Tag: cbn

  • CBN, NERDC to develop teachers guide on financal literacy

    CBN, NERDC to develop teachers guide on financal literacy

    The Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC) and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in collaboration with other financial institutions have unveiled plan to develop teachers’ guides. This will promote financial literacy and  the teaching of Financial Education Curriculum (FEC) at the basic and senior secondary education levels.

    This is coming after the NERDC completed the process of developing the stand-alone financial education curriculum, and its infusion into the school curriculum.

    Executive Director, NERDC, Ismail Junaidu, said the move is necessary for the effective implementation of the FEC and the teaching of the carrier subjects at the basic and senior secondary education levels.

    Junaidu said by infusing financial education into the school curriculum, school children will be empowered to make informed and appropriate decision in managing their resources.

    “The CBN can play all roles especially funding. It is funding that has taken us to this level. I am grateful and encouraged because we did not experience any hitch at any given time at all the stages of the project. The CBN and the financial institutions has been very supportive and kept to their commitment and that is what encouraged the NERDC to come this far”, Junaidu said.

    Speaking at a workshop in Lagos, CBN Director, Consumer Protection Department, Umar Dutse reiterated the apex bank, financial regulators and all stakeholders commitment to the project.

    According to her, financial education would fast track government’s target of reducing the number of Nigerians excluded from the financial system from 46.3percent in 2010 to 20 percent in 2020.

  • Nigerians lost N11.9b to Ponzi scheme – CBN

    Nigerians lost N11.9b to Ponzi scheme – CBN

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said on Thursday that Nigerians lost N11.9 billion to the Ponzi scheme in 2016.

    Speaking in Kano during the 2017 Bank-Wide Sensitization Campaign on CBN initiative programme, the apex bank Acting Director, Corporate Communications, Alhaji Yusuf Wali, warned Nigerians on the inherent danger associated with the subscription to Ponzi scheme.

    He said: “I will also like to reiterate the position of the CBN on the need for the citizens to desist from unwholesome financial engagements in all Ponzi schemes. The Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum made public a recent daunting report on the losses suffered by the subscribers which amounted to N11.9 billion in December 2016.”

    He noted that the sensitization programme tagged “CBN Fair” is geared towards sensitizing citizens on the activities of CBN as well as educating Nigerians on how best to engage in financial transactions.

    Wali added: “Our objective is simple. We want you to understand what we do at the CBN. We want to sensitize you on your roles as citizens in keeping the Naira clean and other matters.

    “We want to hear your complaints about matters relating to financial sector and we want to let you into how you can access and benefit from the different initiatives of the CBN.

    “CBN has introduced some strategic initiatives and intervention schemes to support the economy with a view to ensuring sustainable growth and development.”

    He mentioned the sectors to include agriculture, power, energy, manufacturing, Micro, Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (MSMEs) as well as banking and industry, through credit delivery to the real sector of the economy.

    In his remarks, Kano State Governor, Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, who was represented by the state Commissioner for Finance, Prof. Kabiru Isah Dandago, lamented that Kano people in recent times have failed to key into CBN programmes designed to benefit the economy of the state and their private businesses.

  • Ministry, CBN to develop Financial Literacy curriculum

    THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is working with the Federal Ministry of Education to develop a new curriculum on Financial Literacy, which will be introduced to public and private schools in the country, its Director, Consumer Protection, Mr. Fada Banon, has said.

    Speaking at a sensitisation fair organised by the bank at the Three Star Hotel in Dutse, the Jigawa State capital, Banon said the curriculum was aimed at exposing Nigerians to financial discipline at a young age and educate them about financial regulations.

    The director said the bank hopes to, through the new subject, reduce fraud, financial abuses and damage to the naira by the public.

    During a question- and-answer session, most of the participants made up of farmers, small scale entrepreneurs and pupils, decried the attitude of the commercial banks in the state for poor service and uninformed charges.

    A member of staff of Jigawa Polytechnic, Musa Shuaibu, complained that the Automatic Transaction Machines (ATM) in the state only paid a maximum of N20,000 at once.

  • Senate gives CBN, NNPC, Customs, others deadline to submit budgets

    Senate gives CBN, NNPC, Customs, others deadline to submit budgets

    THE Senate yesterday gave the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Nigerian Customs Service, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and 34 other statutory federal agencies a seven-day ultimatum to submit their 2017 budgets to the National Assembly for vetting and passage into law.

    The upper chamber said the directive was in line with the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007.

    The directive followed the observation of Senate Leader Ahmed Lawan that a greater number of the statutory agencies and corporation have failed to comply with the requirement of the Fiscal Responsibility Act to submit their 2017 budget proposals for scrutiny by the National Assembly.

    Lawan noted that ordinarily, the budget proposals of the agencies should have been presented with the 2017 Appropriation Bill presented by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He noted that it has become necessary for the agencies to submit their budgets for consideration and passage before the National Assembly goes on recess.

    He insisted that the submission of the budget proposals must be done within the week to enable the parliament do its constitutional duty.

    Senate President Bukola Saraki agreed with Lawan that the consideration and approval of the budgets must be concluded before the end of the session.

    Saraki said it was imperative to pass the budgets before the Senate goes on recess to pave the way for its full implementation.

    Senator Solomon Adeola, in his contribution, said the submission of the budgets should be the responsibility of ministers since most of the agencies and corporations did not have boards to approve the budget proposals.

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu said laws are made to be obeyed.

    He said since the Fiscal Responsibility Act made it mandatory for listed statutory agencies to lay the budgets for the approval of the National Assembly, affected agencies were duty bound to comply with the law.

    In line with the motion by Lawan, the Senate resolved that the affected agencies must submit their 2017 budget proposal to the National Assembly within the week for consideration and passage into law.

    Other affected agencies are  Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC),  Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE), National Maritime Authority (NMA), Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Nigerians Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), Nigerians Immigration Service (NIS), Federal Housing Authority (FHA), Federal Mortgage Bank (FMB) and Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), among others.

  • Senate gives CBN, NNPC, Customs, others seven- day ultimatum to submit budgets

    Senate gives CBN, NNPC, Customs, others seven- day ultimatum to submit budgets

    The Senate on Wednesday gave the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Nigerian Customs Service, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) and 34 other statutory federal agencies a seven- day ultimatum to submit their 2017 budgets to the National Assembly for vetting and passage into law.

    The upper chamber said the directive for the agencies and corporations to submit their budgets to the National Assembly was in line with the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007.

    The directive followed the observation by the Senate leader, Senator Ahmed Lawan, that a greater number of the statutory agencies and corporation have failed to comply with the requirement of the Fiscal Responsibility Act to submit their 2017 budget proposals for scrutiny by the National Assembly.

    Lawan noted that ordinarily, the budget proposals of the agencies should have been presented with the 2017 Appropriation Bill presented by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He noted that it has become necessary for the agencies to submit their budgets for consideration and passage before the National Assembly goes on recess.

    He insisted that the submission of the budget proposals must be done within the week to enable the parliament do its constitutional duty.

    Senate President, Bukola Saraki, agreed with Lawan that the consideration and approval of the budgets must be concluded before the end of the session.

    Saraki said it was imperative to pass the budgets before the Senate goes on recess to pave the way for its full implementation.

     

  • CBN eyes single digit inflation

    CBN eyes single digit inflation

    Buoyed by the rate of the economy’s recovery, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is confident that the country will return to single digit inflation rate.

    CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele, in an interview with Arise Television yesterday, said with the improvement seen in growth from the negative 1.7 per cent in the last quarter of last year to the negative 0.5 per cent in the first quarter of 2017, the inflation target “is achievable in the course of time”.

    Nigeria’s inflation rate fell for a fourth straight month in May, dropping to the lowest in a year as growth in prices of most goods, except food, eased. Inflation slowed to 16.25 per cent from 17.2 percent in April, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.

    Emefiele spoke of huge success in exchange rate stability, based on some of the actions the apex bank had took in the last couple of months.

    The CBN boss said: “In 2017, with the improvement we have seen in growth, from the negative 1.7 per cent in the last quarter of last year to the negative 0.5 per cent in the first quarter of this year. We have seen exchange rate stability with some of the actions we have taken in the last couple of months. We do expect that if this trend continues, we should get better. Firstly,  with inflation trending downwards, we are hopeful that in the course of time, we will get back again back to single digit inflation.”

    He said the country had developed homegrown solutions to its economic challenges and that the feedbacks from those decisions are positive.

    “ Why needed to adopt Nigerian option, because of our peculiar reasons. On inflation, the CBN had a target of six to nine per cent, unfortunately, it grew to 18.8 per cent and I am happy it is coming down, and I am hopeful it will continue to get better. We looked at the foreign exchange market, and today we have ensured that forex is not N500/$1. It is now between N360 and N370/$1 and we will ensure it gets even better from where it is right now,” he said.

    On some of the stabilisation steps taken by the regulator, Emefiele said the apex bank had opened the market up for more people to come in. “We want more people to in and invest in the economy, and that was why we introduced the Investors’ & Exporters’ Window. We want forex market that will be determined by demand and supply. It has helped in forex flow and led to the appreciation in the naira we are seeing today,” Emefiele said.

    On the real exchange rate for the naira, he said that despite any method used in determining the value of the local currency, the real effective exchange rate should not be above N325/N330 to dollar.

    On the restriction of forex for 41 items, Emefiele said there was need to take a look at what is being imported. “Why should we import toot pick, palm oil and even rice? At a point in time, Nigeria was the largest producer of palm oil, controlling 40 per cent of the market share. Why should we set aside forex for the importation of products that we can produce in the country. My view is that forex should be devoted to critical segments of the economy and for the importation of items that we cannot produce in the country,” he said.

    The CBN boss’ logic is that when items, such as palm oil, are imported, the local producers are made poorer.

    “When we import rice, we impoverish the rice producers in Abakaliki, Kebbi, Sokoto, Katsina and other parts of the country. We need to look at that very seriously because God has blessed this country, with good climate, good weather, which should be taken advantage of. Since we can produce these things, let’s use them to feed our people so that we can save foreign exchange for the country,” he said

    Emefiele said he grew up seeing the country’s economy thriving in the 60s and 70s, adding that he owed Nigerians an obligation to ensure that the economy rebounds.

    Emefiele also said with the level of commitment shown to agriculture and rice production, many manufacturers were already indicating interest in the supporting government’s efforts.

    “As we continue this plan, we have seen some multinationals coming to say they will join us in rice production, palm oil production among others,” he said, adding that the CBN would continue to support multinational that help in building the economy by supporting government’s efforts at promoting agriculture.

    “If PZ Wilmar Nigeria needs foreign exchange because they have a little shortfall, I will give them because I have seen their contributions to the economy. Coscharis has acquired thousands of hectares of land in Anambra, trying to grow rice. And we were there last year, and this year, we will be there again to see what they have done. Dangote is also investing in rice farming,” he said.

    Emefiele said Kebbi, Jigawa, Sokoto, Anambra and Ebonyi  states were showing lots of interest in rice production, adding that with the sustenance of these efforts, Nigeria’s economy will be on the path of recovery.

  • CBN injects $254.3m into retail forex market

    CBN injects $254.3m into retail forex market

    Players in the retail segment of the Nigerian inter-bank foreign exchange market received a $254.3 million boost from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday.

    The release of the said sum followed bids received by the apex bank from forex dealers.

    Information obtained from the CBN indicates that the deals in the retail window represent requests from the various sectors in the Secondary Market Intervention Sales (SMIS), thereby providing a boost to the respective sectors.

    The Acting Director, Corporate Communications at the CBN, Isaac Okorafor, while confirming the forex sales, explained that the sale was in response to bids received from authorized dealers on behalf of their customers at the retail auction announced by the CBN on Wednesday.

    He disclosed that the $254.3 million sold was for companies in the raw materials, agricultural, airline and petroleum sectors.

    He recalled that the bank, at its last intervention in the Retail Secondary Market Intervention Sales (SMIS) on June 23, 2017, injected a total of $240 million for spot and forward deals, just as it intervened with the total sum of $390 million in the wholesale, SMEs and invisibles segments of the market on June 28 and July 3.

    Speaking further, Okorafor said the CBN remained very committed to ensuring that all the sectors continue to enjoy access to the foreign exchange required for their business concerns.

    Meanwhile, the naira exchanged at an average of N364/$1 in the Bureau de Change segment (BDCs) across major trading points in Lagos, Abuja, Port-Harcourt and Kano.

     

  • CBN injects $254m into retail forex market

    CBN injects $254m into retail forex market

    Players in the retail segment of the Nigerian inter-bank foreign exchange market received a $254.3 million boost from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Friday.

    The CBN said the release of the fund followed bids received from forex dealers.

    The CBN’s Acting Director of Corporate Communications, Isaac Okorafor, while confirming the forex sales, said the sale was in response to bids received from authorized dealers on behalf of their customers, at the retail auction announced by the apex bank on Wednesday.

    He said the $254.3 million sold was for companies in the raw materials, agricultural, airline and petroleum industry.

  • CBN pumps $195m into interbank market

    CBN pumps $195m into interbank market

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), in continuation of its drive to ensure liquidity and stability in the foreign exchange (forex) market, yesterday injected  $195 million into various segments of the inter-bank forex market.

    A breakdown of the figures released by the CBN, showed that $100 million was offered to authorised dealers in the wholesale window, just as the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) window was allocated $50 million.

    Those seeking forex for the purpose of Business Travel Allowance/Personal Travel Allowance, tuition and medical bills, among other invisibles, received $45 million.

    The Acting Director, Corporate Communications at the CBN, Isaac Okorafor, who confirmed the figures, said the bank’s continued intervention was aimed at strengthening the international value of the naira, while ensuring accessibility to the greenback by customers who required it for genuine purposes.

    The CBN had in the last round of forex intervention in the inter-bank market on June 28, injected $195 million to the wholesale, SMEs and invisibles segments of the market.

    Meanwhile, a survey of markets in the Bureau de Change segment (BDCs) in Lagos, Abuja, Port-Harcourt and Kano, showed that the naira exchanged at an average of N360/$1.

  • Forex reserves dip to $30.25b as CBN issues N32b debt

    Forex reserves dip to $30.25b as CBN issues N32b debt

    The Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserve stood at $30.25 billion by June 28, down by 0.36 per cent from a month ago, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) data showed last Friday.

    The reserves showed a 14.8 per cent rise from a year ago, when they stood at $26.34 billion. The  dollar reserves have risen slightly this year, thanks to the rise in global oil prices.

    The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) member country has added $4.2 billion to its reserves since the beginning of the year. Foreign reserves stood at $26.09 billion at the beginning of the year.

    The foreign exchange reserves rose by $7 billion in six months to hit $31 billion at the end of April. According to FBN Capital Research, the reserves rose after the disbursement of $600 million by the African Development Bank (AfDB) last November and the recent sale of N1.5 million Eurobond.

    “There has also been a significant recovery in oil production over the period. With less certainty we can speculate about improved forex management and possible swap transactions,” it said.

    The research firm said the positive surprise was due to the upward swing in reserves, since the CBN stepped up its forex sales in early March.

    “The steady accumulation makes it less, not more, likely to adopt the forex reforms sought by the market. There is no sign that the CBN plans to slow its sales, which for wholesale transactions alone are close to $3 billion: rather, it launched its latest window (for investors and exporters) only last month,” the report said.

    It said the macro-economic damage from the latest period of oil price weakness, which is approaching three years, could have been manageable if a fiscal buffer against external shocks had been functioning.

    The CBN also sold N31.94 billion ($104.76 million) in treasury bills last Friday in a bid to tighten liquidity in the money market, while overnight lending rate fell.

    Traders said the bank sold N31.52 billion of 349-day treasury bill at 18.59 per cent and N440 million naira of 160-day treasury bill at 17.98 per cent at an auction last Friday.

    Cost of borrowing among commercial lenders, however, dropped to around five per cent on the interbank market from around 8.5 percent last week. Traders said cash balance in commercial lenders’ accounts with the CBN stood at N320.35 billion last Friday, boosted by the repayment of around N287.39 billion in matured treasury bills last Thursday.

    “Interbank rate is at low level because the CBN sold fewer dollars this week (on the currency market),” a currency trader said.

    Traders expect rates to remain flat next week unless the CBN decides to take advantage of the low rates to mop-up excess liquidity from the banking system.