Tag: cbn

  • Recapitalisation: Mortgage firms know fate Jan 2

    AS deadline for recapilisation of 90 Primary Mortage Banks (PMBs) in the housing finance sub-sector expires today, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) may release the list of successful operators on January 2, 2014.

    Last March, CBN extended the deadline from April 30 to today following the PMBs’ request for more time.

    Under the revised guidelines for PMBs, those operating nationally are to raise their capitals to N15billion and state operators, N2.5billion.

    In a circular, the apex bank said the shift in date was meant, “ to afford all affected PMBs sufficient time to exercise any of the options for capital raising, business combination and downscaling.

    “All PMBs are once again strongly advised to conduct due diligence and seek professional advice in exercising any of the options and to conclude the processes before the new deadline in order to allow sufficient time for capital verification and necessary regulatory approvals.’’

    The circular added: “All directors, particularly the Managing Directors/ CEOs of all PMBs, are again reminded that prior approval of the CBN is required before the disposal of assets of the bank, as they will be held jointly and severally liable for any asset stripping.”

    Under the fresh guidelines, mortgage firms were categorised into national and state mortgage firms, while the national PMIs are allowed to operate in any or all parts of the federation after the payment of a new N5 billion minimum paid up capital, the state’s PMIs are restricted to only one state at the payment of N2.5 billion.

    But it is not clear yet those who have complied so far. Mortgage Banking Association of Nigeria (MBAN) President, Femi Johnson could not ascertain the number of those that have met the requirement.

    He said: ‘‘I don’t know the numbers of mortgage banks that have met the deadline, but I know some will not meet it. CBN has all the figures. It is impossible for all to meet the deadline, though a lot of people will meet it. It is the CBN that will audit the account of the mortgage banks to know if they meet the consolidation deadline.

    “Not all will meet it, people will tell you stories and some that are not able to meet it will definitely become Micro-Finance Companies (MFCs). It is the CBN that will determine that.”

    MBAN Executive Secretary, Mr. Kayode Omotosho would also not hazard any guess. According to him, all operators would be willing to comply. “It is when the deadline elapses that we will know those who meet it and those who fail to meet the deadline. They are all prepared and it is CBN that will determine that.”

    The total assets base of the mortgage banking industry stood at N357.1 billion as at December 2011, while the four largest PMBs listed on the nation’s capital market accounted for 39 per cent of industry’s total asset and 54 per cent of loans.

    As at press time, it could not be ascertained how many PMBs have met the requirements. The apex bank spokesperson, Mr.Ugochukwu Okoroafor, who was on Christmas break, spoke with The Nation on phone and promised to give an update later. Some officials of MBAN, who spoke on condition of anonymity said they are at a loss about those who have met the requirements.

    “No one knows those who have recapitalised. CBN may make the list known by January 2,” said one of them.

    According to experts, there are many factors why the mortgage market is not thriving well. These include underwriting standards, high cost of property transaction, lack of a secondary mortgage market, housing supply deficit, weak capital, poor legal framework, titling challenges, high cost of funds, absence of MRC and dearth of long term funds.

    To mitigate these, government is planning to increase the number of mortgage loans from the current 20,000 loans to over 200,000 loans within the next five years.

    One of the new initiatives to facilitate this is the establishment of the Nigeria Mortgage Refinancing Company (NMRC), which is set up to be a secondary mortgage bank to refinance mortgages originated by mortgage banks and commercial banks.

    The World Bank has already put down $300 million as a 40-year loan with a low interest rate to the company. The company is primarily owned by Mortgage Banks and Commercial banks, with a startup capital of N6 billion and it will be private sector owned and operated.

  • CBN to retain $250,000 weekly sales to BDCs

    CBN to retain $250,000 weekly sales to BDCs

    Foreign exchange sales to bureau de change (BDC) operators will remain at $250,000 per week per BDC, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has said.

    In a circular to all authorised dealers and BDC operators, CBN Director, Trade and Exchange, Musa Batari, said the selling rate by the authorised dealers to BDCs shall be the prevailing interbank exchange rate, plus a margin not exceeding one per cent.

    He explained that foreign exchange cash purchased by BDCs from authorised dealers and the CBN shall be sold to foreign exchange end-users at a rate not exceeding two per cent margin above the buying rate.

    “For the avoidance of doubt, the margin shall be applicable to all funds to be retailed by BDCs regardless of sources of the fund,” he said.

    Batari also explained that authorised dealers shall continue to render weekly returns on sales of BDCs, while the BDCs shall render weekly returns on purchase from authorised dealers. He enjoined BDCs to keep adequate records of foreign exchange sale and purchases for purposes of monitoring by the authorities.

    The apex bank observed that some authorised dealers have continued to deal in ‘free funds’ without adequate documentation contrary to provisions of extant regulation.

    The regulator reminded the dealers that the circular is still in force and all dealings in foreign exchange must be supported with appropriate documentation and returns rendered to regulatory authorities irrespective of the source of the funds, adding that violators of the laws will be sanctioned.

    The regulator had in September replaced the Wholesale Dutch Auction System (WDAS) with the Retail Dutch Auction System (RDAS) because of the ineffectiveness of the former in addressing hitches in the forex market.

    It also withdrew the licences of 20 bureau de change (BDCs) operators for violating forex rules, an indication that more licences withdrawal may be seen in future, should the violations continue.

    Under the RDAS, banks and other authorised dealers are required to place bids on behalf of individual clients who qualify to buy forex at the official auction. The change from WDAS to RDAS allows the authorities to monitor more accurately various sources of forex demand and any potential duplication of forex demand in the system. Banks will remain responsible for all documentation requirements.

  • 30.7m Nigerians have  bank accounts, says CBN

    30.7m Nigerians have bank accounts, says CBN

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said Nigeria lags behind some of its peers in Africa when it comes to the provision of financial services.

    In a circular released yesterday, the apex bank said only 36.3 per cent of the country’s adult population, representing 30.7 million out of 84.7 million is served by formal financial services. This is low when compared to 68 per cent in South Africa and 41 per cent in Kenya.

    It said currently, 21 Deposit Money Banks (DMBs)are serving about 20 million clients through a network of about 6,000 branches and 10,000 Automated Teller Machines (ATMs). “With an adult population of over 84.7 million, this shows that a large part of the banking market in Nigeria is still untapped. This has the potential to become a major funding base through the mobilisation of savings and a source of profit for commercial banks and other financial services institutions,” it said.

    The CBN said the population of Nigeria is distributed unevenly, with an average population density of 150 per square kilometers, adding that densely populated states include Lagos, Anambra and Akwa Ibom. It said the urbanisation rate was estimated at 49 per cent in 2009 and is expected to rise to 75 per cent by 2050.

    “By this time, Nigeria is expected to be among the 20 most urbanised countries in the world. Financial inclusion is most advanced in Nigeria’s urban areas, especially in the Southern parts of the country. Northern Nigeria is particularly disadvantaged, with 68 per cent of adults excluded in both the North-East and North-West regions,” it said.

    The CBN said formal inclusion rates range from 49 per cent in the South-West Region to only 19 per cent in the North-West Region. The “informally included” primarily live in the North-Central region, where 23 per cent of adults have access to only informal services.

    “The vast majority, 80.4 per cent of those who are fully excluded from formal and informal financial services live in rural areas. There are three possible explanations for this. First, the physical distance to bank branches in most rural areas makes it difficult and expensive to access financial services.

    Second, lower levels of economic activity in rural areas limit the profit potential of financial institutions. Third, education levels and financial literacy are typically lower in rural areas, making it less likely that clients will make use of financial products and services,” it said.

    The apex bank said a total of 39.2 million adults, 46.3 per cent, of the adult population were excluded from financial services in Nigeria. Out of this, women account for 54.4 per cent, younger adults, those under 45 years, 73.8 per cent and the uneducated, have no formal education, 34 per cent.

  • Foreign reserves decline by $1billion

    Foreign reserves decline by $1billion

    Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves have lost $1 billion in five weeks ended December 23. The reserves were at $44.9 billion on November 1 but dropped to $43.9 billion as at December 23, data obtained from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN’s) website showed.

    Further analysis of the reserves showed that it stood at $44.8 billion on November 18 but had maintained steady fall in the last three months. It was at $44.6 billion as at November 27, contrary to $45 billion recorded on October 14.

    Other figures showed that the reserves were at $47.7 billion on July 1, and dropped to $47 billion on July 15. It also entered August 1 at $47 billion.

    The reserves had five years ago, in August 2008, peaked at $68 billion before the global financial crises impacted negatively on it.

    Chief Operating Officer, Citi Bank Nigeria, Akin Dawodu said the reserves are assets held by the CBN and monetary authorities, mostly in dollar to back their liabilities, such as the naira.

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

    “Reserves act as shock absorber against factors that can negatively affect a country’s exchange rates and, therefore the CBN uses the reserves to maintain a steady rate,” he explained in Lagos.

    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 last year respectively.

  • $50m Biometric Solution’ll enhance  financial inclusion, says CBN

    $50m Biometric Solution’ll enhance financial inclusion, says CBN

    Plans by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to institute a nationwide Biometric Solution for the financial system will be a game changer for financial inclusion, the Special Adviser to the CBN Governor on Sustainable Banking, Dr. Aisha Mahmood, has said.

    She told The Nation that the apex bank is making steady progress on how to get more people into the system, especially with the institution of the agent banking model.

    “The Biometric Solution Project of CBN that will start in 2015 will authenticate banks’ customers, Point of Sale (PoS) terminals and Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) and hence, is a game changer for financial inclusion,” she said.

    Mahmood said the facility is also expected to help those who are not educated to use biometrics to be part of the payment system.

    The biometric solution pilot phase was expected go live in February 14, 2014. The new system, when it goes live, will promote the use of thumbprint as major means of identification in banks and ATMs.

    According to the apex bank, with the biometric solution, the CBN, banks, Nigeria Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS) and at least one branch of each bank would have been connected few months after the takeoff date.

    However, it cautioned that “it will take a few months to go all over the country and register customers of every bank and we will get to the microfinance banks.”

    The CBN assured that the biometric exercise being undertaken by the banks will not interfere or be in competition with the National Identity project but instead will be rolled into the National Identity project.

    The benefit of the biometric exercise were listed to include helping boost the country’s image internationally, deal with money laundering and fraud, extend credit to people without worrying about where to find them and who they are.

    The project, which is the brainchild of the CBN and the Bankers’ Committee, is meant to have a central database where all bank customers’ information will be collected and stored. Since biometric identifiers are unique to individuals, they remain reliable in verifying identity of each bank customer from bank to bank.

    According to the CBN, the platform, when completed, would help operators and regulators of the financial system address issues of Know Your Customer (KYC), anti-money laundering (AML), and access to credit. This will help fast-track use of channels, such as biometric ATMs and PoS terminals, among others.

    The apex bank had last month, signed an agreement with Dermalog Identification Systems, a German company for the deployment of biometric data capturing for all bank customers across the country.

    According to the CBN, the cost of the exercise, which has been put at $50 million, will be borne by the banking industry and the CBN.

    The CBN said it is also planning a Consumer Complaints Management System that will make it possible for it to monitor banks’ breaches in customers’ accounts.

     

  • Slow and   steady…cashless fire spreads

    Slow and steady…cashless fire spreads

    The cashless policy of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has been hailed by many as long overdue. But, months into its operation, there are still problems that must be taken care of before the policy is introduced nationwide, writes Emmanuel Acha

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Act, 2007 charges the apex bank with the responsibility to control and administer the monetary and financial policies of the Federal Government.

    It is also to promote a sound financial system and advise government on economic policies.

    The Money Laundering Act, 2004 stipulates a cash payment regulation on transactions outside the financial institutions to ensure audit trail, as disincentive against money laundering.

    The section also stipulates a N500,000 benchmark for individuals and three million naira for corporate organisations.

    Analysts say that despite the existence of the Act, cases of money laundering are assuming alarming proportions in Nigeria.

    They, therefore, suggested an alternative payment channels that may have positive consequence on the economy and considerably eliminate cash frauds.

    To address the challenges associated with heavy cash handlings, the Bankers Committee in collaboration with the CBN recently commissioned a study that identified cost drivers in the industry.

    The study also sought the possibility of achieving 30 per cent cost reduction with attendant positive impact on lending rates and bank charges.

    According to the CBN, the objective of its new cashless policy was to seek reduction in cash transactions in the banking industry.

    The effect was to encourage bank customers to try other payment options than cash.

    Mr Tunde Lemo, CBN Deputy Governor (Operations), said that the policy was introduced for a number of key reasons, including meeting the Vision 2020 objectives which aims at positioning Nigeria among the first 20 global economies.

    Lemo told Abia State Governor Theodore Orji that the CBN was seeking partnership with the state government in the implementation of the new policy.

    He said the project also aimed at modernising Nigeria’s payment system by reducing the amount of physical cash in circulation.

    Other reasons, he said, included a reduction in the cost of banking services, improved effectiveness of monetary policy, reduce high security and safety risks, foster transparency and curb corruption in the polity.

    “In the wake of the banking industry intervention, our analysis indicated that the high cost structure of the banks was partially responsible for their preference for lending to the capital market, and oil and gas industry which led to asset bubbles.

    “Embedded within lending rates and cost of banking services are operating expenses arising from inefficiencies in the provision of banking services,’’ Lemo said.

    He noted that the cost of handling cash to Nigeria’s financial system was high and increasing annually.

    He noted that Nigeria was behind other comparable economies in terms of payment systems maturity.

    “This novel policy that aims at reducing the quantum of cash in circulation introduced a ‘processing fee’ on daily cash withdraws or cash deposits that exceeded N500, 000 for individuals and three million naira for corporate bodies was introduced.

    “By this policy, third party cheques above N150,000 are disallowed from being cashed over the counter, while banks have been mandated to discontinue cash in transit lodgment services as cash in transit firms have been incensed to provide such services.

    Lemo told the governor that embassies and diplomatic missions were granted exemptions, adding that ministries, departments and agencies of the federal and state governments were also excluded on lodgments for revenue collections accounts only.

    He said the new regime would significantly eliminate revenue leakages by identifying fraudulent debit, diversion of funds and excess charges on government accounts.

    Analysts have opined that there is no doubt that the policy would open more avenues for electronic-based transactions.

    The avenues, they said, would include Point-Of-Sale Systems, Mobile Payments, Multi-functional Automated Teller Machines, Internet Banking, Instant Electronic Funds Transfer and Direct Debit.

    They also noted that industry stakeholders were working to increase the alternative channel penetration, functionality and ease-of-use.

    Analysts are also of the view that mobile phone, the cheapest electronic channel, is the easiest route to financial inclusion of the unbanked segment of the economy.

    Available statistics shows there are over 100 million phones available to serve customers.

    They said with mobile phones, both the banked and the unbanked could open accounts, transfer funds, pay bills, purchase goods and services.

    However, this has thrown up some challenges, including literacy levels of prospective users of the scheme in terms of literacy and numeracy.

    Mr Lawrence Ukegbu, a businessman, said the informal sector needed to be abreast with the policy in order to make the best out of it.

    He said it would impact positively on the business climate, adding that the business environment would be more secure as handling of cash was associated with much hazards.

    For Orji, the policy had thrown up much challenge to the banking sector as the gap between the educated and non-educated in the society would need to be breached for the success of the policy.

    Orji said the state government would contribute towards the success of the project, and appealed for enlightenment of the populace.

    “There should be a lot of sensitisation, and if possible the CBN should establish an education unit at major industrial areas and strategic points,” he said.

    Mr Emmanuel Ogbonnaya, a financial and stock analyst, said that the interest of the non-formal sector needed to be protected in the policy, while the rural areas should be given special attention in terms of education and other enlightenment campaigns.

    He expressed concern on the activities of cyber fraudsters who may leverage on the dependence on ‘new technology’ to carry out financial transactions.

    But Lemo allayed the fears, saying that the CBN had through the instrumentality of the Nigerian Electronic Fraud Forum stepped-up surveillance on cyber fraud which, he noted, had reduced incidences of crime by 90 per cent.

    “We are in the process of acquiring a Payment System Oversight and Anti-Fraud System for online risk surveillance of the payment systems,” he said.

    He said the apex bank was in the process of establishing the office of Ombudsman for financial services in order to strengthen users’ confidence and promote adoption of the policy.

    As Nigeria strives to become one of the top 20 economies in the world by 2020, analysts say there should be the desire for all to ensure the success of the new CBN cashless policy.

     

    • Acha is of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)

  • ‘How to combat terrorism, money laundering’

    ‘How to combat terrorism, money laundering’

    Terrorism and money laundering are twin evils. But how can Nigeria, despite being delisted from countries identified as jurisdictions with significant deficiencies in Anti-Money Laundering and Counter Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) campaigns, tackle these problems? It is by building systems, says Head, Inter-Governmental Action Group Against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA) office in Nigeria, Timothy Melaye. In this interview with COLLINS NWEZE, he insists that intelligent and influential people are behind money laundering.

    One of the key issues your organisation addresses is terrorism financing.

    Nigeria is faced with this problem believed to be funded externally. How relevant is your organisation in this matter?

    Well, you see, who would have thought that terrorists would blow the World Trade Center in the United States of America (USA) or would have thought that the Kings Court Station in the United Kingdom (UK) would be blown up by terrorists. There were cameras; there were digital information; there were intelligent gathering and all of that. Recently, there was bombing in Boston.

    So, the issue of terrorist activities is borne out of the fact that there is increase in evil people. Evil people plan evil every day. When out of 600 plans, that one that succeeded will make news more than those 599 that were averted. That is the case with terrorist activities. Of course, GIABA did not state in clear terms that it is fighting terrorism. No! Our work is issues of combating the financing, and in this case, certainly, there is funding.

    If somebody drove a car, he did not bring the car from the road. Probably, he used money to buy the car. Even though cases have shown that some of them were snatched, or stolen, but either we like it or not, there are funds involved in terrorism. Some of them carry AK47 rifles, you can’t buy such from the street, it costs huge sums of money and with this of course, and there are issues of finance.

    You cannot fight terrorism. It is just like if you want to kill a fish, just drain its water and leave the fish inside. In no time, the fish will not survive. So, what we are trying to do is to identify the means of draining the resources from those who finance terrorism.

    If you really want to kill a fish without your bullet, obviously, you have to drain out the water from the pond. What we are doing is just working virtually and systematically with member-states to ensure that all of these are done, and those people doing this will no longer have a hiding place.

    Nigeria was delisted from the list of non-coooperative countries. What does it mean to be non-cooperative; does it mean that it is cooperating or no money laundering is going on in the country?

    Like you know, money laundering is a derivative crime. What do I mean by a derivative crime? It is not a crime you commit directly now. You must have committed criminal offence to get illicit wealth before you can lander it. So, it is a crime you are deriving from another crime that has existed before. So, you cannot stand here and nobody anywhere in the world can say there is no money laundering going on here or there. No! Every country is trying to ensure that it is minimised. The people who are involved in money laundering and other proceeds of crime are intelligent, articulate, have access to resources and sometimes, influential. So, if they say a country is complying, that means a country is meeting those recommendations; putting in place the structures that I have mentioned. That means, your jurisdiction has built the structure that will protect it from money laundering.

    As I am talking to you, what if somebody is buying jewelry with stolen money? That means money laundering is taking place. He just goes into a jewelry shop and they tell him this gold will cost N20 million, and he says oh! No problem put it in my bag.

    They tell him another one will cost N16 million and he says no problem, and picks it up. Because he knows that is the treasure he can hide his money, because jewelry, especially gold, anytime you want to sell it, you can just take it back to the market and resell your thing. He has cancelled the source of the money. He has made it to appear like clean money. That is what money laundering is all about.

    And it will be reintegrated into the system. Now, we are saying that the jewelry seller should pay the money into his account. And when they see money in his account, he will say ‘ha you don’t know it was the jewelry that I sold?’ The origin has changed. So, what will they do? So that is what happens in many nations.

    When we say that a country is complying, and it is enlisted on public statement, that means that the country is complying with the regulations, putting up necessary structures; the laws, awareness, and implementing them. Banks are following the Know Your Customer (KYC), due diligence and other things required from them by the regulators.

    The awareness is created, and all the offences are criminalised in law. And money laundering itself is an offence in the law. So, when you have all those things in place, that means the country is cooperating. It is putting up structure so that its domains, its territories, are not a haven for those who launder money and finance terrorist activities.

    The CBN took some key policy actions close to the time GIABA and FATF team came to Nigeria for on-sight inspection. There was a change from Wholesale Dutch Auction System to Retail Dutch Auction System and enforcement of other anti-money laundering rules to ensure that Nigeria was delisted from the list of non-cooperating countries. Why did the CBN go that far?

    Well, I can not speak for Nigeria because I can’t say that I am directly working for GIABA or for the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and what we do here is to talk for the region. So, I cannot speak specifically for Nigeria, what they did and why they did it as at the time they did it.

    But I know that in Nigeria, both the government and the operators have shown commitment towards ensuring that the country complies with those standards. So, of course, for you to comply, you have to put up what is required of you. The country did not just got into the list. The country was in the list before it came out in 2004. Of course, Nigeria Mutual Evaluation Report took place in 2007 and was adopted in 2008 after the adoption, the GIABA and FATF expected Nigeria to make some significant progress in case of follow up report on that mutual evaluation and the gaps required to fill.

    And when those gaps were not filled up sufficiently, as at the time it was expected, that was why Nigeria went back to the public statement. So, what the country needed to do if it wanted to come out of the public statement, the gaps that have been identified had to be filled. If you see a lot of policies coming up, the policies are intended to fill those gaps and if they didn’t fill it, they will still be on a public statement.

    By the time you finished filling these, it doesn’t matter whether you will fill all of them at once or five years or 10 years, the longer it takes, the more the country will degenerate from the green list to black list to all kinds of things like that.

    So, the country therefore, would have done what it needed to do to get out of the list. Whatever it has done would have been as a response to the fact that the country is working hard to comply with all necessary regulations.

    A lot of laws were passed, bills were sent to the National Assembly, those laws will enhance the policies of the banks, the policies of designated non financial sector, and all kinds of issues would be put in place. Now that the country feels that it has addressed those challenges that have been identified in the Mutual Evaluation report, then, it would be presented to the plenary session of the FATF.

    Why doesn’t the acronym of GIABA match its full meaning? I ask this question because it means Group Inter-Governmental d’Action Centre le Blanchiment d’Argent en Afrique de l’Quest.

    That is the English name but, the acronym actually, is a French acronym as the Intergovernmental Action Against Money Laundering in West Africa, does not synchronise with what we have on the acronym as a GIABA.

    This is because GIABA is an organisation that is formed by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). And ECOWAS, of course, has membership across all West African countries, and there are 15 ECOWAS members that formed ECOWAS.

    So, because it also has English speaking, French speaking and Portuguese speaking, since the name is always called in English, we prefer that the acronym be in French. It is a way of creating sense of ownership to all the member states. However, most documents of the organisation come in English, French and Portuguese to represent the combination of the whole components.

    ECOWAS established GIABA in the year 2000 because of the need to see issues relating to money laundering and terrorist financing to be addressed within the region. After the establishment of GIABA in the year 2000, they were setting up process and all of that. The initial mandate of GIABA was to work assiduously in combating money laundering and terrorist financing within the region. They are to ensure that people do not have access to launder the proceeds of crime within the region. That was the core mandate of GIABA as it was given by it statutes.

    In essence, all the work we do revolves around this mandate. Working with all the member states.

    Two other countries, Sao Tome and Principe have also joined. Though Sao Tome and Principe is not member of ECOWAS but it is a member of GIABA, because GIABA has more opportunity to add more members that would address issues concerned. This country made GIABA members to be 16 instead of 15 ECOWAS countries.

    What is the relationship between GIABA and Financial Action Task Force (FATF)?

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

    This gives GIABA the opportunity to be part of every decision making at the FATF. In terms of relationship, GIABA is also what they call the FATF Style Regional Body. What they mean by FATF Style Regional Body (FSRB) is the body that covers this jurisdiction.

    For instance, there are over 180 countries that have signed into the FATF, and Jurisdictions. FATF will not be able to cover all these countries effectively and so they have SRBs that manage the jurisdictions. For instance, GIABA is the FATF SRB in West Africa. So, the role of FATF is being played by GIABA within West Africa.

    For instance, they conduct mutual evaluation which is the peer review mechanism to assess a county’s performance in terms of plans to fight money laundering and terrorist financing.

    In conducting mutual evaluation, what are the issues always considered?

    The mutual evaluation exercise is usually to check, in the whole form of it, a country’s compliance with the recommendations. FATF has what it calls “40 Recommendations” it used to be 40 plus nine, but after the revision, it was revised to have 40 recommendations that comprises money laundering, issues of terrorist financing, and proliferation of light weapons and weapons of mass destruction which they call proliferation financing.

    Also, countering the finances of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or light weapons. So, these are the key issues that are addressed in those 40 recommendations, and what countries needed to do to prove standards.

    Mutual evaluation is to identify gaps that countries have based on these recommendations.

    For instance, the recommendation is talking about the enactment of adequate legislation, laws that will combat terrorism. In a lawless society, it is criminal to be law abiding.

    So, it is to make sure that all the member states have adequate legislation, laws that combat money laundering because criminals will be looking for countries where laws do not exist to go and operate, so even when you catch them, there is nothing you can use to prosecute them.

    What we do for instance, is to ensure that all countries have adequate legislation. You remember that sometimes ago, in Nigeria they said had anti money laundering law but did it have law against terrorist financing?

    So, we look at all the issues of legislation, we look at financial institutions. What role are they playing? Are their platforms available, readily confirmed? Do they prepare transaction report? Do they remit to transaction report, and were those reports well processed? What roles do they have to play, and their impact in terms of moving finances/ money from one country to another?

    So, all are those areas that we are looking into. Customers due diligence, the customs, the immigration, movement of cash and goods and all the other areas, even the designated non-financial businesses and profession; could be somebody who deals with the issues like property. If someone wants to launder money through property and he decides not to take the money to a bank, he can approach a property firm and decide to buy 20 duplexes in choice areas. He is laundering the proceeds of crime. He is not taking the money to the bank, but he is making transactions and payments and the money is going into property.

    Later, when you ask him where he got the money he would say, you don’t know that I am into property business? I have been buying property bit by bit and now I even have over 40 properties. I have 200 houses, and I am into estate. And he has successfully hidden the source of his estate wealth. So, we will be looking at designated non-financial businesses and professions.

    That could be the hardest part of your job?

    Yes! And that is because we have a very large informal sector. Informal sectors where things are not going through formal processes. For instance in Nigeria, they have what we call Special Control Unit Against Money Laundering (SCUML). For you to operate in any business, you have to register with them now as a regulation body.

    May be Bureau de Change, may be estate agents, may be law firm, may be accounting firm, and all of those things, because if you want to buy a property now, you will need a lawyer who will do the agreement. You need an estate manager who will make all the perfections and check the papers. All of them now are compelled to register with SCUML If you register with SCUML, any transaction you do within certain threshold will be reported as suspicious transaction. For instance, if I come to you and I work as a civil servant, and I say, I want to buy 200 houses, it is a suspicious transaction.

    My salary as a civil servant may be at that time, just N200,000 and I want to buy a property of about N250 million. It is a suspicious transaction. You will go ahead to do your transaction but, you report it to the financial intelligent unit. It is their work to investigate, to identify, and to know if it is something to be looked into or not so that no stone is left unturned, no loophole is created in the system.

    If it is jewelry or you sell cars, all manner of things, same procedure will be followed. And if you are caught not reporting when you should, then you know that you are aiding and abetting. The law covers not only the perpetrators of the crime but also the people who knew but conspired not to report it.

    When the SCUML policy was introduced, many non-governmental organisations (NGOs) kicked against it. Is the policy still being implemented?

    Yes, it is being implemented. A lot of organisations subscribe to it including non-governmental organisations and faith-based organisations. You may have your grudges but you have to subscribe to it.

    If you say you don’t like traffic lights, that will not make you not to obey traffic lights. If you break the rules, there are sanctions. Fine, it has been spelt out that this is the process to go. Fine, some people may not like it and would prefer to hide their identities, maybe they don’t want to be part of it, but the day they are caught by law, they will pay for it. Recently the SCUML implementation deadline was extended to allow more people to take part.

    People are already keying into the SCUML policy because it will get to a point that you would want to do your business as an agency and they will ask you to produce your SCUML registration certificate.

    Banks will begin to demand that for you to open an account, you must provide SCUML registration certificate. By the time you want to open an account and your account officer says that you must produce your SCUML registration for that to happen, then you will know that it is very important. And overtime, they will find out that there are no options and they will have no other choice but to go and register.

    So, these are the kind of processes that are being put in place and this is what will help. And you know also that there have been reductions on the volume of cash people can carry. So everybody is compelled one way or the other, through processes and systems, to go into the banking system.

    You want to just carry your money around, to go and pay N5 million and withdraw it when you need it, the bank will demand that you explain why. There is a limit to what you can take now. If you are taking outside of it, it is something that can be reported. If you are taking more than the threshold, they will charge you and also report it. A follow up is going to be made on that personality, to find out if there are any issues of money laundering or any form of terrorist financing going on there. So, these are some of the issues.

    It is not about the noise, it is not about the media, it is not about the type of things people want or people don’t want. It is about putting structures and systems that will make it work.

    For instance, if I drive a Range Rover and the traffic light stops me but nobody sees me, if I beat the traffic light, I will just go away, as far as, there is no police in the front that is going to stop me. I have beaten the traffic and I have escaped it. But, if I beat the traffic in London, I am not supposed to see the policeman there, I will just beat the traffic and go, so, in the evening, they will just bring the fine bill to my house if I am a first offender but if I am a second or third offender, sometimes, it is even possible for me to go through legal processes.

    So, these are the systems that we must put in place. Systems that will not allow you to see the police but will chase you when you beat the traffic as it is done in London or in New York city. The systems are what we are trying to build because, every cars that is driven in UK is registered with the owner’s phone address, emails with residential address of the person who registered the car. Whoever is driving the car, the camera is there to pick its number plate and the owner will be identified. If you are not the one that drove the car when it contravened the law, you will provide the person that drove it because records are there. So, it is not because people want to obey laws but because there are systems to check people’s excesses.

    Every country, every nation has excesses. There are criminals everywhere. What we are trying to do is to put the systems that will work and will not allow criminals to go undetected. If the criminals know that they no longer have a hiding place because they will be detected, that will reduce the number of people that may wish to go into criminal activities.

    So, if I know that it doesn’t matter whether everybody is seeing me or not, as far as I passed it at the wrong time, the camera will see me, all I need to do is just to be there, and once the light passes me, I will move. When the system is there, you will know that when you break the law, there is something that will find you and bring you out to face justice.

    What we are trying to do now and I think the Nigerian government particularly, is making effort to help us. The CBN and other financial regulators are working on those systems, and as soon as they are in place, you will find out that the proper structure to combat money laundering and terrorist financing in this country and this region will b e minimised.

  • AMCON redeems N1tr bond December 30

    AMCON redeems N1tr bond December 30

    The Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) will redeem N1 trillion series one, two, three and four bonds held by institutions outside the central bank on December 30.

    To ensure that nothing untoward happens to the money, the Central Bank if Nigeria is already in possession of the fund preparatory to redemption.

    Addressing journalists in Abuja on Friday at the agreement signing ceremony between CBN and AMCON, for the bonds redemption, the CBN Governor, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi ,said by October next year, an additional N1 trillion bond for series five would be redeemed by AMCON.

    Sanusi stated that redemption of the N1 trillion bonds became necessary after the N5.7 trillion bonds issued had enabled AMCON to improve the  troubled banks’ liquidity.

    He said, “Some of the money will come from the sale of the underlying assets by AMCON and the N5.7 trillion includes interest component, the amount AMCON owes of N3.8 trillion. We are at a point where AMCON balance sheet has enabled them to raise enough money to pay for this bond.”

    The CBN governor added that when both tranches of redemption are completed by October next year, “the only creditor to AMCON will be the apex bank.

    “No one will hold AMCON bond. So this will now be AMCON owing the central bank and this is positive for this economy,” Sanusi stated.

     

     

  • CBN, NNPC ‘reconciling $10.8b’

    CBN, NNPC ‘reconciling $10.8b’

    Just how much is the shortfall of the cash that should have been sent to the Federation Account?

    The question remains as knotty as it was since Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi broke the news of a missing $48.9billion.

    “We will continue our work, until we can come to terms of what is actually the shortfall and what is due to come to the Federation Account,” Finance Minister Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said yesterday in Abuja at a news conference.

    With the minister were Sanusi, Petroleum Resources Minister Mrs Diezani Allison-Madueke and Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Group Managing Director Andrew Yakubu.

    Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala was speaking on the findings of a revenue reconciliation meeting convened among the CBN, NNPC, the Ministry of Finance and other stakeholders to clarify the discrepancy.

    Said the minister: “At the meeting, the NNPC noted that the actual proceeds from crude oil exports over the period amounted to US$67.12 billion, and was thus about US$1.79 billion higher than the revenues reported by the CBN (possibly due to timing differences and Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) listings, which were not included in the CBN report).”

    According to the NNPC records, the Finance Minister said, the total revenue of US$67.12 billion comprised revenues which directly accrued to NNPC (for the Federation Account) of US$14 billion; and additional revenues lifted by NNPC on behalf of other parties as follows: for FIRS (US$15 billion), for DPR (US$2billion), for NPDC (US$6 billion) and for other third party financing (US$2 billion). In addition, domestic crude lifted by the NNPC amounted to about US$28 billion.

    This domestic crude component, she said, was not reflected in the CBN’s foreign accounts, but rather paid directly in naira into the Federation Account.

    As such, “taking account of these various exports conducted on behalf of the non-NNPC parties, the total of US$67 billion was mostly accounted for. This substantially addresses the issues raised by the CBN” she said.

    Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala added that “the Federation Account indicates that over the period January 2012 to July 2013, a shortfall of US$10.8 billion was recorded from the domestic crude oil receipts.” This shortfall she said, has been acknowledged by NNPC, but the magnitude of the shortfall is still disputed by NNPC.

    The shortfall is explained to be the result of subsidy claims, unrecovered crude/product losses, and cost of strategic petroleum storage (which is currently not captured in the Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) template for refunds).

    This figure, she said, is also well-known to all stakeholders at the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC), and is reported and updated monthly.

    “However, all parties concerned are working assiduously through the ongoing reconciliation efforts to resolve this. Both Finance and NNPC have been in discussions to reconcile; we do so every month after Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) meeting we reconcile our figures, it is not an easy thing,” Mrs Okonjo-Iweala said.

    She added: “In the course of the reconciliation, from January 2012 to July 2013, we have looked at a shortfall of about N1.7trillion, the equivalent of $10.8billion. That is the amount that we have been discussing and, of course, NNPC has been disputing some of it. But it is an ongoing reconciliation. We will still continue; we do it every month.”

    A statement released to the media to capture the efforts to trace the “missing” fund noted that “as a result of the changing structure of the business arrangements- from joint ventures to production sharing contracts, alternative financing arrangements, and the impact of the fiscal regime on gas development- the government, take in recent years has been declining. In this regard, a quick passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) will help to reverse this trend.”

    Sanusi said what the CBN had in its records was $65billion shipped by NNPC and about $15billion returned as equity to the Federation Account, but after his letter to the President, it was discovered that “out of the $65billion that NNPC shipped, $24billion did not belong to NNPC; it was crude that was paid by oil companies as tax and royalties and shipment for them from NPDC and so on. So that explains half of the sum. Now the outstanding issues are with the $28billion domestic crude, which has been taken by NNPC. From our records, we have received $16billion. There is a shortfall of $12billion and we are told that that shortfall has always been a part of an ongoing discussion with ministries of Finance and Petroleum and NNPC. So this is where we are. Finance, NNPC; all parties are going to try to resolve this matter.”

    Sanusi said: “The CBN has a duty to perform and if we see anything that should worry government, we alert and that is what we have done. We have alerted and this has been investigated, and looked at and this is the conclusion, the letter was not the end of the investigation.”

    Mrs Allison-Madueke said to mitigate and minimise the incidence of crude theft, the government has extended an “invitation to the United States to partner and assist us in this, particularly the international dimensions of this crude theft”.

    “We are in on going discussions with them; we met with a cross sectional team of intelligence experts last week and we had very crucial discussions that cut across many areas of the business,” she said.

  • Council faults CBN board composition

    Council faults CBN board composition

    The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) has faulted the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Board composition, saying it breaches international corporate governance principles.

    Speaking at a media retreat in Lagos, Managing Director, FRC, Jim Obazee said the new corporate governance code to be launched in February next year would also look at the composition of the CBN board to seek its review.

    Obazee, who spoke on the theme: The role of FRC in promoting investors’ confidence in Nigeria, said the CBN Governing Board cannot stand because it violates the international corporate governance code. The FRC boss said the CBN Governor is the Chairman of the Board, and is also the Chief Executive Officer of the bank. Faulting this arrangement, he said there was need to separate those powers.

    The FRC, formerly the Nigerian Accounting Standards Board (NASB), is an organisation charged with setting accounting standards in Nigeria. The NASB was established in 1982 as a private sector initiative associated with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN). NASB became a government agency in 1992, reporting to the Federal Minister of Commerce.

    The NASB Act of 2003 provided the legal framework under which the body set accounting standards.

    FRC membership includes representatives of the government and other interest groups. Both the ICAN and the Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN) nominate two members to the board.

    Obazee explained that part of FRC role in the coming year would be to carry out audit in banks and other publicly quoted companies. He said there is urgent need to check what the internal auditors are doing at all times.

    “We are to look at who is checking the checker (internal auditors). This will be done through the external auditors, but there are international audit control rules that will be followed,” he said.

    “The FRC shall commence audit quality inspections. It should be noted that the FRC is seeking membership of the International Forum of Independent Audit Regulators (IFIAR). This will be a booster to the capacity of the Council to monitor audit quality,” he said.

    He said the body is convinced that the national Code of Corporate governance will be operational in the first quarters of 2014, adding that this will also strengthen compliance with Section 44 (3) of the FRC Act and enhance the inflow of Foreign Direct Investment and steer greater interest from local investors.

    He explained that the FRC is a unified independent regulatory body for accounting, auditing, actuarial, valuation and corporate governance practices in public and private sectors of the Nigerian economy.

    The body, he said, is also to address institutional weaknesses in regulation, compliance and enforcement of standards and the development of robust arrangements for monitoring and enforcing compliance with financial reporting standards in the country.

    He said the implementation of the FRC Act is expected to lead to increased management credibility, more long-term investments, lower cost of capital, improved access to new capital and higher share values.

    “For investors and lenders, better disclosure provides more relevant information for making sound investment decisions and risk assessment respectively. This is especially so because merchants do not have a country,” he said.

    Obazee said the FRC is carrying out International Financial Reporting Standards readiness test for entities in the second phase for other public interest entities including not-for-profit organisation.