Tag: cbn

  • 2007 poll: CBN to refund N1.015b over alleged double payment for ballot papers

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has been ordered to refund N1.015 billion to the Consolidated Revenue Account (CRA) for a contract for the supply of 65 million ballot papers for the 2007 presidential election.

    The order followed the failure of the apex bank to provide evidence of the transaction, which the House of Representatives’ Committee on Public Account alleged was paid for twice by the Federal Government.

    The committee invited the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Atahiru Jega, Permanent Secretary of State House, Emmanuel Ogbila, and the Acting Governor of CBN, Sarah Alade, to give accounts of the transaction.

    Dipo Fatokun, director, Banking and Payments System Department, who represented the CBN, said there was no double payment for the transaction.

    He said: “There was no double payment for the transaction. When we first appeared before the committee, we did not check our records well. That was why we thought there were double payments.

    “But now, we have checked our records well and discovered that there were no double payments. Our records showed that there was no payment made for the memo from the State House because the minute on it was Keep in View (KIV).”

    Ogbila said the State House took over the contract from the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation (OAGF) when INEC was unable to meet the financial requirements of the transaction in time.

    The committee doubted the submission of the CBN representative.

    According to the committee, State House statement of account generated from CBN showed that cheques for the transaction and debit entries were contradictory.

    Two cheques for N262 million and N763 million could not be found, while two debit figures of N10.5 million and N1.4 billion were suspicious.

    The two debit entries did not tally with the approved amount of N1.015 billion.

    The committee queried the legitimacy of the transaction, as the money remitted to South Africa for the supply was less than approved.

    The INEC chairman, who said the commission was not involved, was requested to confirm the receipt of the 65 million ballot papers.

    Jega pleaded for time to check the commission’s records, as he was not there at the time.

    Explaining why the money remitted to South Africa was less N10 million, Fatokun said it was a service commission charged Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDA) by the CBN and that commercial banks would have charged more.

    “Who authorised the CBN to reduce the amount? The money approved was N1.015 billion, but CBN remitted less, this brings us to doubt if the transaction was actually consummated?

    “In view if this development, the CBN is ordered to remit to the Consolidated Revenue Account, N1.015 billion within one week,” Chairman of the committee, Solomon Adeola, said.

    Sixty-five million ballot papers were supplied by a South African firm, following the declaration of the Supreme Court on April 16, 2007, that the then Vice President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, was free to contest the presidential election on April 21, 2007.

    He was disqualified by INEC, following an administrative panel of enquiry, which indicted him of corruption.

  • Oil minister’s, bankers’ role in Sanusi’s ouster

    Oil minister’s, bankers’ role in Sanusi’s ouster

    Suspended Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, in a New York Times’ report, gives an insight into his hurried exit from the apex bank

    Even in a country where untold oil wealth disappears into the pockets of the elite, the oil corruption scheme he was investigating seemed outsize — and he threatened to lay it bare at a meeting with Nigeria’s top bankers.

    The rabble-rouser was none other than the governor of the country’s central bank. Weeks later, however, he was out, fired by Nigeria’s president in an episode that has shaken the Nigerian economy, filled newspapers and airwaves here, and even inspired a rare street demonstration.

    The bankers were going to have to open their books, the governor, Lamido Sanusi, warned them at the recent meeting. He wanted to see where the money was going — $20 billion from oil sales that, mysteriously, was not making its way to the treasury, in a country that could soon be declared Africa’s biggest economy and already attracts the most direct foreign investment on the continent, according to the United Nations.

    But his suspicions were cutting too close, Mr. Sanusi said — too close to an oil-politics nexus that both feeds the political establishment in Nigeria, in his view and that of analysts, and deprives the country of vital revenue.

    The charge of missing oil money is not new in Nigeria. In recent years, government commissions, parliamentary inquiries and civil society groups have all pointed to serious shortfalls in the disbursement of oil revenues. Their findings have been ignored.

    This time, the accusations appear not to be going away: Never before has an official at Mr. Sanusi’s level made them.

    In interviews here, Mr. Sanusi gave a detailed account of the events that he said led to his ouster on Feb. 20, a dismissal that continues to depress the country’s currency and frighten investors. He said his warning to the bankers had been reported straight back to the threatened seat of power in the country’s capital, Abuja.

    It was too much, he said. With his accusations, which outside analysts consider credible, the soft-spoken, bow-tied central banker appeared to have penetrated to the heart of the country’s entrenched corruption problem.

    In 2009, Mr. Sanusi took aim at Nigeria’s failing banking sector, shutting down fraudulent banks, uncovering theft that led to an unprecedented conviction, and earning trust in international financial markets. He was named central bank governor of the year by The Banker magazine in 2011, and is a suited-up member of his country’s establishment, as an heir to the position of emir in the ancient northern city of Kano, one of Nigeria’s highest-status designations.

    But then he began taking on the government oil agency, which determines whether oil-dependent Nigeria rises or falls. Specifically, he accused the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation — the agency that buys, sells, regulates and produces the country’s oil — of not turning over earnings to the country’s central bank. The country is Africa’s largest oil exporter, oil prices were steady or rising, yet Nigeria’s financial reserves were falling. It was a mystery. The money was missing. Mr. Sanusi said he feared an eventual collapse of Nigeria’s currency.

    Backed by calculations, he presented his findings to a Nigerian Senate committee early in February. “A substantial amount of money has gone,” Mr. Sanusi said in an interview at the mansion reserved for the country’s central banker, which he will soon have to leave. “I wasn’t just talking about numbers. I showed it was a scam.”

    At a time when political energy in Africa’s most populous country is focused on next year’s elections — and staying in power is costly for a governing party that functions as a patronage machine — Mr. Sanusi knew exactly which interests he had menaced, he said. He had been warned to “cool down.

    “By making N.N.P.C. an issue now, the source of money for financing elections is threatened,” Mr. Sanusi said, referring to the petroleum corporation. “If this is stopped, there will be no money to finance the elections.”

    On the other hand, if it was not stopped, the risk to Nigeria’s economy was grave, the central banker suggested. “It was critical that we stop this hemorrhage,” he said. “Otherwise, we can’t maintain stability. Reserves had gone way down. We would watch the naira collapse,” he said of the nation’s currency.

    Alarmed, Mr. Sanusi said, he went in front of Nigeria’s top banking heads for a semimonthly meeting on Feb. 11 and “threatened to open the books of the bankers, to trace the money.” He suspected some were laundering stolen oil money.

    “Some of them were not giving information about their accounts,” the central banker said. “I told them I would order a special examination.”

    One of the bankers at the meeting said, referring to the Central Bank of Nigeria, “He made it clear to them that the C.B.N. would need to unravel what was going on, and they should cooperate.”

    Many of the bankers became angry. “One of us said, ‘What next?’ “ a second banker said. “There was a general heaviness. He spoke tough.” Both bankers requested anonymity.

    Panicked, several of the bankers went straight to the government, Mr. Sanusi said. Two of the bankers — he would not identify them — “went and reported to the petroleum minister,” he said. And at that moment, his days were numbered.

    “The strategy of the government was to discredit the messenger,” he said. The Nigerian president “doesn’t want me to bring out any more information that would get them into trouble.”

    Mr. Sanusi’s account is “untrue,” a spokesman for President Goodluck Jonathan said.

    “Mr. Sanusi has been making all kinds of claims to project himself as a victim,” the spokesman, Reuben Abati, said in an email, accusing the former bank governor of “financial recklessness, abuse of mandate, incompetence and criminal acts of negligence.”

    Mr. Sanusi has not been charged with any crimes, and the most Mr. Jonathan held him responsible for in a series of counteraccusations that emerged after the bank governor raised an alarm over the oil money was having perhaps “sidestepped civil-service rules.”

    Outside analysts appear to be in large agreement that Mr. Sanusi’s claim of vast missing oil revenues is plausible.

    Nigeria’s state oil sales “feature undue complexity, extensive discretion and well-documented flaws,” Revenue Watch, a group focused on natural-resource management, wrote in an examination of the central banker’s declarations. “In such a system, the line between mismanagement and corruption is difficult to draw, as shortcomings in process often benefit specific private interests.”

    One such “shortcoming” was laid bare by Mr. Sanusi last month to the parliamentary committee: a phony subsidy on kerosene that he determined to be a racket, costing the Nigerian treasury billions of dollars and greatly benefiting what he called a “syndicate” of marketers and unknown others. Mr. Sanusi showed that any official subsidy on kerosene had long since been abolished, that the petroleum corporation was nonetheless selling kerosene to marketers at less than a third of its purchase price on the international market and that the Nigerian marketers were then selling kerosene to the public at prices 300 to 500 percent above what they had paid for it.

    “It’s just a big scam,” Mr. Sanusi said in the interview. “The amount is shared by a cabal.”

    Though his official term would have ended in June anyway, Mr. Sanusi said, he is challenging his removal in court. In a judiciary that is only lightly insulated from political pressure, the outcome is uncertain, though perhaps not with the wider public. One of the bankers at the Feb. 11 meeting said: “For me personally, I don’t think there’s anything wrong with the position he has taken. We are Nigerians. We owe it to this country that things are run properly.”

    One of Nigeria’s leading activists, Tunde Bakare, a founder of the pro-democracy organisation Save Nigeria Group, said: “This is going to be tried in the court of public opinion. We can’t wish this matter away. Twenty billion dollars is not going to go away overnight.”

     

     

     

  • CBN may depreciate naira, tighten  CRR, says Rewane

    CBN may depreciate naira, tighten CRR, says Rewane

    THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) may adopt a mixed bag of depreciation of the naira and further tightening of the Cash Reserve Requirement (CRR) on public deposits at its March 17 meeting to stabilise the monetary system, Managing Director, Financial Derivatives Company (FDC) Limited, Mr Bismarck Rewane has said.

    In a preview of the financial and economic outlook in the weeks ahead, Rewane said the CBN is in between a rock and a hard place as the options for the Acting CBN Governor, Mrs Sarah Alade are narrow and hard.

    He indicated that the correction at the stock market would continue in the weeks ahead. The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) is trailing with a year-to-date return of -5.22 per cent.

    According to him, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the CBN will have to adopt a mixed bag this month, including allowing the naira to slide by three per cent and pushing up the CRR on public deposits from 75 per cent to 100 per cent.

    Rewane noted that the apex bank is faced with two scenarios for stable naira and external reserves, adding that all options would remain unattainable if the oil revenue leakages continue.

    Under the first scenario, the MPC could increase the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) from 12 per cent to 13 per cent, increase the private sector CRR from 12 per cent to 15 per cent, increase the public sector CRR to 100 per cent and then leave an option to increase liquidity ratio in May.

    Under the second option, which Rewane singled out as possible, the apex bank will allow the naira to depreciate by N5 or three per cent to N162 while increasing public sector CRR to 100 per cent.

    “She may have to depreciate the currency by approximately five per cent at the March 17 meeting,” Rewane said referring to acting CBN Governor.

    According to him, with external reserves at $39 billion and likely to decline further, options are narrow and choices are hard.

    Rewane described the suspension of the CBN Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi as a “bizarre move” and a pyrrhic victory with such “devastating cost that it is tantamount to defeat”.

    He said the suspension was politically motivated and was “designed to send a signal of political machoism to opponents”.

     

  • CBN tackles govt revenue leakages via e-payment

    CBN tackles govt revenue leakages via e-payment

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has initiated processes aimed at blocking revenue leakages in government and private sector.

    The apex bank has mandated banks to dishonour payment instructions for salaries, pensions, suppliers and tax payments not transmitted through the electronic or e-payment channels.

    According to a guideline on e-payment of salaries, pensions, suppliers and taxes, released by the CBN, the policy applies to organisations with over 50 employees.

    This, it said, means that instructions and associated schedules are no longer to be routed to Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) by public and private sector organisations through unsecured channels, such as paper-based mandates, flash drives, compact discs (CD), email attachments, among others.

    The CBN said the process would reduce time and costs, minimise and provide reliable audit systems, thereby making the payments system to comply with global payment standards.

    It said the action was also taken to promote transparency and accountability in governance and increase internally generated revenue (IGR).

    The policy is also expected to ensure confidentiality of information of e-payment of taxes, salary, pension and suppliers.

    It said henceforth, payment instructions and associated schedules are no longer to be transmitted to banks by all public and private sector organisations through unsecured channels such as paper-based mandates, flash drives, compact discs, email attachments, among others.

    The transactions must be routed through bank approved electronic platform which transmits the instruction to debit a payer’s account and credit a beneficiary’s bank account, mobile account, electronic wallet or any other electronic channels.

    It also entails the ability of a payer to independently monitor and obtain electronic feedback on the status of any payment, at any time without depending on any third party, manual or semi-manual means.

    The CBN had earlier sent a draft guidelines on the policy to commercial banks and payment service providers for ratification. The exercise is in line with its powers as provided in the CBN Act, 2007, Section 47, sub section 2(2d).

    It said the policy aligns with the objectives of the National Payment Systems of Vision 20: 2020 (NPSV), which ensures the availability of safe and effective mechanisms for making and receiving all payments from any location through multiple channels.

    The CBN said public and private sector organisations, which maintain relationship with employees, pensioners, suppliers and taxpayers and other entities, are considered as relevant stakeholders required to work for the success of the policy.

     

  • CBN cuts loans to banks by 75 per cent to N1.44tr

    CBN cuts loans to banks by 75 per cent to N1.44tr

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) reduced its loans to banks by 74.9 per cent to N1.44 trillion in the fourth quarter of last year.

    This was part of its belt-tightening policy.

    The loans came as Standing Lending Facility (SLF), representing a daily average credit of N24.09 billion to the lenders, while interest paid on SLF stood at N0.87 billion. The CBN loaned banks N5.75 trillion in the preceding quarter, which ended on September 30.

    The drastic cut in the loans, The Nation learnt, was not only meant to support the naira, but also to secure the declining foreign reserves which have lost over $3 billion in the last one month.

    The SLF, given at 14 per cent, is an overnight CBN credit available on banking days between 2 pm and 3.30 pm, with settlement done on same day value.

    The CBN explained that money market rates were influenced by the liquidity condition in the banking system arising from the introduction of the 75 per cent Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) on all public sector deposits, coupled with the delay in the release of fiscal allocation.

    The CRR on all public sector funds was raised further to 75 per cent at the January 21 Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting of the CBN. The CBN had during the MPC meeting maintained the monetary policy rate (MPR) at 12 per cent, and kept the symmetric corridor of plus two per cent around the MPR for SLF.

    However, the SLFs are available only to banks and discount houses that have executed the Nigerian Master Repurchase Agreement (NMRA) with the regulator. The NMRA covers the operations of the SLF and addresses issues relating to pricing, duration, custodian as well as default resolution in lending.

    Furthermore, the CBN Economic Report for the fourth quarter, showed that the total assets and liabilities of the Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) stood at N24.3 trillion.

    The figure, the report said, represents an increase of 4.4 per cent over the level at the end of the preceding quarter. The funds, it said, were sourced largely from increased mobilisation of demand deposit and Federal Government deposit were used for accretion to reserves and to purchase government’s securities.

    The CBN said banks’ credit to the domestic economy rose by 8.6 per cent to N12.2 trillion, when compared with the date from the preceding quarter. The development, it said, was attributed largely to the 346.9 per cent increase in claims on the Federal Government.

    Also, the liquidity ratio rose by 1.8 percentage points above the level in the preceding quarter, and was 9.5 percentage points above the stipulated minimum ratio of 30 per cent. The loans-to-deposit ratio stood at 36.3 per cent, and was 2.9 percentage points above the level at the end of the preceding quarter, but was 43.7 percentage points below the prescribed maximum ratio of 80 per cent.

    The quarterly report also said gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated to have grown by 7.7 per cent, compared with 6.8 per cent in the preceding quarter. The development, it said, was driven, largely, by the growth in the non-oil sector.

    Broad money supply, (M2), grew by 9.1 per cent, in contrast to the 7.9 per cent decline recorded at the end of the preceding quarter.

    The CBN said the development reflected, largely, the 14.9 per cent increase in domestic credit (net) of the banking system. Similarly, narrow money supply, (M1), rose by 11.4 per cent, in contrast to the 9.3 per cent decline at the end of the preceding quarter.

    Over the level at end-December 2012, broad money supply (M2) grew by 1.2 per cent, owing largely to the 18.5 per cent increase in net domestic credit, which more than offset the 26.0 and 5.9 per cent decline in other assets (net) and foreign assets (net) of the banking system, respectively. Reserve money (RM) rose at the end of the fourth quarter of 2013.

    Available data indicated that banks’ deposit and lending rates generally trended upward, while the weighted average inter-bank call rate fell by 3.23 percentage points to 11.02 per cent, reflecting the liquidity condition in the inter-bank funds market.

    Provisional data indicated that the value of money market assets outstanding increased by 4.1 per cent to N6.8 trillion, compared with the increase of 5.7 per cent at the end of the preceding quarter. The development was attributed to the 4.7 and 3.9 per cent increase in Federal Government of Nigeria Bonds and Nigeria Treasury Bills outstanding, respectively.

    “The introduction of the 50 per cent CRR on all public sector deposits continued to affect the monetary conditions of the market. Open market operations were conducted for various maturities, for liquidity management purposes.

    The bank’s discount window also remained open to authorized dealers to access both the standing deposit facility (SDF) and standing lending facility (SLF). Overall, developments in money market indicators were mixed in the review quarter,” it said.

     

  • CBN begins same-day value for cheques in September

    CBN begins same-day value for cheques in September

    •Special clearing session for defaulters inaugurated

    THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will on September 4 begin same-day value for cheque transaction.

    The cheque clearing system, CBN Director, Banking and Payment System, ‘Dipo Fatokun, explained, will allow both the beneficiary banks and customers get value, the same day transactions are consummated.

    Fatokun, who made this known this yesterday in a circular to all Deposit Money Banks (DMBs), said the policy became exigent as a result of developments in the processing of cheques.

    He said the measure was also prompted by the need to enhance the effectiveness of the cheque truncation (online clearing) procedures following changes to the Nigeria Bankers Clearing House Rules.

    He said cheques presented in the automated clearing house in day T+1, earn value for the beneficiary on day T+2, whereas the beneficiary bank is settled in day T+1.

    The CBN said it believes that the delivery of value to beneficiaries at the close of business on day T+1, is achievable, adding that such a move would further enhance the National Payment System and contribute to the attainment of the goals of the PSV 2020.

    “All Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) are hereby directed to configure their systems to give values to their customers on day T+1 (same day the DMBs are given value for the presentment),” he said.

    The CBN envisaged that these changes to the process may affect banks’ internal control practices, as well as systems, he noted, saying this made the apex bank to stipulate that T+1 value to banks’ customers is to be fully operational by September 4, rather than the policy being implemented immediately.

    Fatokun said a special clearing session has been introduced to cater for exigencies that often make the first clearing session to close later than the prescribed time of 8am daily. He said some DMBs often make passionate appeals for the extension of time, of five to six minutes, just few minutes before 8.00 a.m. with reasons associated with data transmission.

    “NIBSS often obliged these request because turning down such requests would mean that the bank(s) would not be able to present cheques for clearing on that day, as fresh cheques are allowed only in the first session,” he said.

    However such time extension, he said, always put pressure on all other DMBs that have completed data transmission well before the 8am deadline, and such banks would not have access to their respective clearing report until noon.

  • UBA spends N2b on ATMs

    UBA spends N2b on ATMs

    • Plans 1000 more

    United Bank for Africa Plc (UBA) is investing over N2billion on the installation of automated teller machines (ATMs) across the country to deepen cash-less drive of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and financial inclusion in line with the regulator’s Financial System Strategy (FSS20) 20:2020.

    UBA’s former Head of ATM, Obinna Uma, who spoke on the sideline at a forum to showcase the lender’s e-banking bouquets over the weekend, said the lender was not relenting to take banking services to its numerous customers.

    According to him, the bank has concluded plans to deploy another set of 1000 new ATMs across the country this year, adding that it is also doing a lot of partnership with technology firms to upgrade all ATMs. He said it had been discovered that ATMs have the greatest reach in terms of alternative payment channels, stressing that the lender will do more in that direction.

    Earlier, the Divisional Head, E-Banking Products, Dr Adeyinka Adedeji, said based on the premium paid on e-banking by the lender, it has a dedicated structure, adding that it is standing on its own with its independent budget and workers.

    He said the lender is positioning its e-banking service such that people will be attracted to open an account with the bank because of its excellent service, stressing that in the sub-region, the banking model remains outstanding.

    Adedeji said the bank is de-emphasising physical structures, but investing massively on e-banking products, quality assurance and management to ensure that the use of alternative channels of payment are encouraged and embraced in the country.

    He said the cash-less policy of the CBN has recorded a huge success because it compelled lenders who were not prepared for it at the time it took off, to hurriedly put the requisite infrastructure in place.

  • Petrol imports deplete reserves by $3b

    Petrol imports deplete reserves by $3b

    THE foreign reserves have declined by $3 billion to $39.72 billion in the last 30days, analysis of the reserves movement has shown.

    The reserves, which were $42.77 billion on February 3, and dropped to $39.72 billion on March 3.

    Analysts said the reserves declined as imports of petroleum products and foods soared.

    The level of Nigeria’s external reserves has fallen precariously low to $43.63 billion as at December 30, last year. This is the lowest level since November 2012 and a decline of 10.7 per cent from 2013’s Year to Date peak of $48.86 billion.

    The continuous use of the external buffers to support the value of the naira, declining oil receipts are among the contributing factors to the depletion. However, this level of reserves is sufficient to fund an import bill of approximately seven months.

    With over 50 per cent of foreign exchange utilised for the importation of fuel and food, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said the policy should focus on a comprehensive backward integration production strategy, while fast-tracking the repair of the existing refineries.

    As at October 10, the reserves were at $45.3 billion, as against $46 billion in September 19, and $47 billion in August 19, data from the CBN website showed.

    Further findings showed that the reserves were at $47.7 billion on July 1, and dropped to $47 billion on July 15. They also entered August 1 at $47 billion. The foreign currency reserves had five year ago, in August 2008, peaked at $68 billion before the global financial crises impacted negatively on it.

    Analysts said the reserves are assets held by the CBN and monetary authorities, mostly in dollar to back their liabilities, such as the naira.

    They explained that manipulating reserves levels can enable CBN intervene against volatile fluctuations in currency by affecting the exchange rate and increasing the demand for the naira.

    Analysis of foreign exchange utilised by sectors revealed that $7.83 billion was expended on the importation of visible goods into the country in the second quarter as against $6.63 billion and $7.74 billion in first quarter and second quarter of 2012.

    Also, a large part of the reserves were utilised in the importation of oil, industrial, food and manufactured products in the ratio of 30.3, 28, 20.4 and 13.3 per cent of the total.

  • Bank loans hit N15tr in three months

    Bank loans hit N15tr in three months

    Deposit Money Banks

    (DMBs) lent N15.04

    trillion as loans in the last quarter of last year, a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Economic report has shown.

    According to the report, the figure represented a 14.9 per cent increase, in contrast to the decline of 0.5 and 1.5 per cent at the end of the preceding quarter and the corresponding quarter of 2012.

    The CBN said the development relative to the preceding quarter was due, largely, to the 54 and 1.4 per cent increase in claims on the Federal Government and the private sector.

    The apex bank said when compared to December 2012, aggregate banking system’s credit (net) to the domestic economy, rose by 18.5 per cent, reflecting between 40.1 and 9.0 per cent increase in claims on the private sector and the Federal Government.

    It said banking system’s credit (net) to the Federal Government, at the end of the review period rose by 53.9 per cent to negative N1.4 trillion, in contrast to the 25.5 and 31.4 per cent decline at the end of the preceding quarter and the corresponding quarter of 2012.

    The development relative to the preceding quarter was accounted for, largely, by the increase of 29.7 per cent in Central Bank claims on the Federal Government.

    Also, at the end of December 2012, credit (net) to the Federal Government rose by 40.1 per cent, reflecting a rise in banking system’s holding of Federal Government securities.

    The CBN said at the end of the quarter under review, banks’ credit to the private sector rose by 1.4 per cent to N16.5 trillion, compared with the 3.7 and 2.7 per cent increase in the preceding quarter and the corresponding period of 2012. The development, relative to the preceding quarter, it said, reflected the 0.9 per cent increase in claims on the core private sector during the review quarter.

    The report pegged banks’ foreign assets at N8.51 trillion, a decline of 4.6 per cent at the end of the review quarter, compared with the decline of 2.6 per cent at the end of the preceding quarter.

    The development, the CBN said, was attributed, to the decline in both the CBN and banks’ holdings of foreign assets.

    However, by December 2012, foreign assets (net) of the banking system fell by 5.9 per cent at the end of the review quarter, compared with the decline of 1.3 per cent at the of the preceding quarter.

    Also, other assets (net) of the banking system fell by 3.1 per cent to negative N7.8 trillion, compared with the decline of 13.8 per cent at the end of the preceding quarter, but was in contrast to the 12.1 per cent increase recorded at the end of the corresponding quarter of 2012.

    The CBN said the decline, relative to the preceding quarter, reflected the fall in unclassified assets of both the CBN and the banks during the review period.

    Over the level at end-December 2012, other assets (net) of the banking system fell by 26 per cent.

  • 2014 CBN Junior Tennis Championships in retrospect

    2014 CBN Junior Tennis Championships in retrospect

    The just-ended 8th edition of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Junior Tennis Championships can be said to have been successful as no fewer than 162 players from 10 states participated.

    The 7th edition of the championships had 115 participants in attendance. The event was organised by CBN in conjunction with the Nigeria Tennis Federation (NTF) and the International Tennis Academy (ITA).

    The event which held from Feb. 24 to March 1, took place at the Lagos Lawn Tennis Club (LTTC) and featured seven categories. The competition provided opportunity for potential talents in the sport the platform to showcase their skills.

    The championships also provided an avenue for the discovery of talents in the build up to the 19th National Sports Festival (NSF) slated for Calabar, Cross River from Nov. 27 to Dec. 3. The competition provided a forum for coaches across the length and breadth of the country to converge and keep abreast with the recent developments in the sport in the one-week competition.

    More than anything else, it provided a platform to promote the new talents who graced the event using their skills to stun the spectators that graced the event.

    At the end of the competition, Kaduna-based Sylvester Emmanuel, 16, won the boys’ U-16 category, while Zainab Oladimeji, 15, from Ondo State emerged winner in the girls’ U-16 event.

    In the girls’ U-12, Marylove Edwards, 8, from Lagos State prevailed, while in the girls’ U-10, Anambra-born Chidinma, 10, won the title. The boys’ U-14 category was won by Christopher Itodo, while 11-year-old Gabriel Friday from Kaduna State won the boys’ U-12.

    Finally, in the boys’ U-10 event, Ogun-based Usman Kushimo, 12, won the category.

    A member of the NTF, Bala Amisu, while expressing his delight at the success of the championships, said it was used to gauge compliance by officials in applying the rules.

    “I give kudos to the organisers for the competition, I say well done, they have stood by the NTF in promoting the sport. I am glad that this competition has brought about more talents and also the fulfillment of adhering to the rules of the sport,” he said.

    Godwin Kienka, the coordinator of the event and director of the ITA, said that more of such local competitions would bring about a well-grounded improvement in the sport.

    “I am glad that it was a success; I hope we have more of such competitions all the year because it will be about the development of the sports. The coaches and players will improve on their game and this in turn will take the sport to greater heights.

    “For the players which I am particular about, they have shown that the sky is just a stepping stone. I am confident that the massive investment in junior tennis will soon produce world-class tennis players,” he said.

    Abel Ubiebi, a certified International Tennis Registry (ITR) coach, said organising such a competition would help to churn out more grassroots talents to the fore.

    “It has brought me great joy to see that these talents are improving in the sport. Indeed, I am glad to have witnessed it; such competitions will be only to build for a better tennis in future. The competition has improved the quality of budding grassroots talents,” he said.