraud not only translates to operational risk losses to banks’ it erodes the confidence of the public in electronic platforms/systems as a channel for transacting business.

    He reiterated that the need to protect customers from fraud cannot be over-emphasised, adding that the electronic payment system is international and requires to be approached from global perspective.

    Chief Technical Officer, Digital Encode, Seyi Akindeinde, said internet and mobile banking constitute the most frequent avenues through, which frauds are perpetrated.

    Also, the NeFF is collaborating with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the judiciary to fight the scourge. He added that the forum was also working with Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS) to enhance the fraud reporting in banks.

    According to him, fraud not only translates to operational risk losses to banks, it erodes the confidence of the public in electronic platforms/systems as a channel for transacting business.

    Also, the Nigeria Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS) said it is taking measures aimed at reducing the volume and value of fraud perpetrated in the banking sector.

     

     

  • ‘Why some banks ran into trouble’

    ‘Why some banks ran into trouble’

    About four years ago, a tsunami hit some banks when their management teams were sacked by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Those banks have since been given to others to manage and they are today doing fine. What really went wrong? Mr Ahmed Kuru, Group Managing Director of Enterprise Bank Limited, which evolved from Spring Bank, said their undoing was lack of good corporate governance. He spoke on this and more to reporters. Deputy Business Editor SIMEON EBULU was there.

     

     

    What are the specific figures as regards Enterprise Bank’s improvement?

    I will give you figures. We have grown our deposit by 27 per cent. The industry average growth rate is 15 per cent, and we have grown ours by 27 per cent between last year and now. On loan book, the industry growth rate is 16 per cent, we have grown ours by 200 per cent. In total asset, the industry growth rate is 15 per cent; we have grown that of Enterprise Bank by 26 per cent. On return on investment (ROI); which is also important, the industry rate is seven per cent; we have achieved about 20 per cent and by any standard anywhere in the world if your ROI is 20 per cent, it shows that you are not destroying value. In the previous year, the bank was in a loss situation, now we have reported profitability in billions, I don’t want to mention figures; because the auditors and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) are checking our books. I can tell you that our corporate communications in the next three weeks or one month would furnish you with the actual figures.

    How do bankers operate? A legacy bank was taken over by the CBN and the same CBN appointed managements that didn’t perform well, sacked them and paid them huge amount of money. Why pay those who have not performed well?

    You say our predecessors were paid huge sums of money, I’m sure some of them would have contested for political offices. Every management has a different mandate. When the previous management came on board, at that time there was an intervention, after the CBN’s special examination of 2009, the banks were almost collapsing, so the CBN wrote them to stabilise the situation and find core investors. This was their mandate, stabilise the situation and find core investors.

    At the end, they succeeded in stabilising the banks. Five of the 10 institutions succeeded in finding core investors, the only three that couldn’t conclude because the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) gave a deadline, they now have to intervene and appointed a management to complete the cycle, they came to stabilise and get core investors, and they were able to achieve the mandate that was given to them by the CBN. We were appointed to come and run these institutions as commercial entities. When we came on board, we were not challenged by issues of negative assets or inadequate capital; by the time we came, all those issues had been addressed by the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) that purchased these institutions.

    So, we were given the institutions and mandated to run them commercially and competitively, and I think that’s what we have done and what we are doing and we are on the right track. These three banks are strong enough today to compete competitively with all operators in the industry. Anybody that was appointed was based on contract; so they are, ultimately, compensated at the end. I will not define the amount paid to them as huge; but I think they were adequately compensated based on their assignment. And, of course, because we were appointed to come and run the institutions commercially, we have to tread with caution.

    The last pronouncement by AMCON was that the nationalised banks would be sold next year. Would this have any setback on your operations?

    Yes, AMCON made a statement that they wanted to sell the institutions either next or this year or two years time. For us that means nothing. What is important to us is to run the institutions commercially, profitably and put all the structures on ground to ensure that business continues; because whoever steps in to buy the banks, is not coming to buy structures, he is coming to buy the value that is in the structures. He is coming to buy quality of the customers, balance sheet, quality of staff and infrastructure etc.

    Those are the things that a buyer will want to see. To run the bank profitably, these are the areas we are concentrating; we are not involved in issues of if they are selling or not; because we have three-and-five-year plans. Of course AMCON’s pronouncement does affect us once in a while because everybody wants continuity. I can tell you if you go into the institution, you will see how the processes are, considering how our customers are well taken care of. Anybody who is well attended to will like to come back and continue patronising the bank and if you are a good staff, anybody that takes over will want to retain you. As I said earlier, we have a three to five year plan and we are pushing it.

    What does your logo signify?

    The logo is deliberately designed the way it is, just a shadow, so that the black and yellow colours will show as a spirit of our enterprise. It explains how the eagle flies and, ultimately, takes care of us.

    The financial inclusion that the Bankers Committee want to pioneer and kick off in Borno State, will you send your staff to the rural areas of Borno State, considering the current security situation in that place?

    We are aware of the security issue in Borno State. However, if you go to New York, the security risk is higher. These days in New York there are certain streets you cannot walk at night; especially when you are a black person. Yes, the issue of security in Borno is a problem; but I can say you don’t just employ people and send them to a volatile area just because you want to prove a point. Every organisation has the responsibility to protect its workers. There are people that hail from those areas and there are people in those areas; part of the structure we want to leverage on; besides, the bank branches in those locations are also to offices in almost all the over 700 local governments in Nigeria. In some of these states, in every local government you go to, there is a post office structure and how does this work? They try to put local people that speak the local dialect; they are usually the staff that manage post offices in Nigeria.

    If you have a problem and go to the Post office to ask questions, you will realise that those that are there are local people. So, what we need to do is to build capacity and train them, you don’t need to carry people from other locations to a different place. Be conscious of the lives of those people that are going to manage it and try as much as you can to ensure that you eliminate any danger that may come to people you are bringing from outside.

    But in all the budget that I have seen, security is always at the top and that is why the project is the one the Federal Government, states, bankers committee and security agencies are involved to ensure that no life is lost in the process; because no matter the profit you are making and putting people in danger; definitely there is a challenge in it. The security issue has been taken into consideration and some of us strongly believe that it will work because some of these security challenges also have linkages with economic empowerment and economic activities. We believe that in the banking industry we are going to do something that will benefit the society.

    You mentioned that you have put structures in place, I want to believe that one of the major challenges that led to the collapse of the former banks was that of structure, I want you to be specific on what you have done on this.

    What has happened is that when the CBN intervened, they realised that most of these banks got affected because of lack of good corporate governance structure. At Enterprise Bank, the first thing we did was to convene a very strong corporate governance structure. And we insisted that there must be strong policies to this regard. Also, the level of regulation has gone up. In our bank as small as we are, we have a 16-member board. We have five executive Directors; including the Managing Director, we have 10 members non-executive directors. The least amongst them was a former Executive Director in a bank; so we are very strong, we have former Managing Directors of banks and insurance companies.

    We brought credible people and put them on the Board so that the corporate governance structure will be strong to avoid any abuse of process. It’s usually the abuse of process that allows banks to engage in unethical practices. So, everybody on the board is an independent character particularly now that CBN has intervened. They are professional people, Chairman of the Board is the former Managing Director of Diamond Bank, and he is a professional and disciplined banker. So, CBN has ensured that what happened in the past will not happen again, now due process is followed in whatever is done.

    Are you still a medium-sized bank considering all the achievements you mentioned?

    We are still a medium-sized bank. When I gave the unverified figures, and you look at it in absolute terms, if I grow by 20 per cent of N200 billion or N40 billion, and some other banks for example grows by one percent of say N5.0 trillion, in terms of size, I’m still a medium sized bank and I want to be a medium-sized bank, like I said in December 2011, we are not here for any size game or size war, we want to be an efficient bank and that is our strategy.

    What is the number of depositors in Enterprise Bank?

    In December 2011, we said we had about 1.5 million customers. What happens in the industry is that you always have five to 10 per cent dormancy and deposits continue to go down. We have not gone farther than the 1.5 million, because immediately we stop managing dormant accounts, you realise that naturally we have to drop so many accounts. In those days, what banks do is to go for mass market appeal, they go to the market and start opening accounts with zero balance; sometimes with N20 balance; by the time you start evaluating some of these things, you will have to move them because of administrative costs; because those accounts are not being maintained for so many years; some of them you try to pursue if after sometime you don’t get them, you have to remove them so that you will continuously have a realistic number to work with.

    On your business relationship with Union Bank UK?

    Union Bank UK has continued to support us; last week we had a major transaction with them,;happy with them also. We will still maintain a good relationship with them.

    You have narrated the things you have done so far for the bank, which ones have you not done yet?

    There are so many things that we will want to do, all those things that we have indicated are already in process. I’m working towards having a cost income ratio of 50 per cent, when I came, the cost income ratio was around 180 per cent, now I’m around 88 per cent which is a very good move; but my target is to make it 50 per cent which is good.

    On loan to deposit ratio, industry average today is about 80 per cent and I’m looking at making it 15 per cent. I have not reached the level of efficiency that I want. To train is not an easy task, it takes time, you cannot turnaround all sectors regardless of whatever you have on ground in one or two years. The only thing you can do is to put those things that are necessary on track, and then you start to measure them. I think that is what we have been able to do. I want to have a traditional institution; while in terms of percentage; maybe only five percent of my customers come to my bank. I want to be a traditional institution that is leveraging on innovation and technology to deliver an efficient service, we have not achieved that; but we are on track.

    Where do you think the bank will be at the end of 2013?

    I want to be a formidable bank; where you can identify with me and know when you come into my banking hall I will be able to give you an efficient service; this takes time; but we are on track. I’m happy with the progress we have made so far and happy we are on the right track to be anything that we want to be in the industry. We must continue to innovate, invest in our human capital, invest in technology and have the freedom and process that we are able to do what we want to do and once we are able to put those things in place, I’m sure we will be where we want to be.

    There is no going back in Nigeria, for us first and foremost, we want to take it to the next level and at the end of this year, I want to have maybe three per cent of the market, I don’t want to be like Bank A or Bank B, I want to have my own market share, I want to know that I’m making profit. I want to concentrate on the target I set for myself regardless of what every other person feels; I will then achieve my target of being an efficient and service delivery oriented bank. Be a bank that identifies with the tail end of the market regardless of size.

    How many branches have you opened since coming on board?

    When we were appointed, our mandate is to consolidate, and when you talk of how many branches we have opened, branches typically in a banking environment are supposed to be channels to where you offer banking services and the branch thing is gradually phasing out, the issue of having 10 branches on a particular street doesn’t count anymore; because people now want to transact business inside their houses.

    So, instead of spending so much time in opening new branches, our strategy is to consolidate the 152 branches that we have, before the end of this month, we are going to open in five states and these states we were not there before, that is why we are opening them. If we had branches in these locations, we wouldn’t have done that. We want to be present in all the state capitals, so we are going there as a strategic move not the one driven by profitability; but ultimately, it must be profitable.

    So, we want to make sure that wherever you are, you can reach us even leveraging on infrastructure built by other people. You can reach us on the Internet, go to the ATM. I believe things are changing; because if you go to developed countries, hardly you find the kind of banking halls that you find in Nigeria. You will see one small place, sometimes; you have to ring the bell before you go in, but if you know the kind of transaction that is happening in that office, you won’t believe it; because everything is now based on technology. As a banker 80 per cent of my transactions are done on the telephone; so the moment I have to go to the banking hall, I feel a little constrained and even you as a person, you will want to come out of your NUJ building and draw your N100,000. You don’t want to go to the banking hall to waste time; just because you want to collect cash. The emphasis will be more on technology driven channels than the kind of branch banking that we are used to.

    What are you doing with the assets of the legacy bank you inherited?

    The African Continental Bank (ACB) assets just like other banks assets are huge assets to the bank. What we are trying to do is to ensure that we get maximum benefit out of them; because at the end when you are going to value the institution, they will also count in that process. We are trying to extract maximum benefit out of our premises. The buildings we are not using, we will maintain them and rent them out. The plan is not to sell any asset; but to use them as a basis to earn some income.

    How do you manage to cope with over regulation?

    What happened in 2009 has made CBN to intervene and tighten their regulatory processes. All over the world, regulations have increased tremendously. I think the financial sector; mostly the banking industry is the most regulated in the world. The most important thing is it is for the good of the industry; because what the CBN is trying to do is to ensure that they put necessary measures in place; so as not to be caught unawares; that is why they continue to roll out guidelines. I can tell you that many of the circulars they put out are also discussed at the Bankers Committee meeting; they want to carry everybody along and as partners, we will see how to position the industry; it will not be driven by individuals, but structures; so, if anybody comes into the system, regardless of what happens, the structure will mould how he conducts himself. We are not distracted by the CBN’s regulation; but rather encouraged by it. So, we will continue to operate in a way that we do not go contrary to the CBN rules.

     

  • RenCap: Banks to grow credit by 20% in 2013

    RenCap: Banks to grow credit by 20% in 2013

    • Lenders’ loan to private sector falls

    Inflation, forex top CBN’s agenda

     

    Banks’ credit to the economy is expected to grow by 20 per cent this year, Renaissance Capital (RenCap), an investment and research firm has said.

    In a report obtained by The Nation, it said the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) was in not a hurry to ease monetary policy. Instead, the regulator’s primary concern is to achieve lower inflation and forex stability.

    “Our read of this is that the monetary policy rate (MPR) is unlikely to be reduced by much, while the cash reserve ratio (CRR) is unlikely to be reduced at all – both are currently at 12 per cent,” it said.

    RenCap said about 20 per cent loan growth is consensus guidance for the year, with very few banks anticipating power projects from first quarter of this year to fiscal year 2014.

    It said Nigerian banks excite it most within the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) banks context this year. With growth expectations for Gross Domestic Product (GDP) put at 6.7 per cent, RenCap said the Nigerian market should benefit from accelerating top-down trends.

    Banks’ lending to the private sector has also decreased by 1.4 per cent from N15.4 trillion in November to N15.2 trillion in December 2012, a data obtained by The Nation has shown. This represents a difference of N139billion.

    The latest money and credit statistics obtained from the CBN indicated that the private inflow to the private sector was N15.2trillion in October, as against N15.4trillion in November.

    The CBN’s economic indicator also showed that currency outside banks increased from N1.14 trillion in November to N1.3trillion in December, indicating an increase of 1.4 per cent. However, currency outside banks was N1.15trillion in October compared to N1.3trillion for December.

    Analysts have attributed the development to certain policy changes made by the apex bank. They said the on-going banking reforms have helped in improving the liquidity positions of banks, as well as making the institutions to lend to certain sectors of the economy.

    Speaking on the issue, a former director, CBN, Mr Titus Okuronmu said the issue signals a good omen to the economy. He also said an economy gets better anytime the financial position of private sector operators is galvanised through the provision of operational funds.

    He said: “The theory is that if the public sector gets more credit than the private sector, the economy suffers. But in a situation whereby credit to the private sector has increased consecutively in less than three months, the economy will benefit in the long run.”

    According to him, more investment opportunities would be created when companies have enough money to finance their operations.

    “Private sector remains the engine of growth in any economy. When the sector is provided with funds, the operators will invest, re-invest, create employment opportunities and stimulate economic growth,” he added.

    A capital market operator, Dr Olusola Dada, said banks must sustain their lending to achieve meaningful economic growth. He said the stock market is still docile because investors do not have enough money to buy stocks. He added that growth cuts across board, arguing that many sectors including capital market would grow when more money is injected into the economy.

     

  • Banks, govt agencies, others risk IT security breach

    An information technology (IT) expert has warned that banks, other financial institutions, government agencies, universities and other corporate organisations may become targets of young people with IT skills if unemployment persists.

    Tim Akano, vicechairman, WiniGroup Incorporation, an America-based IT security and business solutions company, warned that brilliant young hackers will attack on the data banks of these organisations and sell to others.

    “IT security is already a major concern globally which threat will become more serious in 2013 and beyond. In Nigeria, IT security is usually handled with levity. With more young people acquiring IT skills and with little opportunity to earn a decent income due to poor infrastructure that will make them transit to technopreneure, these youths will turn to vulnerable banks, universities, government agencies and other corporate organisations to earn huge income by hacking into their database and sell(ing) it for handsome fees in the online booming black market,” Akano who is also chief executive officer of New Horizons Nigeria Limited, said.

    According to him, organisations will have to embrace encryption to stave off attacks. “The way out of this pending hacking- earthquake is for organisation to embrace encryption. Organisation that will go unhurt, un-embarrassed and stand protected this year and beyond will need what I call:’’7-Layer IT-Security Sweater’’ to cover its origination’s body. Fortunately, this 7-Layer IT-Security Sweater’’ already exists in Nigeria,” he said, warning that the recent news about the hacking of the Federal Reserve’s and Wall Street Journal’s and Twitter accounts in the America is a tip of an iceberg as to what will come this year.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • CBN, banks to review charges

    CBN, banks to review charges

    The Bankers’ Committee, comprising the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), all the Deposit Money Banks, Micro Finance Banks and the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) is reviewing guidelines on new bank charges.

    The Director, Banking Supervision of the CBN, Mrs Agnes Tokunbo Martins while addressing journalists yesterday in Abuja, said no final decision has been taken on the guideline for new bank charges.

    Managing Director of Access Bank, Aig-Imokhuede, said bank charges cannot stop particularly when lenders are providing value. He however, said the charges will come down this year from N5/mill to N3/mil. He said Commission on Turnover (COT) will continue to reduce to allow bank charges to decline.

    He said that the Committee also decided, “no bank customer should pay Automated Teller Machine (ATM) charges, adding that bank customers who use ATM cards on machines other than their bank’s ATM machines, are not expected to pay any charges because, “that is the banks contribution to alleviate some of the problems that bank customers face. Besides, he said that the Committee directed that customers should take up such issue with any bank that charges them for using their ATM.

    The Managing Director of Zenith Bank PLC, Godwin Emefiele, said the Committee also reviewed the success of the cashless policy in Lagos and hopes that in due course; it will be replicated in other parts of the country. “But for now, we are concentrating on cluster locations where cash is used predominantly to see how the people can be convinced to go cashless. A date for the movement of cashless policy from Lagos to other parts of the country will be announced later,” he said.

    He stated that the Committee also discussed customer identity management to boost consumer credit to borrowers, saying the weakness in extending consumer credit to bank customers, “is that there is no data bank of information on customers.” Consequently, he said the Committee is setting up the customer identity management team that would help to build a data base.

    To this end, a bio-metric project where customers are assigned unique identification numbers and thumb prints taken, will soon commence, he said. He added, “once these information is taken, all banks will have access to that information irrespective of where the initial account is domiciled.  Because of the unique identification number, it will now be easy for banks to lend money to customers with good repayment records, or clean slate and those who fail in repaying their loans, will also be easily identified and refused further credit by the banks.”

    As part of the cashless project, Emefiele stated it was clarified at the meeting that the N150,000 third party cheque payments is nationwide. He said here will not be any cash payments on third party cheques for sums more than N150,000, and it is not restricted to Lagos.

    Aig-Imokhuede added that the banking industry is serious about capturing those outside the banking system through financial inclusion strategies. Consequently, he said the Committee has decided to use Borno as the pilot for financial inclusion, adding that if it works in Borno it will work anywhere in Nigeria. “We will concentrate efforts on Borno state, which was chosen because it is in the North East of the country with its social demographics in terms of poverty, “ added.

    Another reason for choosing Borno he noted is because women, youths and those in the rural areas do not have access to financial services, hence the decision of the committee to concentrate efforts in these areas.

    The financial inclusion strategy for Borno he said is near finalization. He said with a population of 5 million in 2010, only 280,000 had access to payments, with savings accounting for only 14 per cent of the population. He noted that less than two per cent had access to credit; pensions 2.9 per cent  and less than 1 per cent had access to insurance.

    The Bankers’ Committee he said, did not adopt the national averages for financial inclusion for Borno, becuase “the idea is to get the number of ATMs up from 95 today to 770 in 2020, branch networks from 72 bank branches to 120 in 2020  and Point of Sales (PoS) from less than 300 to just under 10,000 by 2020.”

  • CBN: 50 big customers owe banks N2.39tr

    No fewer than 50 top customers are owing banks N2.39 trillion, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said.

    Their debt represents 30 per cent of the N7.87 trillion owed the banks, according to CBN Financial Stability Report for June, last year.

    The report put the banks’total credit at N7.2 trillion at the end of December 2011.

    The report signed by CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido and Deputy Governor, Financial System Stability, Kingsley Moghalu, said top 100 obligors accounted for 39.1 per cent of the gross credit, indicating a high loan concentration within the banking sector. The ratio of non-performing loans (NPLs) to gross loans declined by 0.6 per cent from 4.9 per cent, but falls within the regulatory threshold of five per cent.

    The ratio decline, the report said, was partly attributable to the sale of N52.85 billion Eligible Bank Assets (EBAs) to the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) by six banks.

    The NPL classified as substandard was N74.81 billion (22.3 per cent), doubtful, N123.44 billion (36 per cent) and lost loans, N141.63 billion (41.7 per cent). The NPL also declined by 5.6 per cent to N339.88 billion from N360.09 billion.

    A further deterioration of earlier classified loans resulted in an increase in loan loss provisions from N202.27 billion to N242.13 billion.

    The CBN said it received 444 petitions, amounting to N1.41 billion from customers, relating to alleged excess charges and other unethical practices. Its intervention resulted in banks refunding N5.76 billion to customers.

    The report said banks are facing current or prospective risk arising from changes in the business environment and adverse decisions. Others are improper implementation of decisions or lack of responsiveness to changes in environment.

    The CBN noted that as the environment changes because of changes in economic and regulatory framework, it is critical that financial institutions manage the risk from their business strategy.

    The report said a stress test conducted at the end of June last year, evaluated the solvency risks in banks’ balance sheets and imbalance in the financial system. The result of the exercise reaffirmed the increasing resilience of the industry to shocks. Comparatively, the results showed slight improvements over the December 2011 position in credit, foreign exchange and interest rate risks; liquidity risks increased marginally.

    The reforms in the sector, CBN said, would address liquidity and exchange rate volatility concerns in the near to medium term. It added that liquidity risks were adjudged significant as the impact of 10 per cent general run on the industry’s liquidity resulted in 815 basis points reduction in liquidity ratio. The results, according to the report, showed that small and medium banks were less vulnerable to liquidity risks than big ones.

     

  • Banks await CBN’s nod to implement e-clearing at branches

    Banks await CBN’s nod to implement e-clearing at branches

    Electronic clearing (e-clearing), being implemented only at banks’ headquarters, will soon be extended to their branches nationwide, The Nation has learnt.

    It was learnt that the banks are waiting for the approval of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for the extension.

    The policy, which became effective last August, could not be implemented across board because of poor technical know-how and infrastructure needed for seamless take-off.

    e-Clearing involves stopping the physical movement of the cheque and replacing the physical instrument with the image of the instrument and the corresponding data contained in Magnetic Character Ink Character Reader (MICR) line.

    The cheque details are captured, typically by the bank presenting the cheque or its clearing agent and electronically presented in an agreed format to the clearing house for onward delivery to the paying bank.

    Unlike the more common form of presentment where a cheque is physically presented to the paying bank, a truncated cheque is typically stored by the presenting bank electronically.

    The banking watchdog said clearing period under the new rule would allow cheques clear on a T+1 basis such that customers receive value in the morning of T+2 even as the clearing house is also expected to operate three sessions.

    Besides, the images of all the instruments in a batch/file shall be duly captured along with MICR data using scanners set up for the purpose. The amount needs to be captured/keyed in to complete the data record.

    “The incoming images are subjected to validations. The images which fail validations are rejected with an appropriate response file. The bank may rescan the instrument and present in line with bank’s internal processes/ control procedures. The member banks have to maintain control over such re-presentments,” it said.

    Besides, banks are expected to plan transmission of their outward presentation by taking into account presentation volume, the bandwidth of network with the clearing house, and the session window.

    In the event of an exchange file being received at the clearing house within a session time but not passed to the clearing house, the clearing house would unbundle the exchange file, and reattach to a new session.

    In case validation of digital signature of presenting bank fails, paying bank may return such items with appropriate return reason codes.

    The introduction of the truncation process changes the roles and the responsibilities of the various participants in the clearing system and may lead to introduction of certain risks

     

  • ‘National ID’ll curb frauds in banks’

    The Director-General, National Identity Management Commission, Mr Chris Onyemenan, has said fraud and related activities in banks would reduce when the country has a national identity database.

    Speaking at a stakeholders’ forum in Lagos, Onyemenan said fraud persisted in the financial system because there was no national identity database in place.

    He said: “By the time Nigeria has a centralised identity management system in place, it would be difficult for people to commit fraud and escape. When there is national identity base on ground, people would have all their details in one place. Their names, pictures, signatures, next of kin, among other information are going to be recorded. It would be easier for banks to get an update information on their customers among other stakeholders in the financial chain.”

    Onyemenan said the cash-less economy programme would succeed with time, noting that countries that have implemented it experienced difficulties at the initial stage.

    “Rome was not built in a day. The Cash-less economic scheme would take some time before it enjoys wide acceptability. Continuous awareness programme is key to the acceptability of the cashless programme in Nigeria,” he said.

     

  • Banks register staff for CIBN’s certification

    Banks register staff for CIBN’s certification

    Banks have begun the registration of their workers as members of Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) to ensure professionalism, a council member of the institute, Mr Bayo Olugbemi, has said.

    He told The Nation that banks are registering their staff across board for CIBN certification, following a recent decision taken by the institute to sanction erring banks.

    He said Stanbic/IBTC, Guaranty Trust Bank PLCand First Bank of Nigeria PLC, among others, have started the exercise to encourage growth.

    Olugbemi, who is Chief Executive Officer, First Registrar Limited, said the development was informed by the need to check quacks and further ensure that only those who are fit practise banking.

    He said: “Currently, we are trying to provoke the provision of CIBN Act 2007, which stipulates that all banking practitioners must register with the institute if they want to be relevant in the industry. A number of banks are leveraging on this initiative by registering their workers across boards. We are at the implementation stage of the exercise now. We would sanction banks that fail to comply.”

    He said banks have been directed not to allow uncertified personnel to head internal audit, risk management, among other sensitive departments.

    “You cannot appoint unqualified people to head a particular department. That is our stand. Since we are regulating banks to some extent, we must have a say in whatever they are doing in line with ethics of the profession,” he added.

    According to him, the institute will enforce the provision of the Act to ensure standard in the industry.

    He said CIBN has made its examination flexible by introducing 20 different courses for practitioners, adding that excuses would not be tolerated.

    He chided banks have turned their staff to fund mobilisers, instead of pursuing ethical standards.

    The First Registrar’s boss said CIBN regarded people that are not qualified as quacks, noting that quackery is the bane of the industry.

     

  • Missing funds: Delta tax board to drag banks to CBN, EFCC

    Missing funds: Delta tax board to drag banks to CBN, EFCC

    The Delta State Board of Internal Revenue has vowed to drag the management of two banks before the Central Bank of Nigeria and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission over the disappearance of N1.106 billion tax deduction from Chevron Nigeria Limited.

    It was gathered that the money was deducted as tax from December salaries and allowances of CNL’s expatriate and local staff for the month of December 2012.

    The money was paid through a first generation bank to the DBIR’s account on December 27, 2012 vide CBN/RTGS confirmation number O0032P0026000012 for N568, 600,285.60

    Controversy ensued when the money failed to reflect in the board’s Diamond Bank Nigeria Plc account weeks after the electronic transfer – CBN/RTGS was reportedly done.

    Financial experts said the process usually takes hours to complete.

    Branch Manager of Diamond Bank in Asaba, Mrs. Noma Imilar, who was contacted on Monday refused to comment, insisting that only the topmost echelon of the bank’s headquarters in Lagos are competent to comment on the matter.

    However, a DBIR source confided in our reporter on Tuesday that “The Executive Chairman (Hon. Thomas Joel-Onowakpor) is determined to pursue the case to its logical conclusion.

    “Plans are already in place to invite the EFCC to unravel the mystery of where the fund was within the past 11 days.

    “We are also contemplating making formal complaints to the CBN through the relevant channel because this is not only embarrassing, it is unethical,” our source said on condition of anonymity.