Tag: cbn

  • Forex: CBN moves against importers of rice, cement

    Forex: CBN moves against importers of rice, cement

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said that importers of rice, cement and other products will no longer have access to Foreign Exchange from the CBN, Banks and Bureau De Change for such importation.

    The CBN Governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele, who disclosed this at a news conference on Wednesday in Abuja, said the measure would prevent further depletion of the country’s foreign reserve.

    He said the country was spending huge amount to import things that could be produced locally.

    Emefiele said the apex bank would not continue to support the importation of such items through the use of the hard earned foreign exchange.

    Some of the products include margarine, palm kernel, palm oil products, meat and processed meat products, vegetables, private airplanes and jets, Indian incense, tinned fish, galvanised steel sheet, roofing sheet and furniture.

    “Importers who may want to continue importing these goods would have to sort their foreign exchange from their own private sources.

    “The CBN will continue to be vigilant around this policy, keep reviewing the list of items as it becomes comfortable that these items can be produced locally if we apply ourselves sufficiently.

    “This policy change is in line with the believe that Nigeria cannot attain its true potentials by simply importing everything into the country.

    “We have to decide what we really want for our country and I believe that the time is now for that deep and honest conversation,’’ he said, adding that in spite of relative positive GDP growth over the past seven years, there was no corresponding reduction in unemployment and poverty.

    He said bank’s analyses of the situation had compelled it to put to a stop forex access to some of these goods to encourage local production and consumption for economic development.

    The CBN chief also said that the Federal Government was spending about N1.3 trillion on the average annually to import rice, fish, sugar and wheat.
    “Why should we continue importing rice into Nigeria when vast amount of paddy rice produced by local farmers across rice belts are being wasted and ignored.
    “What will it take for these importers to stop importation and go into processing this locally produced rice.

    “Why are they not utilising large expands of arable lands for cultivation instead of importing rice into the country,’’ he said.

    Emefiele said that Nigeria had been creating jobs for other countries, while importing rice into the country.

    He said it was unfortunate that sardines, tooth picks, among others, were imported into the country.

    Emefele said the apex bank had no power to ban the importation of the items, but noted that it would work hard to ensure support for local production.

    He said local production would reduce poverty, unemployment and pressure on the reserve. “I believe that the current situation we found ourselves affords us a unique opportunity to embrace self sufficiency in Nigeria.
    “We should also reduce our appetite for everything and anything foreign, conserve reserve and create jobs at home for our people.

    “With full complement of the bank management, we would continue to look for areas which the bank can play a catalytic financial role to achieve the goal in the near future,’’ he said.

    On lifting of ban on importation of textiles and furniture by the Nigeria Customs, he said CBN would not provide foreign exchange for people that would want to import such products.

  • CBN vows to increase items denied foreign exchange

    CBN vows to increase items denied foreign exchange

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has threatened to list more items to be denied access to foreign exchange to check goods and services import.

    Besides, all banks and Bureaux dex Changes (BDCs) will no longer provide foreign exchange for the importation of the listed items.

    Addressing reporters in Abuja yesterday on what informed the CBN’s decision to deny importers of certain items access to the foreign exchange markets, CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele said: “The huge amounts of money the country spends on importing things we can produce locally have become a significant drag on our Foreign Exchange Reserves.”

    He demanded to know why we should keep importing rice when rice paddy of comparable quality produced by poor hardworking local farmers across the rice belts of Nigeria are being wasted and ignored?

    The CBN governor asked what it will “take for these importers to stop the importation and go into processing these locally produced rice. “Why are these importers not utilising the vast expanses of arable land for rice cultivation instead of taking the easy route of importing rice? Do we, as a people, realise how many jobs we are creating for other countries by ignoring local production and simply concentrating on imports? How can we keep complaining about the depreciation of the naira when all we do as a people is to import everything from ordinary Geisha and toothpicks, to even eggs?”

    These, he said, are some of the fundamental reasons behind the CBN’s recent announcement. Emefiele emphasised that the CBN does not have the power to out rightly ban the importation of the items it listed in its circular but added that what CBN has done “is to simply say that the CBN cannot continue to support the imports of these items using Nigeria’s hard-earned foreign exchange. Importers who may want to continue bringing in these goods or services into the country will have to source their foreign exchange from private sources.”

    Emefiele said the apex bank would continue to be vigilant on this policy and will keep reviewing the list “as we become comfortable that items can be produced locally if we apply ourselves sufficiently enough.”

    Nigeria’s situation, Emefiele said, “affords us a unique opportunity to embrace self-sufficiency, reduce our appetite for everything and anything foreign, conserve the country’s scarce Foreign Exchange, and create jobs here at home for our people.”

    Emefiele assured Nigerians that the CBN “will continue to look out for areas in which the Bank can play a catalytic financial role to helping us achieve these goals in the near future.”

  • Why CBN ordered banks, MMOs to institute fraud desk

    Why CBN ordered banks, MMOs to institute fraud desk

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has ordered deposit money banks, Mobile Money Operators (MMOs), switches and all payment service providers to establish electronic fraud desks to enable the institutions check rising cases of fraud in the subsector.

    The apex bank’s Director, Bank­ing and Payments Systems Department, Dipo Fatokun, said the establishment of the new industry desk followed submissions to the Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum (NeFF) and consultation with the deposit money banks as well as electronic payments service providers.

    The new desk, Fatokun said, would set up effective mechanisms for receiving and responding promptly to fraud alerts, to help manage and reduce electronic payments fraud in the banking industry.

    In a circular to all stakeholders the CBN gave all banks and e-payment plat­forms July 1 deadline to set up and staff a functioning fraud desk. He noted that the staff of the desks must be trained on emerging fraud trends on various electronic payments channels, while stating that defaulting banks risk serious sanctions.

    While speaking at the unveiling of the 2014 yearly report of the NeFF, with a call for sustained innovative efforts against cybercrime, Fatokun said it has become imperative that an ef­fective mechanism for receiv­ing and responding promptly to fraud alerts be set up within the banking industry, towards managing and reducing suc­cessful electronic payments frauds.

    He said “the mobile money space started in Nige­ria just about four years ago in 2011, and currently we have licensed about 21 mobile money operators.”

    He noted that it is not right to say that “we are not making progress, but it will be right to say that our expectations on mobile money has not fully been met and probably be­cause we are a little bit ambitious in setting the targets.”

    He added: “Each transac­tion in mobile money runs into billion, in fact, more than N5 billion every year, but what we have noticed is that most of the transactions in mobile money is either subscriptions, payment for subscriptions and remittances, maybe the mobile wallet sending money to ac­count in the bank or account in the bank sending money to mobile wallet,” he noted.

    The Group Managing Director (GMD) /Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Diamond Bank, Uzoma Dozie, said cybercrime has become worrisome and dominating global financial discourse, as perpetrators get more sophisticated in their approach.

    For him, the underline ideology for cyber security is to provide relevant strategy and framework against cyber threat, as well as secure the business in the advent of attack and nurture the same cyber.

    However, the circular stated that the desk would provide, among other services, support to customers on electronic fraud with a minimum of 10 dedicated phone lines, manned and available at all times, to handle calls directed from con­tact centre for fraud alerts and complaints. The desk would also log on all customer fraud alerts and complaints and redirect them to the appropriate authorities in line with internally predefined path, while preparing and sub­mitting reports regularly to the Nigeria Inter-bank Settlement System (NIBSS) on fraud in­formation.

  • CBN to raise N120.5b treasury bills next week

    CBN to raise N120.5b treasury bills next week

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said it plans to sell N120.52 billion of three-month, six-month and one-year Treasury bills on June 24, the bank said.

    The bank said in a statement it would sell N31.19 billion worth of the three-month paper, N39.33 billion of the six-month bill and N50 billion in the one-year debt next week, using the Dutch auction System.

    At an auction later, the bank is offering N143.64 billion worth of Treasury bills of tenors ranging between three-month and one-year.

    In addition, a total of N80 billion worth of Treasury bonds with maturities between five-year and 20-year are also on offer at the same auction. The results of both auctions will be published today.

  • Firm petitions EFCC, CBN over N750m deposit

    A consulting firm, OG Consulting has petitioned the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) over an alleged N750 million unpaid deposit by a Lagos-based Mortgage Bank, Resort Savings and Loan Plc against one of its client.

    The firm alleged that one of its clients had invested about  N750 million in Resort Saving and Loans Plc on October 10, last year under the agreement that the investment will mature within one year at an interest rate agreed at 15 per cent interest.

    It claimed that since the maturity of the investment on January 8, this year, the mortgage institution, Resort Saving and Loan Plc has declined to pay back the initial investment and the accrued interest.

    Copies of the petition has also been forwarded by the firm to the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) and  Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on the matter.

    The firm further alleged that after several correspondents with the management of the mortgage  bank, the financial institution only managed to pay back about N200 million recently, leaving a balance of N550 million plus interest.

    According to the firm, the finance house has several times reneged on its promise to pay up the balance on different dates it promised to do so thereby lending credence to the possibility that  it may be facing liquidity crises.

    OG Consulting, therefore, urged the EFCC and other relevant authorities to compel Resort Savings to pay back its client’s outstanding balance, noting that other investors in the finance house might be facing similar challenges in getting back their investments.

    Reacting to the allegation, the management of Resort Saving and Loans Plc in a statement said its inability  to keep its side of the bargain on the deposit was not deliberate, explaining that the bank holds its customers in high esteem.

    The statement said the agreement reached between the client in question and the bank is sacrosanct, urging him to be patient.                                                                                                               The bank further explained that the delay in paying the balance of the deposit was due to slow disposal of properties in its portfolio, adding that arrangements were being made to fulfill the agreement reached with the customer.

    “As a bank, we are committed to best practices and we will like to appeal to our client to be patient as we are working at ensuring that we keep our own side of the deal.

    “ We have paid a reasonable part of the deposit in question while the outstanding will be paid as soon as possible in line with the agreement. All we want from our client is patience. We will surely keep our words,” the statement added.

    A Managing Partner in the consulting firm, Mr Oladimeji Abolaji, told reporters that they would explore other measures within the confines of the law to retrieve the investment made into Resort Savings and Loans Plc.

  • Burden of N8b currency scam on CBN, economy

    Burden of N8b currency scam on CBN, economy

    The banking system is notorious for keeping worn-out and smelly banknotes. Poor monetary policy decisions and abuses by Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) officials as seen in the ongoing N12billion currency scam trial involving 22 bankers are denting the regulator’s image, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    Edith Okafor, a consumer goods distributor based in Lagos is worried that for the past four years, what she has been paid with worn-out banknotes from her customers. Some of the notes are so bad that her customers kept rejecting them as balance after transactions. In some of the occasions, the customers threw the banknotes back at her, saying they needed cleaner notes.

    Whenever Edith tried to reject the banknotes, the feedbacks from her customers are always the same: “I got this money from my bank or do you think I print money. Where do you want me to get cleaner notes?”

    Perhaps, the customers are right. Finding new banknotes is like finding a needle in a hay sack. Not until last week, when an alleged N8 billion fraud broke out did many people understood why there are much worn-out bank notes in circulation.

    Facing trial over what happened to the N8 billion are 22 bankers, including  six from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and 16 others from commercial banks.

    The CBN staff include: Patience Okoro Eye (Abuja), Afolabi Olufemi (Lagos), Kolawole Babalola (Ibadan), Olaniran Muniru Adeola (Ibadan), Fatai Yusuf Adekunle (Head, Security, CBN, (Ibadan) and Ilori Adekunle Sunday (Akure).

    The suspects, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) alleged, stole and recirculated defaced and mutilated currencies, worth N8 billion. They are being tried at the Federal High Court, sitting in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    The accused persons, according to the prosecution counsel, Mr. Rotimi Jacobs, instead of carrying out the statutory instruction to destroy the defaced currency notes as their duty demands, substituted the currency with newspapers neatly cut to naira sizes. The offence, as contained in a charge sheet read out to the accused persons is punishable under section 7(2) of the Bank Employees etc.(Declaration of Assets) Act, CAP. B1, Laws of the Federal Republic, Nigeria 2004.

    Former President, Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN), Mazi Okechukwu Unegbu, said he was not surprised at what the 22 bankers did because the ethics of the profession had gone down over the years.

    He said: “Why is it that Nigerians are spending dead notes but when you go to parties, you see crispy notes? It is because of corruption and the calibre of people managing the economy. The CBN is supposed to be managing the economy and ensuring that clean notes are made available to the people, but the reverse is the case. That tells you we are in a jungle country.”

    Unegbu said such unwholesome practices have made money management difficult.

    The ex-CIBN chief said the N16 million had been injected into in circulation as against the N8 billion that would have been added if the suspects had kept faith with the ethics of their profession in the discharge of their duty.

    According to him, every currency has a lifecycle which should be followed, and the expired notes must be destroyed, but the policy is being abused.  He said the suspect needed the support of bank staff to reintroduce the cash into the system adding that such temptations should be resisted by bankers.

    Unegbu said: “When I was in FirstBank, some fraudsters approached me to assist them circulate counterfeit currencies into the system. I was expected to mix the funds with genuine notes and circulate them into the market.

    “But I refused because we were taught not do such things. I don’t know how many bankers will resist such temptation today.”

    However, the scam never came as a surprise to Henry Boyo, who alleged that Nigerians take for granted even bigger fraud in the CBN.

    The economist said:  “It did not surprise me at all. It was expected. What is clear is that the CBN is fraught with fraud. Whether it is the intervention fund or monetary policy strategy, it is the more you look, the less you see,” he said.

    Boyo described as questionable the practice that allows the CBN to carry out regular mopping up of excess liquidity from the system, alleging that the apex bank mops up over N6 trillion every year and that the one for the first quarter has already been conducted, with N1.5 trillion taken off the system. Commercial banks were paid 10 to 15 per cent interests, leaving them with about N600 billion profit margin.

    Mr. Boyo alleged that the intervention funds, running into billions of naira, must also be investigated just like the Polymer notes scam.

    But, Brown Okorie, another economist, said the mopping up of excess liquidity in the system is the statutory function of the CBN, saying it’s a mechanism to bring down inflation and stabilise the exchange rate.

    Pointing out that the apex bank has several tools to control the inflation rate, he emphasised that the best option at the moment will be to reduce the excess liquidity in the system.

    “The CBN will look at the indicators and decide what tools to use to control the inflation rate, which will all be aimed at reducing excess liquidity in the system,” Okorie said.

    The Intergovernmental Action Group against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA) also reacted to the development. It said it has written to the CBN and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) requesting to be updated on the scam.

    Head, GIABA Office in Nigeria, Timothy Melaye, told The Nation that the alleged fraud has dented the CBN image and that of the country, which is a signatory to the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).

    Melaye said: “Nigeria is a member of FATF and as a member, it should be above board in a matters regarding fraud, money laundering and illegitimate transactions.”

    The FATF is the global standard setting body for Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT).

    In its efforts to enforce greater compliance with acceptable international standards, the FATF, in collaboration with FATF Styled-Regional Bodies (FSRBs), undertake targeted review of countries/jurisdictions identified with strategic AML/CFT deficiencies with a view to protecting the international financial system from Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing (ML/TF) risks arising from such deficiencies.

    The FATF had in October, 2013, removed Nigeria from the list of countries identified as jurisdictions with significant deficiencies in their AML/CFT regimes.

    The global anti-money laundering body gave its countenance to Nigeria’s significant progress in improving its AML/CFT regime and noted that the country had established the legal and regulatory framework to meet its commitments in its Action Plan regarding the strategic deficiencies that the FATF evaluators had identified previously.

    Melaye called for more effective international cooperation, including exchange of information between competent authorities, conduct of joint investigations, tracing, freezing and confiscation of illegal assets.

    Saying that GIABA has been supporting the EFCC in fight against corruption, he urged: “The EFCC is getting the needed support from GIABA and we want the Nigeria government to provide the necessary financial support for the body do carry out its work more efficiently.”

    What experts are not sure yet, is whether the alleged fraud uncovered at the CBN will prompt the FATF to delist Nigeria from list of countries with AML/CFT compliant regimes.

    Former Executive Director, BankPHB, Richard Obire, said as a regulator, the CBN should be above board when compared with banks’ adherence to ethical banking standards.

    Obire said: “The CBN has to keep a responsible behaviour. If the accusations are established, it will be so unfortunate for the CBN. It is not something to expect at all from a banker, let alone the CBN. The apex bank needs to quickly restore the confidence of banks in their operations.”

    According to him, besides the CBN being the custodian of banking integrity, it needs to come out and assure the public on what it stands for, by getting to the root of the crisis by reviewing its oversight functions on its employees.

    Obire said the same severe sanctions should be extended to the six banks whose workers are allegedly involved in the scam.

    “The banks need to take same steps because they are inexcusable,” he said.

    The former bank director, said that by injecting N8 billion into the financial system, the alleged perpetrators had boosted money supply.

    “And as an import-dependent country, the floating money will be driving up demand for forex, and weakening the naira. If it is not chasing forex, the fund will be targeting other goods, and raising inflation”.

    He recalled that inflation has been on the rise since December last year, from seven per cent to 7.6 per cent in May.

    At the last Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting mid-May, CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele disclosed that the year-on-year headline inflation crept upwards for the fourth consecutive month in April 2015. The inflation rate rose from 8.2 per cent in January to 8.5 per cent in March and further to 8.7 per cent in April.

    According to him, the increase in headline inflation in April reflected increases in both the core and food components. Core inflation rose to 7.7 per cent in April from 7.5 per cent in March, while food inflation increased to 9.5 per cent from 9.4 per cent over the same period.

    The CBN chief noted that the uptick in inflationary pressures, year-to-date, was largely traceable to transient factors such as high demand for transportation, food and energy, especially in the period around the general elections as well as the Easter festivities. He also noted the roles played by system liquidity and the pass-through effects of the recent depreciation of the naira exchange rate.

    Reiterating CBN’s commitment to price stability, Emefiele noted that given the already tight stance of monetary policy and the transient nature of the incubators of the current inflationary trend, which are outside the direct control of monetary policy, the space for maneuver remains constrained, necessitating the intervention of fiscal and structural policies to stimulate output growth.

    Equally, broad money supply (M2) increased by 1.80 per cent in April, over December 2014 level. When annualised, M2 increased by 5.39 per cent, but it remained lower than the growth benchmark of 15.24 per cent for the year.

    Both Obire and Unaegbu agree that the impact of the N8 billion cash fraud cannot be ruled out in driving inflation to its new heights. They believe that since the funds were reprinted and ploughed back into the system, the additional N8 billion fraud cash will bring the total cash to N16 billion, instead of approved N8 billion.

    Within the banking industry, there have also been reactions to the alleged fraud, which has shaken the financial sector to its roots.

    Head of Media at FirstBank Babatunde Lasaki said the transactions were done basically by CBN staff in collaboration with five employees in his bank.

    He said two of the employees had been sacked while the remaining three are helping the EFCC on the ongoing investigation.

    Lasaki said that it is after the true picture unfolds that the remaining staff if culpable may be dismissed.

    Also speaking, Head, Corporate Communications, Wema Bank Plc, Onome Odili, said the affected workers in her bank had been sacked long ago. Like Lasaki, she said the fraud is a CBN show and that her bank officials were brought in to implement it.

    An insider in Ecobank said the two affected officials left the bank, when they suspected that the crime had uncovered.

    Another insider in Access Bank said the two officials of the bank are involved are legacy staff from the defunct Intercontinental Bank. The source said the CBN should be blamed because bad notes submitted for destruction are kept in long queues for years with no action taken on them, giving room for abuse by staff.

    He said the banknotes would have been destroyed immediately and the fraud averted if the unit involved had been effective.

    The source said that some of the notes marked for destruction were still pending, five years after with nothing done and thereby creating room for abuse.

    Imma Okocha, a principal partner in Messrs Imma Okocha & Associates, said members of the public should demand for the real identity of the suspects.

    He said: “Could they have acted alone, or there are other top CBN officials involved. Are they being used as sacrificial animals because they are lower cadre staff?

    Okocha said the success of the case will depend on how well the evidence is gathered but believes that the police are likely to do a shoddy job.

    “You will find out that some principal witnesses may decide not to come to court because of their relationship with the accused persons. The Police are tactically known for spoiling cases, especially, where those in investigation are not additionally taken care of by the complaining party,” he stated.

    The lawyer said that until, further facts are released and people that took the case to court provide further evidence, otherwise the case may collapse.

    He said: “The boldness of this type of crime, shocks me. There is no doubt that this type of crime have been going on for a long time. They should look at what has been happening because they already have facts.”

    Okocha, however, admitted that an accused person, although knows he has committed the crime, do not necessarily need to plead guilty, but would want the prosecution to prove their case.

    CBN’s Director, Corporate Communications, Ibrahim Mu’azu, relived the events that led the management of the apex bank to hand over the suspects to the EFCC for prosecution.

    He said: “As soon as the bank’s internal investigations were concluded beyond reasonable doubt that some wrong doing had occurred, the affected members of staff who are middle-level officers were, depending on gravity of offence, either summarily dismissed or immediately placed on indefinite suspension on 21 October 2014, and all handed over to the EFCC for further investigation and prosecution.”

    Continuing, he said the CBN has also conducted a nationwide audit of all 37 branches of the bank and found that this was an isolated scheme at its Ibadan branch.

    He said the bank will continue to collaborate with the EFCC to ensure that affected CBN workers, as well as their accomplices in some commercial banks, is brought to justice.

    Mu’azu said the scam was discovered during a routine internal audit of the bank’s cash destruction activities in September 2014.

    He said the CBN Briquetting Panel, comprising of senior bank officials from the various branches, noticed some anomalies at the Ibadan branch and immediately reported this to the bank’s management.

    He said that on further investigation ordered by Emefiele, it was discovered that a systematic scheme, which had been on for several years, was being run in which mutilated higher denomination notes, originally meant for destruction, were swapped with lower denomination currencies. This practice known as interleafing, basically labels a box with a higher value than its true content.

    At the penultimate court hearings, it was discovered that the suspects acquired assets in Nigeria and Pretoria, South Africa.

    The EFCC arraigned the suspects on a 28-count charge, bordering on forgery, misrepresentation and self-enrichment before Justice Adeyinka Faji.

    In the charge, the EFFC said that the CBN staff conspired with the FirstBank employees to recycle the mutilated currency notes meant for destruction.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge. The accused persons are facing a 15-count charge ranging from conspiracy, abuse of office and stealing to false declaration of actual amount.

    The others have been accused of concealing of property, fraudulently acquiring assets in excess of their legitimate and provable income and causing economic adversity to the country.

    The court was told how the suspects acquired assets worth several billions of naira through fraudulent means, in excess of their legitimate income.

    The assets said to have been acquired were allegedly gotten by stealing N1.25 billion supposed mutilated currencies meant to be destroyed and taken out of circulation.

    The EFCC told the court that one of the accused, persons, Mr. Ayodeji Alase, had N134 million in one of his bank accounts.

    It (anti-graft agency) told the trial judge, Justice A.O. Faaji, that Alase, a primary six certificate holder, started work at First Bank as a guard before he was promoted to the position of a cash assistant.

    The commission’s lead prosecution counsel (Jacob), a senior advocate, also told the court that the accused had property worth hundreds of millions of naira.

    Alase, according to the anti-graft agency, has a duplex at Oluyole Estate in Ibadan, a shopping complex, a warehouse at Podo, a fenced plot at Dugbe, a block of four flats at Apeye, two plots of land and five-bedroom flat in other parts of the state capital.

    He was alleged to have a credit balance of N132 million in one of his bank accounts. The commission also alleged that Alase possessed a block of five-bedroom flat at Apete area of Ibadan and a supermarket at New Garage, Apata area of Ibadan.

  • CBN misses mobile money target, records N5b turnover

    CBN misses mobile money target, records N5b turnover

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has admitted that its mobile money expectations are not met, despite N5 billion annual turnover recorded by operators.

    CBN Director, Banking Supervision, and Chairman, Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum (NeFF), ‘Dipo Fatokun who disclosed this at the Nigeria Electronic Fraud Forum (NeFF) June meeting held in Lagos at the weekend, said: “It is not correct that we have not made progress in mobile money. It is right that our expectations on mobile money has not fully been met and probably because we were very ambitious in setting the target”.

    He regretted that most of the mobile money transactions are for subscription payment, and remittances, like mobile wallet sending money to account in the bank, or account in the bank sending money to mobile wallet.

    Fatokun said the mobile money space started in Nigeria about two years ago, adding that about 21 Mobile Money Operators have already been licenced. “What we have discovered is that what has led to slow growth is because of lack of agency. For mobile money to be successful, you must have agent. The CBN did report setting up some conditions on agency banking which the mobile money operators are keying into,” he said.

    “We have also released a guideline on super agent structure. We expect that some of the telcos, if not all, will serve as super agents. Two of the telcos already have our approval in principle, to make their agents available for mobile money”.

    Speaking on the NeFF 2014 annual report with theme: “e-Fraud: Fighting the battle, winning the war”, which was also launched at the event, Fatokun said Nigeria needs to put necessary controls to avoid fraud in the e-payment space. “We have articles there to open the eyes of the public on how to stop electronic fraud. We have articles from different stakeholders. It will help you on what you need to avoid if you want your account to be safe,” he said.

    He said the assessment of the e-payment industry is that the value and volume of electronic transactions in e-payment has been in the increase. However, he said the value and volume of fraud, though globally is on the increase, but in Nigeria is on decrease because of so many controls in place.

  • CBN suspends 437 BDCs from forex market

    CBN suspends 437 BDCs from forex market

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has suspended 437 Bureau De Change (BDC) operators from accessing its weekly dollars sales from the foreign exchange (forex) market, The Nation learnt yesterday.

    They have been denied access to the $30,000 weekly allocations to operators, and slammed with a N2 million fine each for non-rendition of their monthly returns to the apex bank.

    They are said to have defaulted in providing   detailed reports on how previous dollars sourced from the CBN were utilised.

    Sources said the level of abuse was so massive that the CBN decided to impose sanctions to serve as deterrent to others.

    “Given that the BDCs were long viewed as a potential source of forex leakage in the system, these measures should boost confidence in the sustainability of the forex band,” one of the sources said.

    CBN Director of Communications, Ibrahim Mu’azu did not respond to phone calls and text messages sent to him on the matter.

    But when contacted, the President, Association of Bureaux De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe confirmed the development, and described the sanctions as punitive.

    Gwadabe said the CBN would make over N1 billion when the 437 BDCs pay the stipulated penalties and that will add undue pressure on the finances of the operators already wailing from the burden of increased capital base and N35 million mandatory cautionary deposit.

    “My suggestion to the CBN is that instead of demobilising the affected BDCs for non-rendition by denying them access to forex market, their N35 million cautionary deposit should be debited with the penalty sum,” he said.

    This is coming as CBN had last week, licensed additional 70 BDCs, bringing the total approved operators to 2,688 since the request that operators increase their  capital base from N10 million to N35 million plus another cautionary deposit of N35 million kept with the CBN. There were 3,208 registered BDCs before the apex bank ordered them to recapitalise latest by July 31, 2014.

    The regulator has, however, kept updating its list of BDCs, even though the deadline elapsed since July last year despite earlier stand that it would cease to fund any BDCs that failed to beat the initial deadline.

    The CBN has consistently urged banks, BDCs and Other Financial Institutions (OFIS) on the importance of rendition of returns and compliance with anti-money laundering regulations.

    CBN Director, Banking Supervision, Mrs. Tokunbo Martins said during the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) anti-money laundering workshop held in Abuja, that the CBN always wants to ascertain if lenders are complying with Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) regulations.

    Matins said: “Section 29 of the CBN AML/CFT Regulations, 2013 (as amended) requires financial institutions to maintain all necessary records on transactions, both domestic and international for at least five years after completion of the transactions or such longer period as may be required by the CBN and Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU), provided that this requirement shall apply regardless of whether the account or business relationship is on-going or has been terminated”.

    She said financial institutions are expected to maintain records of the identification data, accounts files and business correspondence for at least five years after the termination of an account or business relationship or such longer period as may be required by the CBN and NFIU on a timely basis.

    She said that financial institutions are required to forward their AML/CFT Compliance Manual to the CBN for off-site review of the document as well as carry out enhanced customer due diligence for high risk customers and effective Know Your Customer (KYC) processes. “The KYC means knowing the identity of the customer and understanding the kinds of transactions in which the customer is likely to engage in. By knowing one’s customers, financial institutions can often identify unusual or suspicious behavior, termed anomalies, which may be an indication of money laundering,” she explained.

    The CBN director said most challenges with the rendition of returns center around quality, accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the returns being rendered.

     

     

  • ‘CBN’s 31% harmonised CRR  results in N142b debit’

    ‘CBN’s 31% harmonised CRR results in N142b debit’

    The Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN’s) preferred tool for monetary policy adjustment over the past three years, the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) has become the biggest drag on banks’ profits, with N142 billion net weekly debit across sector, Renaissance Capital (RenCap) report released yesterday said.

    The CRR is a portion of banks’ deposits kept with the CBN as reserves and was harmonised to 31 per cent for both public and private sector deposits.

    Its Head, Equities Market, Adesoji Solanke said the combined CRR for banks under its coverage moved from 11 per cent in 2012 to 27 per cent last year before the current harmonised rate.

    “We note that subsequent to the hike in the private sector CRR to 20 per cent late November 2014, the CBN conducted a special check across the sector to ensure public sector deposits were properly classified. The CRR hike, coupled with this audit (which found some banks erring), led to significant leaps in effective CRR by 2014 across board,” he said.

    He said the tight monetary policy environment and punitive CRR computation implemented by the CBN in first quarter, led to a margin squeeze in most banks’ first quarter results.

    Solanke said foreign exchange income is likely to be weaker this year, as the CBN’s operational controls continue to stifle interbank trading. He said most banks have reduced their commission on turnover (CoT) further to 0.1 per cent, which is also negative for revenue.

    “With a new government in place, there has been much talk of broad, deep-reaching reforms, though with few specifics at this stage. We think Nigerian banks are unlikely to remain unscathed, as weaker fiscal revenue could put the banks’ tax exemptions on government and corporate securities at risk; oil sector reforms could lead to asset quality surprises,” he said.

    Solanke said after evaluating the implications of potential changes to the banks’ effective tax rate, it was  concluded that higher rates could significantly weaken the sector’s investment case, as only Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank) and probably Stanbic IBTC in RenCap’s coverage universe would be able to deliver returns to match their cost of equity.

    “We also establish each bank’s breakeven cost of risk and deduce a ‘pain buffer’ that calculates how much room we think the bank has to take on additional impairments before moving into a loss. Based on our 2015 estimates, GTBank, Stanbic, Zenith Bank and UBA have the highest pain buffers in the sector,” he said.

  • ‘CBN’s 31% harmonised CRR  results in N142b debit’

    ‘CBN’s 31% harmonised CRR results in N142b debit’

    The Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN’s) preferred tool for monetary policy adjustment over the past three years, the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) has become the biggest drag on banks’ profits, with N142 billion net weekly debit across sector, Renaissance Capital (RenCap) report released yesterday said.

    The CRR is a portion of banks’ deposits kept with the CBN as reserves and was harmonised to 31 per cent for both public and private sector deposits.

    Its Head, Equities Market, Adesoji Solanke said the combined CRR for banks under its coverage moved from 11 per cent in 2012 to 27 per cent last year before the current harmonised rate.

    “We note that subsequent to the hike in the private sector CRR to 20 per cent late November 2014, the CBN conducted a special check across the sector to ensure public sector deposits were properly classified. The CRR hike, coupled with this audit (which found some banks erring), led to significant leaps in effective CRR by 2014 across board,” he said.

    He said the tight monetary policy environment and punitive CRR computation implemented by the CBN in first quarter, led to a margin squeeze in most banks’ first quarter results.

    Solanke said foreign exchange income is likely to be weaker this year, as the CBN’s operational controls continue to stifle interbank trading. He said most banks have reduced their commission on turnover (CoT) further to 0.1 per cent, which is also negative for revenue.

    “With a new government in place, there has been much talk of broad, deep-reaching reforms, though with few specifics at this stage. We think Nigerian banks are unlikely to remain unscathed, as weaker fiscal revenue could put the banks’ tax exemptions on government and corporate securities at risk; oil sector reforms could lead to asset quality surprises,” he said.

    Solanke said after evaluating the implications of potential changes to the banks’ effective tax rate, it was  concluded that higher rates could significantly weaken the sector’s investment case, as only Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank) and probably Stanbic IBTC in RenCap’s coverage universe would be able to deliver returns to match their cost of equity.

    “We also establish each bank’s breakeven cost of risk and deduce a ‘pain buffer’ that calculates how much room we think the bank has to take on additional impairments before moving into a loss. Based on our 2015 estimates, GTBank, Stanbic, Zenith Bank and UBA have the highest pain buffers in the sector,” he said.