Tag: cbn

  • CBN’s N2.46tr for banks, discount houses  to shore up liquidity

    CBN’s N2.46tr for banks, discount houses to shore up liquidity

    About N2.46 trillion has been advanced to commercial and merchant banks including discount houses by Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to boost liquidity in the financial system, The Nation has learnt.

    The fund, which came as Standing Lending Facility (SLF) in August, was given at 14 per cent. The SLF is an overnight credit available on banking days between 2 pm and 3.30 pm, with settlement done on same day value.

    The daily lending average was N123.29 billion for the 20 working days in the review month, compared with N793.08 billion with a daily average of N34.48 billion recorded in the preceding month.

    According to the CBN Economic Report for August, the increase is dueto reduction in liquidity following the debit of N896.43 billion Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) in August. Interest received on SLF stood at N1.59 billion, compared with N0.36 billion in the preceding month.

    Also, the report said the aggregate Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) stood at N5.2 trillion. This represented a daily average of N264.16 billion for the 20 working days in the month, reflecting a decline of 166.83 per cent from the level in the preceding month. Interest paid on SDF stood at N2.11 billion against N2.33 billion in the preceding month.

    The CBN said the slight reduction, despite the liquidity squeeze in the review period, was attributable to its non-intervention at the Open Market Operation segment, except for the last day of the month, and the late disbursement of July fiscal allocation.

    The CBN had at the August Monetary Policy Committee (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.

    Accowrding to the report, the aggregate banking system credit (net) to the domestic economy decreased by 4.6 per cent to N13.1 trillion, on month-on-month basis, in contrast to the growth of four per cent at the end of the preceding month.

    The development reflected, largely, the decrease of 47.4 per cent in claims on the Federal Government (net) attributed to the 14.2 per cent and 0.8 per cent decline in banking system’s holding of treasury bills and Federal Government bonds.

    Over the level at end-December 2012, aggregate banking system credit (net) to the domestic economy rose by 3.9 per cent, due largely to the increase of 6.3 per cent in claims on private sector.

    Banking system’s credit (net) to the FederalGovernment, on month-on-month basis, contracted by 47.4 per cent to negative N2.9 trillion, in contrast to the growth of 17.6 per cent and 2.4 per cent at the end of the preceding month.

    Banking system’s credit to the private sector, on month on-month basis, in August, grew by 1.9 per cent to N16.1 trillion, compared with the increase of 0.7 per cent at the end of July.

    Also, banks’ foreign assets stood at N8.9 trillion, which constituted a 0.9 per cent increase, on month-on-month basis, in contrast to a decline of 1.2 per cent at the end of the preceding month. The development was attributed largely, to the 3.5 per cent increase in banks holdings of foreign assets.

    Other assets (net) of the banking system, on a month-on-month basis, rose by 4.5 per cent to negative N7.5 trillion at the end of the review period, in contrast to the decline of 17.83 per cent at the end of the preceding month, reflecting the increase in other assets of the CBN.

  • Fed Govt earns N6.6tr in eight months, says CBN report

    Fed Govt earns N6.6tr in eight months, says CBN report

    • August earnings dip to N760b

    Federal Government’s total gross revenue for eight months ended August stood at N6.61 trillion, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) monthly Economic Report released yesterday has shown.

    The figure which covers January to August reflects a decrease of 12.5 and 10.7 per cent below the budget estimate for the period and the receipts in the corresponding period of last year respectively.

    Of the cumulative earnings, oil receipts represented 71.9 per cent, while non-oil receipts accounted for the balance of 28.1 per cent.

    But the report also showed that government earnings for August slumped to N760.29 billion, a decline of 27.6 per cent over the N1.05 trillion earned in July. The decline relative to the level in the preceding month was attributed to the fall in oil revenue during the review.

    At N457.23 billion, gross oil receipts, which constituted 60.1 per cent of the total revenue, dipped below both the receipts in the preceding month and the monthly budget estimate by 29.2 and 29.1 per cent respectively. This development was largely attributed to the shortfall in receipts from exports and other oil revenue during the period.

    According to the report, there was N303.06 billion gross non-oil receipts, which constituted 39.9 per cent of total receipt and was 0.9 per cent above the monthly budget estimate. This was however lower than the level in the preceding month by 25.1 per cent.

    The increase in non-oil revenue relative to the receipts in the preceding month reflected the rise in receipts from corporate and education taxes.

    CBN said of the gross federally-collected revenue during the month, N477.05 billion was transferred to the Federation Account for distribution among the three tiers of government and the 13 per cent Derivation Fund.

    The Federal Government received N227.52 billion, while the state and local governments received N115.40 billion and N88.97 billion, respectively. The balance of N45.17 billion went to the 13 per cent Derivation Fund for distribution to the oil-producing states.

    According to the apex bank’s report, the Federal Government received N10.68 billion from the Value Added Tax (VAT) Pool Account, while the state and local governments received N35.61 billion and N24.93 billion respectively.

    Also, the sum N35.55 billion was distributed as the Subsidy Reinvestment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P) among the three tiers of government and the 13 per cent Derivation Fund.

    There was also N261.88 billion, which was the estimated Federal Government retained revenue for August. This was lower than both the receipts in the preceding month and monthly budget estimate by 10.3 and 35.9 per cent respectively.

    Of this amount, the Federation Account accounted for 86.9 per cent, while SURE-P, VAT, and Federal Government Independent Revenue accounted for 6.2, 4.1 and 2.8 per cent respectively.

    Estimated total receipts by state governments from the Federation and VAT Pool Accounts stood at N213.80 billion. This was lower than the level in the preceding month by 22.8 per cent, but was higher than the level in the corresponding period of 2012 by 57.1 per cent.

     

     

  • CBN to publish names of errant banks

    CBN to publish names of errant banks

    THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will publish the names of banks that fail to adhere to operating guidelines in newspapers to deter others, its Deputy Governor, Financial System Stability, Dr Kingsley Moghalu, said yesterday.

    Speaking at the continuous education programme for Bank Directors organised by the Financial Institutions Training Centre (FITC) in Lagos, he said after the policy’s adoption sanctions against lenders would be made public. He said the option of payment was not enough, adding that there was need to get the banks to become more responsible in handling their transactions. “When it comes into effect, we will publicise sanctions against banks. We have discovered that fines are not enough,” he said.

    He said the past 25 years witnessed the most intense, often cut-throat competition in industry and commerce, particularly in the financial services sector.

    Moghalu said banks had globally been subjected to intense regulation and supervision because of the fiduciary nature of their business. Consequently, they are required to comply with laws, regulations, guidelines, and standards issued by national regulatory authorities and international standard setting bodies.

    He advised banks to develop robust internal policies and ensure compliance in order to strengthen their controls, enssure transparency and promote sound corporate governance.

    Moghalu said while banks were expected to comply with regulations, they also needed to look critically at what makes them competitive. Technology, innovation and new product development, he said were key factors driving competition in the financial system.

    Banks, he said, were subjected to rigorous regulation because 80 to 90 per cent of their fund is from depositors, adding: “This makes it more compelling for them to comply with regulation.”

  • No cut in interest rate soon, says Sanusi

    No cut in interest rate soon, says Sanusi

    THE Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday foreclosed the possibility of reducing the prevailing 12 per cent interest rate.

    CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi said in Paris, France, that the bank was more likely to tighten monetary policy than ease it in the months ahead.

    The Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) is the benchmark rate by which the CBN determines interest rate. The Cash Reserve Requirement (CRR) is a portion of banks’ deposit kept by banks with the CBN.

    “We’re likely to remain where we are but if we’re going to move at all, we’re more likely to tighten than to ease. I would advise against precipitate easing only to turn around after a few months and tighten,” Bloomberg quoted Sanusi as saying.

    At the September 24 Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), meeting the CBN left both its MPR and CRR for banks unchanged at 12 per cent. It also retained the CRR for public sector deposits at 50 per cent. Eleven of the 12 MPC members had voted for no change in the 12 per cent policy rate, while the dissenter, who voted for a 50 basis points reduction, argued that monetary policy should enhance growth and development.

    Sanusi said inflation was under control, adding that the naira has held up well relative to other emerging market currencies.

    Inflation eased to 8.2 per cent in August from 8.7 per cent in the previous month, staying within the CBN’s target of less than 10 per cent. The naira has weakened by 2.6 per cent against the dollar this year and may come under more pressure as President Goodluck Jonathan estimates a 12 per cent drop in oil and gas revenue next year.

    Last month, Sanusi said the CBN was committed to use its currency reserves to support the naira.

    However, the reserves have been in decline for some time and stand at $45.3 billion as at October 4. The CBN sells foreign currency at twice-weekly auctions to keep the naira within a range of three percentage points around 160 a dollar. “Inflation should be down to under eight per cent by December,” Sanusi said.

  • CBN defends naira with $4.6b in two months

    CBN defends naira with $4.6b in two months

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) defended the naira with $4.6 billion in two months, The Nation investigation has shown.

    The funds were offered and sold in 16 Wholesale Dutch Auctions (WDAS) in August ($2.4million) and September ($2.2million).

    Findings from the CBN website showed that the apex bank maintained steady supply of dollars to the WDAS market throughout the periods, with a maximum of $400 million, on September 25.

    Other dollar supplies were pegged at $300 million, including funding on September 2, 9, 11,16, 18, 23 and 30. Also, a uniform dollar sale of $300 million was achieved during the eight trading sessions in August.

    However, September transactions were not uniform, as $285 million was sold on September 5, $248 million on September 7 and $221 million September 2. The CBN also sold $300 million on September 14, $258 million on September 19 and $290 million on September 21. There were $300 million and $263 million sales on September 26 and 28.

    According to the CBN, naira exchange rate remained stable at the WDAS segment of the foreign exchange market during the period. The exchange rate at the WDAS during the review period opened and closed at N157.32 to a dollar, while the average rate during was N157.31 to a dollar.

    At the interbank segment, the naira exchange rate opened at N160.75 to a dollar and closed at N161.47 to a dollar, representing a depreciation of N0.72 to a dollar or 0.45 per cent.

    “The average interbank exchange rate during the period was N160.78 to a dollar. At the Bureau De Change (BDC) segment, the selling rate opened at N162.50 to a dollar and closed at N163 to a dollar, representing a depreciation of N0.50 to a dollar or 0.31 per cent.

    The average BDC exchange rate was N162.14/US$.

    According to the CBN, “The stability of the exchange rate reflected the commitment of the bank to supporting the naira at a time of massive depreciation in the currencies of emerging and frontier countries. This commitment was underscored by the policy of intervention to improve supply conditions, and the very tight monetary conditions maintained since the July 23 Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting.”

    However, the CBN, on October 2, replaced WDAS with Retail Dutch Auction System (RDAS) because of the ineffectiveness of the former in addressing hitches in the foreign exchange market.

    Head, Global Research Africa, at Standard Chartered, Razia Khan, explained that the WDAS was abused because it allowed banks to collate bids for clients and make a single forex bid.

    However, under the RDAS, banks will place bids for clients who qualify to buy forex at the official auction.

    “This change will allow 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,” she said.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Naira in free fall

    Naira in free fall

    Naira fell the most in more than about two years as the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) held its last currency auction before tightened controls of the sales are implemented, boosting demand for dollars.

    Bloomberg report said the naira retreated 1.1 per cent to N161.55 per dollar, its biggest drop since January 2012 on a closing basis. That brought its decline this month to 0.1 per cent and pared a quarterly gain of 0.6 per cent, the first advance in three.

    The CBN will replace its scheduled wholesale foreign-exchange sales with retail auctions from tomorrow to curb dollar demand, the apex bank said. The CBN offers foreign currency twice a week to keep the naira within a range of three percentage points above or below 155 per dollar. The regulator sold $300 million yesterday, compared with $300.2 million on September 25.

    Chief Executive Officer, Forward Marketing Bureau de Change Limited, Abubakar Mohammed, said: “Dollar demand was high yesterday at the interbank market and the CBN auction, being the last day for the wholesale. With retail auctions, banks will buy dollars on proof of request from customers, unlike in wholesale auctions when they could buy and resell.”

    The naira’s decline yesterday was the biggest among 24 African currencies monitored by Bloomberg. It rallied 0.8 per cent last week after CBN Governor Lamido Sanusi held the benchmark lending rate at a record high 12 per cent on September 24 and pledged to use the country’s foreign-exchange reserves to bolster the currency.

    While the naira depreciated yesterday, retail auctions will probably tighten dollar demand and help support the currency, which has weakened 3.3 per cent this year, Mohammed said.

  • CBN suspends Wholesale Dutch Auction

    CBN suspends Wholesale Dutch Auction

    The Wholesale Dutch Auction System (WDAS) was yesterday suspended by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), which reintroduced the Retail Dutch Auction System (RDAS).

    The policy is to take effect from October 2. The RDAS will hold on Mondays and Wednesdays every week.

    In a circular to the Money Deposit Banks and authorised foreign exchange dealers, the CBN said the existing limit of $40,000 per annum on naira and credit card has been reviewed upward to $150,000 per annum.

    Also there would be a monthly rendition of returns by authorised dealer banks and card issuers (Mastercard and Visa) to the CBN. The settlement for the cards shall continue to be with interbank funds, the apex bank’s circular, said, warning that any authorised dealer intending to import foreign currency cash will need to forward the application to the CBN for processing and approval.

    It said authorised dealers would continue to sell foreign exchange cash to the Bureau de C hange (BDCs) subject to a maximum limit of $250,000 per week per BDC, while it pegged the minimum bid amount for authorised dealers at $100,000 which shall be in dollar and naira.

    Meanwhile, the CBN Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi yesterday, said licences of 20 BDC operators will be revoked today over their involvement in money laundering and other malpractices. He spoke at the 75th anniversary of Ikoyi Club, in Lagos. He said the operators of the affected BDCs will also be prosecuted for money laundering.

    He said people that took foreign exchange from banks and cannot show what the funds were used for, are engaging in money laundering and will face the law. “If you take money above the limit and you cannot show what you used it for, then it is money laundering,” he said, adding that Nigeria has overtaken Russia as the highest importer of dollars in the world and the CBN is committed to changing that trend.

    Sanusi said Nigeria is the world’s biggest user of forex, importing almost everything. “We spend our forex to import what we produce, and export what we do not produce.”

    He said the apex bank has established that some banks were importing dollars and selling them to BDCs and therefore has decided to clamp down on all BDCs violating forex rules.

  • CBN worried over high dollar demands

    CBN worried over high dollar demands

    There is a surge in demand for dollars, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said yesterday.

    This, according to CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, is linked to political activities ahead of the 2015 elections.

    Sanusi spoke after the bank’s twice monthly Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, which retained the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) at 12 per cent for the 12th time in a row. The CBN said the naira and inflation had stabilised.

    Sanusi said there had been “strong foreign exchange demand pressures, which are not necessarily linked to an increase in the import of goods”.

    Elections are scheduled for 2015 and politicians often spend massively on patronage to secure seats or pay off rivals. At least, some of it is acquired illicitly through corruption or links to criminal rackets, like oil theft or kidnapping.

    “This non-import-related demand was linked to the build-up of political activities in the country,” Sanusi said, adding that it was leading to a “dollarisation of the economy by the political class.”

    “There is something absolutely wrong with bureaux de changes buying hundreds of millions of dollars and not being able to account for them… We think these monies are part of a money laundering exercise and we will have to deal with it,” the governor was quoted as saying by Reuters.

    Measures to be announced soon could include imposing restrictions on dollar cash withdrawals, he said.

    The bank has come under pressure in the past to cut rates from businesses who say that would stimulate lending. It has resisted, however, arguing that it is only by staying the course, despite such pressure, that the economy has stabilised.

    Sanusi said the Monetary Policy Committee voted 11-1 in favour of holding rates where they were. He said the MPC had noted “with satisfaction the stability in the financial system and currency markets”.

    He attributed this to a shock tightening at the previous MPC meeting, when the bank slapped a 50 per cent cash reserve requirement on public sector deposits, up from 12 per cent before, in a bid to support the naira.

    That was retained, as was a corridor of 200 basis points around the base rate for borrowing or lending from the bank.

    He said a stable naira had been “underscored by the policy of intervention to improve supply … and the very tight monetary conditions maintained since the last MPC meeting”.

    He also said those conditions had had an impact on inflation, which fell to another five-year low in August.

    The naira has been under regular selling pressure from fleeing hot money and strong dollar demand since June, but has gradually recovered due to frequent Central Bank forex sales.

    That has not been without its costs. Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves declined 2.34 percent month-on-month to $45.95 billion by Sept. 20, their lowest in seven and a half months, the latest Central Bank data shows.

    Sanusi acknowledged the fall in reserves but reiterated that the bank would resist pressure to devalue the naira, something it last had to do in November 2011.

    “I do not see any benefit in devaluing the currency at this point in time. It will not improve our export earnings, it will not reduce imports that are fundamentally inelastic,” like fuel or food, he said. “We will use the reserves. We will not unless we are forced to allow the naira to weaken.”

    He said most of the decisions taken at the meeting were informed by developments in the domestic and global economic environments, particularly to the need to sustain macroeconomic stability in the economy.

    In the course of the MPC meeting, “the Committee noted the continued dependence of the banking sector on monetised oil revenues for its liquidity and stressed the need to keep pushing banks into altering their business model to reduce vulnerability”.

    Sanusi restated the CBN’s commitment to ensure exchange rate stability by adopting appropriate monetary policies that will protect the currency from the forex market manipulations but that he cautioned that “this agenda would not be pursued at all cost”.

    He explained: “If we need to tighten money and use some of our reserves to support the economy, we will; no CBN Governor will say he will support currency at all cost. But we want to be very clear that there is no country that allows its currency to just be determined by market. We are not looking for a stronger currency, neither are we looking at a weaker one. People want to pay fees and investors want to know that they will have returns for their investments. We will use reserves, we will use interest rates, we have gone through the difficult months; hopefully the next few months will not be difficult. We will not allow the naira to be weakened and we are committed to that.”

    The CBN governor was also asked to shed light on the health of Duscount Houses in Nigeria and he responded by saying that the Bank has already taken steps to investigate the operations of Discount Houses, with exception of Express Discount House which had its licence revoked recently, Kakawa and Associated Discount Houses were sound. So, there is no cause for worry with the Discount Houses.

    Sanusi said: “There are no major issues with discount houses. We have taken a comprehensive view, we revoked the licence of Express and we have seen that the other two are in good form. We discovered in the case of Express Discount House; there appeared to be a case of fraud. We have examiners in there to determine the extent of fraud and will pay all unsecured depositors in the course of this week. No depositor will lose money and we will come out with appropriate statements soon.”

    He said the apex bank would curb the exercise of bureau de change operators who engage in foreign exchange abuses.

     

  • Why interest rates can’t move, won’t move

    Why interest rates can’t move, won’t move

    Nigeria’s Central bank has held its policy interest rate at 12 per cent for the 12th consecutive month. Can anything make it budge?

    Analysts seem to think not. There are three factors that will keep rates locked: inflation, the naira and reserves.

    First, inflation has fallen from double digits to under 8.2 per cent in August – well below the target limit of 10 per cent and a five-year low. That gives scope for a cut, surely?

    Perhaps, but as Shilan Shah of Capital Economics pointed out: “The big falls in the headline CPI rate now look to have taken place… inflation is more likely to rise than fall in the coming months.”

    So that’s one reason to keep rates steady.

    The main concern for policy makers, though, is the naira. Like many emerging market currencies, it has lost value since May as investors feared the Fed would – as it suggested – begin tapering its QE programme, and has rallied since that prospect became more distant last week. The naira hit a year-to-date low against the dollar of 164 on September 10, but has since recovered to back under 160. That has eased any pressure for a rate increase.

    The central bank has been using its foreign reserves to help keep the naira around or below the 160 mark. Add the consequent depletion in reserves to the possibility of falling oil prices and increased public spending in the run up to elections in 2015, and the budget deficit – of around 3.5 per cent of GDP – starts to become a concern.

    As Razia Kahn, Africa economst at Standard Chatered said in a note:” Should the pressures on the FX rate prove excessive, we may yet see other measures aimed at stabilising the FX rate. For Nigeria, the question is about sustainability of this FX policy, given pressures on oil output and the country’s political cycle.

    What might those other measures be? Well, back in July the bank hiked its Cash Reserve Requirement for public sector deposits in banks to 50 per cent from 12 per cent, a move aimed at removing excess liquidity and, by putting upward pressure on bond yields, strengthening the naira.” Barclays set out the scale in a note back in July: “Our assessment suggests the government’s (federal, state and local) deposits are substantial, accounting for about 21% (NGN2.5trn or $16bn) of commercial banks’ deposit liabilities as of March 2013. A 50% reserve requirement would imply about $8bn would now need to be held at the central bank, assuming zero holding in these categories currently and little changes from the figures published in March.” Meanwhile, banks’ deposits at the central bank held for reserve requirement purposes totalled NGN1.4trn ($9.1) in March.

    And Nigeria continues to make strong statements about the currency. Here is central bank governor Lamido Sanusi, quoted on Tuesday by Bloomberg: “We don’t believe that there’s any country in the world that would allow its currency to be determined by markets.”

    That’s not quite the message of recent currency moves and foreign exchange dealings, as beyondbrics reported on Monday.

    But with Nigeria’s central bank mindful of inflation as well as the naira, the scope to cut is limited. Although Capital’s Shah suggested that rates may stay on hold for all of 2013 and beyond, Kahn noted that “the performance of the currency will likely determine what happens next.” Another round of EM currency selling will put the bank in a tricky position.

  • A CBN shocker

    A CBN shocker

    What does the Central Bank mean by the statement that it will no longer be a lender of last resort from 2016? This was the poser many are seeking answer to days after the pronouncement since the bank did not say much in its explanation. To The Nation’s enquiry, it said: “What this means is that while the CBN will continue with its explicit role of lender of last resort to Deposit Money Banks, Primary Mortgage Institutions and Microfinance Banks, it will not lend for transactions from December 2016.”

    However, a Senior Manager in one of the tier 1 banks, explained that being a lender of last resort means a bank going to the Central Bank to borrow because it has no other place to run, so that it can continue its business. It means that the CBN will stop performing this function for the banks in 2016. The implication is that they are asking banks to sit up.

    He said it implies that the banks have to be serious at risk management to be able to see the signals when things go bad. Because if they are able to see the signals, chances are that they will know when there are problems. Since they are doing their normal business, he explained, they will still be able to hold themselves by relying on the interbank. “So, instead of relying on the CBN, they could raise funds from other banks. And they will then raise the ante, in terms of marketing network, or some other ways of sustaining themselves,” the banker said.

    Don’t also forget, he stressed, that a month or so ago, the CBN also raised the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) from 12 per cent to 50 per cent. That also is in tandem with this line of thinking. So, what that also called for is creative marketing on the part of the banks so they can get more private deposit from the private sector, rather than folding their arms and waiting for connections in government.

    On whether the loans advanced to the MDBs did not amount to another discount window, which the CBN frowned at when the the present leadership came on board, the banker said: “Whether it is called discount window or anything, it simply means borrowing money from the Central Bank and that’s what the apex bank wants to stop, and they are looking at it as a way of spoon feeding the banks.”

    “The banks are now entirely on their own. You stand to bear the consequences of whatever calculation or miscalculation you make, because in risk management, you either get over-exposed, because you are giving so much credit that you are not expected to. When you give out so much, what do you have as backup in case anything happens? And who are the characters you are giving the loans and in what volume and into how many places? he queried. As far as I am concerned, the CBN is trying to make sure that banks don’t get themselves into trouble, he added.

    On whether this policy not crowd-out credit to the real sector, he said what is paramount is balancing of risks. His explanation: ”You know this business of banking, the whole idea is money. Even you as an individual, you know how much effort you put in managing your own finances. Not to talk about a bank which business is all about taking in business and giving out money. So what I am saying is that it is full of challenges. It is full of risks.

    “And you are dealing with human beings and you are also dealing with businesses that also have their motives. You give them loans based on certain projections. Sometimes, they don’t work out. How do you get back your money? he asked, saying, even if you have houses as collateral, how do you monetise those houses to bring in money within one year! So, these are the challenges that banks face, he added.

    He explained the apex bank’s underlying reason for the measure, thus: “The CBN is now saying, yes what they are doing is unprecedented, a lot has happened, within the banking environment. Having seen what has happened, especially under the current dispensation, they believe that the banks are not managing their risks properly. Risk management is it. They are telling the banks that no matter what you face, don’t come to us to borrow.”

    The banker, who asked that his identity be kept out of print, said these pronouncements have implications for cost of funds.

    He said since the days of consolidation, banks have attained a certain measure of bigness. “No bank is small, so it is left for the banks to know how to manage their resources,” he said, adding that in their effort to be overly profitable, or be perceived as doing well, some banks tend to be reporting hundreds of billions of profits and overstretching themselves. He said the CBN was in the best position to monitor these things, and they know that the banks will survive even with those policies the apex bank have put in place.

    He agreed that cost of funds, may have gone up because of the increase in CRR, which he said has forced banks to look for deposits in other places, adding that this may have pushed the banks to raise deposit rates.

    The bank’s official, said the thrust of the CBN’s pronouncement is a warning that by 2016, you cannot come to us again to borrow, insisting that the essence of it all is to help the banks operate better.

    He said: “It’s not good to be spoon feeding any operator, it will make it to sit up, and be professional and ethical. If they are doing this ethically and professionally, adhering to all the tenets of corporate governance, there is no way any bank will collapse overnight.

    “What it means is that instead of declaring mouth-watering profit, they will be declaring modest figures. Remember that with this policy overtime, banks will be creative and aggressive in their marketing. They will be involved in more fund sourcing.”

    He said the CBN may have been studying this system for a long period of time to know that if this is done, it will not kill the banks. It would rather make them to sit up, arguing that the policy is not punitive at all, but that the CBN wants to make the banks to adjust and take proactive measures.

    You don’t get performance in the air. The figures are there. 2012 results of the banks are there to celebrate. Soon after consolidation, many Nigerian banks were ranked among the first 1,000. By 2008, 2009 and 2010, they were no longer there, because of the challenges they were going through, but last year and this year, many of them are back on that list. That means things are getting rosy. And if you look at the average profit for all the banks, you may just mention one that did not return profit.

    The banker termed the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation’s report that only about ten Nigerian banks are healthy as a woolly statement, saying that NDIC ought to disclose the indices they used to arrive at such conclusion. “ You are in this system. which bank has collapsed, or shown signs of collapsing. For the NDIC to just say that,, what indicators did it use? Is it in terms of employment, balance sheet size, branch expansion, or what. They should have parameters for measurement,” he stated.

    “That report, as you also know is not current. A lot of water may have passed under the bridge. Now we are talking about use of money. Look at the type of money the banks raised for Dangote? None of the banks has problem after that funding.”

    He banks have become much bigger and banks are supposed to be catalysts in developing any economy globally. Once they perform their intermediation role, meaning they are economic agents, so, the role of banks is to take money from one agent and give to another. The CBN is saying it wants to take government money and keep the money for government.

    He said all the banks have said they are global operators and that is why they can get money from international agencies and lend. They can also get their money outside this system. So, you cannot be waiting for CBN money.  The fact that the CBN Governor mentioned it now is a warning, and that warning is positive so that banks are not taken unawares, he said.

    He argued that raising the CRR is not denying the banks money per se, saying the thing is that the CBN thinks the banks are being spoon- fed by having that public sector fund which the banks turnaround to lend to the various government entities again. So, these are the things the CBN is trying to stop, he said.

    Also, Head, Market Risk, Greenwich Trust Limited, Babatunde Obaniyi, said the CBN’s plan to stop lending to the banks is a positive development. He said the policy has more upside than challenges. He said the banks have become lazy, relying more on government funds and using it to buy treasury bills. He said such action, does not develop any economy and should be checked. He said the banks should go into rural banking and get cheap deposits that they can lend at low interest rate. He said there is so much for the banks to gain by sourcing for cheap funds instead of relying on the CBN credit.

    Obaniyi said banks should deepen their retail structure, and support lending to small businesses.

    Head of Research and Corporate Development, Consolidated Discounts Limited (CDL), Mr. Jimi Ogbobine, said the financial market thrives on information, adding that once the CBN made the declaration on stopping to lend to banks by 2016, the banks are already analysing the risks involved.

    He said the only way to ensure that the policy does not have a damaging effect in the financial system, means all hands must be on deck to support the CBN financial inclusion strategy, adding that the policy will motivate the banks to source for more funds that are cheaper and long-term in nature.