The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) have begun work to reinstate the sale of insurance products in banks (bancassurance).
Bancassurance is a relationship in which insurance firms leverage customer base and network of banks to distribute their products to a large number of consumers to deepen insurance penetration.
In a statement in Lagos, NAICOM spokesman, Mr. Rasaaq Salami, he said the management of the NAICOM led by its Chief Executive, Alhaji Mohammed Kari, met with Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to discuss the issue.
Salami said the meeting was successful, adding that there were strong indications of positive resolution of all the grey areas. He stated that a Committee of NAICOM and CBN officials has been mandated to come up with a workable arrangement for the take-off of bancassurance.
According to him, the committee has one week from March 1, 2017 to conclude its arrangement. He noted that the Commission is excited that all the grey areas will be resolved.
NAICOM had ordered suspension of the sale of insurance products in banks in 2016 following a dispute with the apex bank over non-licensing of banks seeking bancassurance services.
As a result, NAICOM ordered the 58 insurance firms in the country to cancel any form of channels such as airlines, online or web-based aggregators, telecommunications and other platforms not approved by NAICOM, used to sell their products and services except the ones licensed by the commission.
The Commission also suspended such distribution channels it didn’t approve. Commissioner for Insurance, Mohammed Kari said the decision to suspend this programme was to ensure that transparency, ethics and compliance with set out rules in the transaction of insurance are followed.
Tag: cbn
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NAICOM, CBN strategise for bancassurance
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12 naira hawkers held in CBN, police raid
Twelve persons have been arrested in a raid on naira hawkers by the police and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) officials.
Operatives of the State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (SCIID) in Panti, Yaba, Lagos Mainland led the CBN officials on the onslaught .
The hawkers were alleged to be involved in the sale of mint naira notes, contrary to Section 21 of the CBN Act, 2007.
Among the suspects are Fausat Jimoh, Bisoye Oyegbile, Balikis Ajadi, Bisola Amoru, Abidemi Oladejo and Ajoke Suraj, who were said to have sold mint notes at social events.
Parading the suspects, Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP) in charge of SCIID, said six others were apprehended penultimate weekend.
He said: “We are clamping down on those abusing our currency. It is an offence to sell Naira notes at weddings or any gathering. It contravenes the CBN Act. We arrested six suspects the previous weekend and last Friday, we arrested six others.
“We recovered N35,500 from these suspects but N465,000 was recovered from those arrested last week. They would be charged to court as soon as possible.
“Investigation would reveal how these suspects come about these new currencies. We are going to get to the root of it because the offence is punishable with N50,000 fine, or six months imprisonment or both.
“No good country would allow her currency to be abused in anyway. That’s what we are guarding against. The CBN is out to enforce the law and we would give them the necessary backing.”
CBN official, who refused to be named, said it is believed that some CBN workers and Deposit Money Banks (DMB) were behind the illegal trade.
Besides, he said the CBN would clampdown on celebrators in whose parties, the hawkers are found.
He said: “We know that these are not the real targets because if they don’t get the mint notes, they won’t be able to sell them. So, our main targets are commercial banks and even our staff who release the money to these vendors. Once these suspects confess and mention their names, we would go after them.
“We are also going to start arresting people who organise events and allow those selling naira notes in their venues. Already, we have started arresting people who spray money at social events. Sanity must return to our system and our currency must be respected.”
Ajadi said low patronage of her hair dressing business pushed her into the trade.
She said she made N200 on each bundle of mint notes.
Oyegbile said N37,500 was seized from her.
She claimed that some of their money were usually stolen whenever they are raided.
Asked how she got the notes, she named one Abdulahi as her supplier, adding that some of her colleagues get from banks.
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CBN threatens to bar forex dealers
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has threatened to bar authorized dealers in foreign exchange (forex) that fail to comply with its new directive on foreign exchange transactions.
According to a circular released over the weekend and signed by Dr. Alvan E Ikoku, Director, Financial Markets Department to all authorized dealers, the apex bank ordered such authorized dealers to “open teller points in all locations in order to ensure access to foreign exchange by their customers without any hindrance.”
Other directives given by the CBN include having electronic display boards in all their branches, showing rates of all traded currencies; process and meet the demands for PTA/BTA customers within 24 hours of such applications and to process and meet demands for school fees (including allowances) and medical bills within 48 hours of such applications.
These directives/ orders the CBN said is “to further increase foreign exchange liquidity in the market and ensure availability to end users.”
The CBN then warned that “non-compliance with these directives would attract sanctions, including but not limited to being barred from all future CBN foreign exchange interventions.”
For over a week now, the CBN has carried out several interventions in the foreign exchange market to curb the value of the Naira from getting out of control.
The measures have seen the Naira appreciate throughout last week with the possibility of the nation’s currency further appreciating in the near future.
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CBN: why Naira is appreciating
There is the Naira’s new strength coming from?
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said yesterday that the currency’s appreciation against others was the result of its market monitoring and intervention.
Its spokesman Isaac Okorafor refuted the claim that illegal sale of foreign currencies at ridiculous rates was responsible for the change in Forex policy.
Okorafor, who spoke in Sokoto, also explained that the appreciation of the Naira was in no way connected to the allegations of illegal sale of foreign currencies.
“I want to state categorically that there is no relationship whatsoever between the allegations that dollar was being sold at 61 kobo and the current appreciation of the Naira.
“What led to the appreciation of the Naira was that the CBN did an intelligence on the market and realised that what was driving the demand on the Bureau De Change (BDCs) and parallel market was speculation.
“We reasoned that since there is a lot of pressure on the two segments from people seeking to buy foreign currencies for BTA, tuition and medicals, that if we successfully addressed that, the pressure will come down.
“Also, before now, the level of our reserves was not enough to make us comfortable enough to really do the kind of intervention that is required.
“We decided to do so now because we are a bit more comfortable with our level of reserve,” he said.
Okorafor said since the new Forex policy, the CBN had intervened with about 591 million dollars in the market, which had led to Naira gaining strength.
“Let me also state as proof that when we placed 500 million dollars in the market, only 370 million dollars was taken.
“That tells you that the real demand is 370 million dollars. When we placed 230 million dollars in the market, only 221 million dollars was taken.
“Anybody who has gone foul of the law and the security agencies have caught up with him, should go and face his or her case and stop causing confusion among participants in the market,” he said.
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CBN and new forex regime
SIR: With the dramatic appreciation of the Naira against the dollar and other major international currencies starting Monday, February 20, there had been shifty discomforts as expressed by many Nigerians despite the unrestrained excitement that greeted the impact of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) recently introduced foreign exchange policy reforms.
Four days after the take-off of the policy, the Naira, at the black market, appreciated exponentially by more than 4% from N525 to a dollar to N480 to a dollar. As at Tuesday, a dollar was exchanging for N445, with even greater prospect of appreciating further against the greenback.
Of course, the market response is a testimony to the multiple layers of measures rolled out by the CBN to salvage a hitherto savaged foreign exchange market where the local currency had been on a free fall, especially at the black market.
Expectedly, the naira had been severely pummelled in the forex segment of the economy in direct consequence of an acute shortage of organically sourced dollars and a slowed down flow of the greenback from foreign investors.
However, the CBN, had through an insistence on managing the float of the Naira against other currencies sustained the naira/dollar rate at N305 to a dollar at the interbank forex market. This had drawn different hues of flaks from some commentators who insisted on a free float of the Naira even as some other commentators rallied to the support of the CBN, defending the apex bank managed float of the country’s forex regime on basis of the lean foreign exchange earnings as a result of the combination of vastly reduced crude oil production and internationally compelled low price of crude oil.
Things started taking a perceptible turn for the good in November 2016 when militant activities in the oil producing Niger Delta area started petering out while the collaborative position of the OPEC and non -OPEC member countries led by Russia, fired crude oil price over the $50 per barrel mark.
This was the needed elixir the Nigerian economy desperately needed, especially at a time inflation rate was looking runaway and productive activities were grounding to excruciatingly painful halt. Thankfully, the crude oil price spike and increased price provided the juice to the country’s dwindling foreign reserve which had been decimated to as low as $23billion. The reverse of fortune soon commenced the consistent accretion to the foreign reserve. Within a twelve-week period, starting November, 2016 to February, 2017, the foreign reserve added more than $8billion and hugged the $30billion psychological mark.
Apparently, this provided the impetus to the CBN to stream the ‘meet all demand’ measure. So now, the Personal and Business Travel Allowance that had hitherto had peripheral access to the foreign reserve, and payment of school fees plus medical treatment abroad were all brought in to banking circle thus vastly reducing the pressure points that led to the flourishing of the black market.
This is even as the CBN pumped more dollars into the interbank forex market at $6million daily intervention in the spot segment of the market. This compares with the miserly $1.5million daily intervention it used to undertake. This, combined with the clearing out of more than four billion dollar backlog of demand through its shorter 60 days maturing future market segment, were enough reasons for the Naira to start a sharp climb up against the dollar.
But now, a new concern seems to have emerged; can this new Naira virility be sustained? The first response to this is predicated on keeping the peace in the Niger Delta. It would seem the Federal Government has been able to persuade the Niger Delta of its seriousness to dialogue and impact a developmental agenda in the area.
In the matter of sustaining this marginal oil price increase, there’s a growing international confidence that price of oil per barrel may hit the $60 mark. This is because critical stakeholders in the collaboration to cut down on oil between OPEC and non OPEC countries have started demanding for a push back of the six-month due date for the expiration of the collaboration.
Iraq has been particularly loud in the call to extend the time period for scaling down national supplies for another six months with eyes set on $60 per barrel. Iraq is being joined by oil producing giant, Total, in this call. The prospect of this call being endorsed is said to be potent and so guarantees sustained high price.
As it were, it would seem this new forex regime is sustainable. CBN decision to heavily fund the supply side of the forex market is truly a welcome policy; however, substantial credit should be ascribed to the emerging culture of transparency and integrity that is defining government responsibility and service delivery.
- Omoniyi Akinsiju,
Abuja.
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CBN sells N310b Treasury bills
•To clear forex backlog for importers
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has raised N310.14 billion (about $985 million) at an auction of treasury bills at yields lower than the inflation rate
The bank sold N222 billion of one-year treasury bills at a yield of 18.49 per cent, lower than inflation at 18.72 per cent and compared with 18.44 per cent at a previous auction.
A total of N62 billion of the six-month bill was sold at 17.20 per cent, slightly higher than 17.15 per cent at the previous sale. A total of N26.14 billion of three-month paper was sold at 13.65 per cent against 13.69 per cent previously.
Subscriptions stood at N312.44 billion against N415.05 billion at the previous auction. The CBN issues treasury bills twice a month to finance the government’s budget deficit, help manage commercial lenders’ liquidity and curb rising inflation.
Meanwhile, the CBN has said it will clear backlog of dollar demand for importers.
It said yesterday it will sell dollars via a book-building process to clear a backlog of dollar demand for companies importing machinery, airline equipment and petroleum products.
Companies would be required to pay the naira equivalent for their dollar bids on the spot market on Thursday, while the dollars will be delivered in two months’ time, the central bank told commercial banks. It did not say how much it would offer at the sale.
The naira was quoted at 315 on the interbank market on Thursday and had traded only $79,000. On the black market the naira was quoted at 455 per dollar.
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GTBank hauls merit awards in Lagos
Guaranty Trust Bank has emerged the best winner in the 2017 Electronic Payment Incentive Scheme (EPIS) Awards organised by the CBN and Nigeria Inter-bank Settlement System (NIBSS).
The GTB said in a statement on Thursday that the awards had reaffirmed its position as Nigeria’s leading financial institution on e-payments with its emergence as a multiple award winner at the EPIS awards.
“With six awards, GTBank took home half of the dozen honours won by banks at the ceremony,’’ it said.
GTB said it had the highest number of the awards presented to the financial institutions, Fin-techs, merchants and other stakeholders in the Electronic Payment Incentive Scheme.
It said that the EPIS Efficiency Awards ceremony was instituted to reward and celebrate financial institutions, merchants and other stakeholders at the forefront of driving electronic payment in Nigeria.
The GTB listed some of the awards it received to include the Best Customer Experience Award (Electronic Payment Platform Experience).
It said this award was given to the bank for achieving the highest level of overall customer satisfaction in the delivery of electronic payment services to customers.
The GTB also said it won instant payments for its outstanding performance in recording the highest transaction count on the NIBSS Instant Payments (NIP) Platform and the Cashless Driver:
It also won the Point of Sale (POS) Issued Cards’ Transactions for having the highest Point of Sale (PoS) transaction count on the National Central Switch with Issued Payment, among others.
Alhaji Suleiman Barau, the CBN Deputy Governor, (Operations Directorate), said that the organisers were delighted by these achievements.
“We are delighted and proud to recognise, encourage, appreciate and reward financial, non-bank and other stakeholders in the EPIS that has been driving the electronic banking channels in Nigeria,” said, at the EPIS efficiency awards.
Mr. Adebisi Shonubi, the Managing Director of NIBSS, said that the event was a reward for all the years of commitments by stakeholders in the finance industry who had tried to push forward Nigeria’s quest for electronic payment.
Mr. Segun Agbaje, GTBank Managing Director, said that he was happy for the awards.
“We are incredibly excited to receive such outstanding honours from the apex regulators in the banking sector. Receiving these awards is indeed humbling and we are encouraged to continue to do more.
“As a bank, we will continue to focus on digitising our services and creating a well segmented and integrated customer experience,” Agbaje said.
The bank’s latest e-payment service, known as 737 banking, was adjudged the best banking product in Africa at the 2016 Asian Banker Awards.
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Why cash-less policy is delayed nationwide, by CBN
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has attributed the delay in implementing the cash-less policy initiative nationwide to the need for proper preparation. Besides, it wants to tap from the experience gained from the pilot states.
Speaking on the sidelines of the Electronic Payment Incentive Scheme (EPIS) 2016 awards in Lagos at the weekend, the Deputy Governor (Operations), CBN, Adebayo Adelabu, said the apex bank was working to ensure that the aim of the cashless policy was realised despite the delay in its takeoff in the remaining 30 states.
“As we all know, the success of any initiative depends on the amount of preparation that you put in before you go into execution level. We have used about six states as pilot states. We have learnt our lessons, we have made mistakes and corrected them and before we move into the other 30 states, all the learning points of the six states would be applied in the remaining 30 states. So we have spent so much time preparing for this and we believe we’ll not have any challenge when we go nationwide,” Adelabu said.
He said the cash-less policy, which the CBN is implementing with the Nigeria Inter-bank Settlement System (NIBSS) and all the commercial banks, will be a success as it goes nationwide.
Adelabu said the CBN supported the EPIS initiative, saying he was excited at the recent development in the payment system. “The CBN has been identified as a leader in the payment system because of the successes recorded by the project. I foresee faster, more rapid and effective payment system in the coming years, given the caliber of operators we have in Nigeria. They have all done well. The operators are happy that they were recognised for the big roles they played in the last one year. The reward for hard work is more work,” he said.
The Chief Executive, NIBSS, Ade Shonubi, who pointed out that the role of NIBSS in the system has always been that of infrastructure provider, assured Nigerians that his organisation will ensure that “the backbone works. We will try to scale it up so that as the volume grows, there would be no impact”. We already have an idea of what is going to happen, so we are already scaling up,” he stated.
Shonubi also advised banks and other stakeholders to sensitise members of the public on the initiative.
The EPIS “Most Customer Experience (Electronic Payment Platform Experience) Award, was won by Guaranty Trust Bank Plc. Also, Zenith Bank won the ‘Cashless Driver Bulk Payment’ and the ‘Cashless Driver PoS Transaction’ awards, while the ‘Cashless Driver Instant Payment;’ ‘Cashless Driver PoS Issued Cards Transaction’ and three other awards went to GTBank.
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Naira gains more as CBN pumps in $180m
In less than one week, the naira has gained over N85 against the dollar – thanks to the increased liquidity in the foreign exchange market.
The currency exchanged for N430 to the greenback yesterday at the parallel market. It was N460 to the dollar at the weekend.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday released $100million into the wholesale forwards segment of the market and $80million into the banks specifically for the settlement of dollar demand for school fees, medicals and Personal Travel Allowance (PTA), among others.
CBN spokesman Isaac Okorafor, in a release, said that its commitment to providing enough forex for legitimate business remained unshaken, pointing out that it would do all that is required to ensure the steady supply of forex to the market.
Naira’s appreciation has raised hopes that the naira/dollar exchange rate may well be on a permanent journey to the N300 to the dollar predicted by some analysts in the past.
The apex bank last week rekindled the forex market by releasing $500million to be accessed through the Deposit Money Banks to fund school fees, Personal travel Allowance and medical bills.
The CBN had maintained that much of the dollar demand had been a bubble created by speculators and hoarders of the greenback, warning market players and keepers of dollars to make hay and sell their holdings to avoid heavy losses. -

Big question as Naira gets more muscle
•Will CBN sustain the gains?
It has been cheery news for the naira in the last one week. For the first time in three years, the local currency regained over 16 per cent of its value against the dollar. It yesterday appreciated to N430/$ from N520/$ at the parallel market last Wednesday. The interbank rate remained stable at N305 to the dollar. A new forex policy by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) requiring more dollar inflows to commercial banks, the rise in Foreign Reserves and the relative peace in the Niger Delta are responsible for the positive feedback. But will the CBN sustain the new offensive against the dollar and keep the naira on a sustainable recovery path? OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE and COLLINS NWEZE report.
The naira – Nigeria’s currency is gradually regaining its lost glory. Its recovery became obvious after it regained over N90 against the dollar at the parallel market within a week. The naira assault against the dollar is likely to continue this week, as currency speculators, who have for months ‘warehoused’ dollars began to offload their stock.
It all started immediately the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), through a statement by its spokesman Isaac Okoroafor, announced a new forex policy, which allows commercial banks to have access more dollars to fund forex users at the retail end of the market.
The policy has empowered banks to sell more forex to travellers through Personal Travel Allowances (PTAs), Business Travel Allowances (BTAs), school fees and medical payments.
Okorafor said that providing direct additional funding to banks to meet Nigerians personal, business travel, medical needs and school fees took immediate effect, saying the apex bank expects such retail transactions to be settled at a rate not exceeding 20 per cent above the interbank market rate.
The statement reads: “Having cleared the historic backlog of matured letters of credit at the inception of the current flexible exchange rate system, the CBN would immediately begin to provide foreign exchange to all commercial banks to meet the needs of both personal travel allowances (PTA) and business travel allowances (BTA) for onward sale to customers.
“All banks would receive amounts commensurate with their demand per week, which would be sold to customers who meet usual basic documentary requirements.”
According to the CBN, the needs of parents, guardians and sponsors to make payments of school and educational fees for their children and wards would be met under the new dispensation. It, however, stated that such payments must be made by commercial banks directly to the institution specified by the customer.
The CBN has promised to ensure that the process is as smooth as possible and that as many customers as possible get the foreign exchange on genuine demands.
In order to further increase the availability of forex to all end-users, the CBN has decided to significantly reduce the tenor of its forward sales from the current maximum cycle of 180 days to 60 days from the date of transaction.
In order to further ease travellers’ burden and ensure that transactions are settled at much more competitive exchange rates, the CBN also directed all banks to open forex retail outlets at major airports as soon as logistics permit.
Okoroafor said the apex bank has stated the implementation of its articulated programme to clear all the unfilled orders in the interbank forex market. He said that given CBN’s plan to meet all unfilled orders, “provision of forex to the manufacturing sector would remain the CBN’s strong priority. We will no longer impose allocation/utilisation rules on commercial banks, and also implement an effective intervention programme to support the inter-bank market to ensure adequate liquidity necessary to deliver an efficient forex market.”
He said the CBN’s objective to continuously and to vigorously pursue a transparent, liquid, and efficient forex market, the bank reiterates that it would neither tolerate unscrupulous actions nor hesitate to bring serious sanctions on offenders, be they banks or their employees.
The bank therefore urged market participants to assist in ensuring that these new measures engender the preservation of our external reserves, stability of our financial system and growth of our economy to the benefit of all Nigerians.Bankers react
Former Executive Director, Keystone Bank Limited, Richard Obire, said the CBN’s capacity to increase forex supply has increased, brining more confidence into the market.
He also noted that the restiveness in the Niger Delta has subsided, thus making it possible for oil production to rise to 2.2 million barrels of crude oil per day. Besides, Obire said the cooperation between the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and non-OPEC members has made it possible for crude oil prices’ recovery.
The former bank chief said the increase in foreign reserves to nearly $30 billion and the positive outlook for the crude oil prices make the fundamentals right for continued naira appreciation.
His words: “The CBN has promised to raise dollar supply and also sell at 20 per cent above the interbank rate retail end forex users. This has brought calm to the market and made many people happy. However, I doubt if the CBN will be able to sustain the drive which I think is only going to help in a short while.”
Describing the development as a good omen for the economy, Obire added that everything must be done to make the exchange rate stable.
He said: “Speculators that stored dollars are now releasing them because of the ongoing decline in the value of the dollar. I cannot call the naira recovery a trend yet, until the CBN is able to sustain it for at least one quarter.”
He said that CBN’s plans to sell dollars for BTA, PTA, school fees and medical fees is good but that the promise to sell must be real. “If people go to the banks and they are not able to buy, then there will be problem and the volatility in the market will return”, he cautioned.
Associate – Research, Eczellon Capital Limited, Mustapha Suberu, believes the policy is not sustainable and that it remains a temporary measure to rattle speculators form the market. He said the best thing would be for the CBN to implement full price discovery, to attract foreign investment into economy.
Suberu said: “CBN’s supply of dollars can only last for a while. What is more important is inflow from the outside and that can only happen where there is full price discovery and stability in the market. It’s an interim measure to get out speculators and close the gap between the parallel and black markets.”
Suberu, who said the N375/$ rate was a guidance rate, added that the price of the naira against the dollar in the parallel market cannot be a true reflection of the rate.OPS also speaks
President, Manufacturers’ Association of Nigeria (MAN), Dr. Frank Jacobs, described the reported naira appreciation on the heels of CBN’s new policy as good news to his members. He, however, said “it’s early to measure its effect on the manufacturing sector.” According to him, manufacturing has a long gestation period and the success of the new policy cannot be gauged in a hurry.
Jacobs said: “We pray the naira appreciates and goes further to about N300 to a dollar for instance, we wish that the official rate will equal the parallel market. Going forward it would reduce the cost of raw material and subsequently the cost of production.”
He called for tenacity of purpose on the part of the CBN to see to its full implementation, as according to him, the problem has not that of dearth of policies but their implementation.
The Director-General, Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI), Mr. Muda Yusuf, also welcomed the naira appreciation as good news to the OPS. He expressed concern on the policy’s sustainability as its initial success may be cosmetic.
According to him the CBN cannot fund the forex market alone as doing so would not be sustainable.
Yusuf said: “We need other reforms to encourage other people to bring in money as confidence building is very essential here. The position now is that CBN is throwing money into the market and it simply cannot be sustained going forward”.
Describing the CBN policy review as a partial step in the right direction, he said it could marginally moderate the pressure of forex at the retail end of the market as the focus was essentially on retail transactions, covering school fees, medical bills, PTA and BTA.
The LCCI chief described as cheery news that the apex bank had cleared all backlog of mature obligations that existed at the inception of the “flexible” exchange rate policy.
The worry, however, according to him, is that the fundamental shortcomings of the forex policy remain unaddressed, warning that it may affect the sustainability of the current gains in the exchange rate.
He called for a framework to encourage forex inflows from sources other than the CBN.
The LCCI director-general said: “Inflows of forex from capital importation, export proceeds and diaspora remittances should be liberalised to strengthen the supply side of the market.
“The continuation of the administrative allocation of forex will continue to pose transparency challenge in the system. The scope for market allocation of forex needs to increase as the forex market still suffers from overregulation.”
He called for the relaxation of the regulation not only to improve liquidity but for the pressure on exchange rate to abate in the market. According to him, these are the real concerns of key players in the economy.
“It is critical to remove all impediments to autonomous inflow of forex into the economy”, Yusuf added.CBN continues to
intervene in the marketIn keeping with its determination to increase liquidity in the forex market, the CBN yesterday released another $100 million into the wholesale forwards segment of the market and pumped an additional $80 million into the banks specifically for the settlement of dollar demand for school fees, medicals and PTA, among others.
Okoroafor restated the CBN commitment to the provision of enough forex for legitimate business remains unshaken, reiterating that it would do “everything possible” to ensure the steady supply of forex to the market.
The apex bank’s decision to make available large amounts of forex to triggered the appreciation of the naira by over N90 in less than one week. But, there are fears in the market that the local currency may well be on a permanent journey to its natural value, which some analysts have put at below N300 to the dollar.
The CBN had maintained that much of the dollar demand had been a bubble created by speculators and hoarders of the greenback.
On a radio programme yesterday, the apex bank warned market players and keepers of dollars to make hay and sell their holdings in order to avoid heavy losses.
The measures announced by the CBN on February 20 may ease some of the severe foreign currency liquidity pressure being faced by local banks, Fitch Ratings have said.
The most important aspect of the CBN’s announcement is a plan to normalise the forex interbank market, with its intention to clear the backlog of overdue foreign currency obligations owed by banks to international creditors.
These are primarily trade finance obligations owed to correspondent banks. Besides, the CBN will no longer have a say in how banks on-lend the foreign currency they access from it. Banks previously had to demonstrate that funds were being directed to priority sectors of the economy.
The CBN promised to make the provision of foreign currency to the manufacturing sector a priority. With the restrictions eased, larger banks with greater access to foreign currency will be free to lend to the smaller banks with restricted access to international funding. The CBN has also stated its intention to increase intervention in the forex interbank market to increase supply.
With the latest intervention, the CBN has reduced the maximum waiting times for banks to take delivery of foreign currency through its forward sales contracts to 60 days from 180.
The first of these forwards was announced yesterday for $500 million, with banks reported to have bought around $371 million in one-month and two-month forwards.
The CBN’s initiatives are an important boost for banks as access to foreign currency liquidity is tight and banks have struggled to meet their foreign currency obligations.
Nigeria is highly dependent on imports and the local banks have long provided trade finance facilities to importers.
The currency scarcity and exchange rate weakness have made it harder for importers reliant on naira-denominated cash flows to service United States (U.S.) dollar-denominated trade finance lines, forcing some banks to restructure their obligations with international correspondent banks last year.
Correspondent creditor banks agreed to maturity extensions and were duly compensated for this. There has been a steady reduction in overdue trade-related obligations since late 2016, helped by more frequent foreign currency auctions by the CBN, and this week’s announcement should further ease foreign currency flows into the banks.
However, the operating environment for Nigerian banks is still challenged by the oil price shock, slow Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth, pressure on the naira, scarce access to foreign currency and policy uncertainty.
A report by Afrinvest West Africa Limited, an investment and research firm, said the naira has shed 46.5 per cent and 66.3 per cent in the interbank and parallel markets respectively between June 2014 and January 2017, while the spread between the two rates reached an all-time high of N215.00 last week.
The company said: “However, the political and economic implications of the forex shortages motivated the directive issued by the National Economic Council to the CBN last week for a more flexible forex market structure and closure of the gap between interbank and parallel market rates.
“In the light of this, the CBN issued a new policy action on the 21st February, 2017 which is expected to increase forex allocations to retail end users while reducing the demand pressures in the parallel market.”
The success of the CBN’s aggressive intervention and moderation in demand in the unofficial market led the naira to post its biggest one-week rally of 13 per cent in more than three years an the parallel market, appreciating from a trough of N520 to dollar to a three-month high of N460 to dollar as speculators with short naira positions sold off.
Afrinvest said: “Personal and business travel allowances, school fees and medical fees have been estimated to account for less than 20 per cent of total forex demand in the country hence there is still a large volume of demand that could pressure rate at the parallel market.
“While we believe the successful implementation of the new forex directive would ease pressure in the parallel market, flexibility in pricing and allocation in the interbank market remains a necessity to restore confidence in the system.”Banks as biggest
beneficiaries of new policyNo doubt, commercial banks will remain one of the biggest beneficiaries of the new forex policy. The lenders have also started to call for bids from retail end-users in preparation for the first travel allowances, school fees and medical bills auction.
The CBN is expected to as from today begin to release weekly forex cash (every Tuesday) to commercial and merchant banks to meet the needs at retail end of the market.
The lenders are already creating awareness, informing customers interested in buying PTAs and BTAs, school fees and medical bills payment about requirements needed to access the forex.
A report from the CBN Financial Markets Department released at the weekend, showed that 10 banks, which could not been confirmed as at last night, used N54 billion to fund $162 million Forex Forwards for 30-day tenor, maturing on March 27. The wholesale intervention rate was between N330 to N335 to dollar.
Another six unnamed banks used N18.6 billion to fund $58.52 million Forex Forwards for 60-day tenor maturing April 25, 2017. The wholesale intervention rate was between N315 to N320 to dollar.
The interventions, the CBN said, was meant to deepen dollar liquidity in commercial banks, sustain efforts to strengthen the naira against the dollar and ensure that forex is available to genuine users.
Specifically, the drastic fall in the price of crude oil, which constitutes the largest component of Nigeria’s forex reserves, has cut dollar earnings from about $3.2 billion monthly to about a billion dollar. This has negatively impacted on the value of the naira.
Some of the measures put in place by the CBN to end the crisis include the first Naira-Settled Over-the-Counter (OTC) Forex Futures Market (FFM) launched on June 27, 2016 with FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange.
The Naira-Settled OTC Forex Futures are non-deliverable forwards, or a contract where parties agree to an exchange rate for a pre-determined date in the future, without the obligation to deliver the underlying dollar on the maturity/settlement date.
On the maturity date, it will be assumed that both parties would have transacted at the spot forex market rate. The OTC Forex Futures contract is an effective exchange rate management tool supported by a transparent price driven by two-way quote market.
The contracts assist the CBN in managing the volatility in the spot forex market, thereby promoting stability and entrenching market confidence.