Tag: cbn

  • ASSBIFI hails CBN on Skye Bank

    The Association of Senior Staff of Banks, Insurance and Financial Institutions (ASSBIFI) has hailed the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for revoking Skye Bank’s licence.

    The union said the N786 billion injected into the bank,  which has been renamed Polaris Bank, was a bold move at ensuring soundness and efficiency of the banking sector. It added that the bank’s sale process be done under best practices.

    ASSBIFI National President Comrade Oyinkan Olasanoye stated this while briefing reporters in Lagos. She said there was no need for panic by the public, customers and workers of the bank.

    Olasanoye noted that as at today, Polaris Bank has a clean balance sheet as it carries no toxic assets in its new balance sheet. “The Bank is well positioned to meet its obligations to all its numerous customers,” she said.

    She advised the bank’s numerous customers to continue to do business with the bank as there is no cause for alarm.

    Olasanoye said ASSBIFI, as a strategic partner in the banking sector, will study the purchase and assumption agreement, which established Polaris Bank and engage the management of the new bank in concrete discussions aimed at ensuring the realisation of its vision, goals and objectives.

    She said the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) should be allowed to undertake the sale exercise without undue interference from greedy party patrons and ensure that the exercise does not go the way of Mainstreet Bank, which was clandestinely sold to the defunct Skye Bank.

    The president advised that only healthy financial institutions with very clean balance sheets, which will add great value to Polaris Bank should be made to participate in the exercise and the best among them made to pay.

     

  • CBN: Nigeria’s foreign reserves remain strong

    •’Doing better than other emerging markets reserves’

    Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has explained that the foreign reserves remain strong and that the recent reduction in the level of the  reserves is not political.

    CBN Director of Corporate Communications,  Isaac Okorafor, attributed the drop in the reserves to capital flow reversals arising from rising interest rates in the United States.

    “You will recall that the Fed has been raising rates and has even given guidance that this would continue in the near term. As a result of this, investments in the emerging and some frontier markets are gravitating towards the US market to reap higher returns”.

    Continuing, he said there’s also the factor of election circle. “In Nigeria, however, we have done much better than most emerging and frontier economies. Some of these countries have suffered substantial depreciations in their currencies as a result of these flow reversals”.

    For instance, since this year Argentina has lost 134 per cent of its currency to depreciation largely occasioned by these reversals, Brazil lost 34 per cent Turkey 78 per cent, Iran 25 per cent, South Africa 19 per cent, Russia 18 per cent, Pakistan 17 per cent, United Kingdom 3.7 per cent, Japan 1.3 per cent whereas  Nigeria has gained six per cent by way of appreciation.

    “The key reason here is because the CBN adopted a forex management strategy that has worked successfully, achieving a comfortable stability in the exchange rates and still maintaining an equally comfortable reserves level”.

    Okorafor also spoke at the 13th Abuja Chamber of Commerce Mines and Industries (ABUCCIMA) Trade Fair in Abuja said foreign reserves fell “because of global squeeze on emerging markets, which was consequent upon increasing interest rates in the  United States of America.”

    Okorafor noted that other developing and emerging markets like Turkey, Brazil, South Africa, Argentina and even China were facing similar dilemma.

    Despite this squeeze, Okorafor assured that notwithstanding the fall, the present level of the NIgeria’s foreign reserve now stands at “$44 billion which is capable of financing between 14 and 17 months imports which is way above internationally acceptable three months.”

    He also gave assurance to customer of defunct Skye Bank that their deposits were safe in Polaris Bank. Okorafor stated that Polaris Bank was duly registered at Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) and licenced by CBN.

    He also told the audience at the fair that the overall impact of CBN’s numerous interventions, will continue to enhance the operational capacity of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).

    These interventions the CBN said “has translated into a reflation of our economy with attendant growth and development.”

    The CBN he said will continue to ensure that it delivers on its core mandate of ensuring monetary and price stability. However, it cautioned that “the it will also continually roll out proactive and innovative policies which would ensure that all economicsub-sectors especially the SMEs in Agribusiness receive the desired support.”

    According to Isaac Okorafor “we are determined to ensure that Nigeria’s economy remains in a state of consistent growth even as we focus on economic diversification and national food sufficiency.”

    In his response, President of ABUCCIMA, Prince Adetokunbo Kayode who was represented by Prof. Adesoji Adesugba disclosed that the Chamber has restructured and now operates through four Centres.

    The prime Centre he revealed “is the Abuja Trade Centre (ATC). The other Centres are the Trade Dispute Resolution Centre (DRC), the Business Entrepreneurial Skills and Technology (BEST) Centre for Skills and Capacity Development as well as the Policy Advocacy Centre which is out to help MDAs to deliver on their respective mandates.

    The 13th Abuja International Trade Fair Prince Adetokunbo Kayode said “seeks to Promote accelerated development of commerce and industry; Promote revitalization and diversification of the Nigerian economy by promoting the nation’s non-oil exports; Direct attention to the role of private sector in the Nigerian economy; Provide access to resources and technology findings; and Attract foreign investment into the Nigerian economy.

    The ABUCCIMA boss expressed appreciation to the CBN for the apex bank’s swift response “which have succeeded in ridding our economy of sharp practices by some financial institutions or houses.”

    In the area of Development Finance, Prince Kayode applauded the CBN for ensuring “the supply of finance to various sectors of the economy which has promoted the growth of the economy in a holistic manner making development, welfare improvement to proceed at a faster rate.”

  • CBN, Sterling lauded for YIEDP scheme

    Entrepreneurs from Nsukka and its environs that benefited from the capacity building programme of the South East Entrepreneurship Development Centre (SEEDC) have extolled the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and Sterling Bank Plc for putting in place the Youth Innovative Entrepreneurship Development Programme (YIEDP).

    YIEDP was initiated to harness the latent entrepreneurial spirit of Nigeria’s teeming youth by providing timely and affordable loans to implement their business ideas. It is open to youths aged 18 to 35 who are serving youth corps members. Graduates with more than five years post NYSC experience are not eligible to participate.

    About 162 graduates from the Nsukka axis completed training at the SEEDC with 90 qualifying to access loans in sectors that include agriculture, food processing and preservation, arts and craft, Information and Communication Technology (ICT), energy, education and photography. The 162 graduates were trained at the South East Entrepreneurship Development Centre courtesy of ChukaUtazi, the Senator representing Enugu North Senatorial Zone.

    Lauding the Central Bank for setting aside funds for the programme, Ikechukwu Isaac Ifeanyi, a SEEDC trained entrepreneur and agripreneur, who spoke on behalf of beneficiaries, disclosed that it was a life changing opportunity for all participants as it will help unleash their true business potential.

     

     

  • NDE, CBN to empower youths

    The National Directorate of Employment (NDE) is to collaborate with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to raise about N17.7 billion for its ‘50 under 35 Project’ aimed at empowering young businessmen and women in all senatorial zones of the country.

    The NDE is also planning to partner the National Youths Council of Nigeria (NYCN) to train about 3, 700 youths in the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory.

    Its Director-General Dr. Nasir Ladan Mohammed, who made this known when the president of NYCN, Comrade Bello Bala Shagari, led other leaders of the group on a visit, said 50 youths who are under 35 and have businesses are the project’s prime target.

    Ladan said each of the youth would access up to N3 million from the money when it becomes available to boost their businesses and reposition them to provide employment to others.

    He said the NDE was established mainly to help train Nigerians in different areas and be employers rather than waiting for government to provide jobs.

    He said: “We are ready to partner any group as far as unemployment is concerned in this country. As such we are going to train about 100 youths, each from the 36 states and the FCT, making it about 3, 700. So, I urge you to send their names to us.

    “We are going to train for you and we are also going to settle them for you. This is because we will make sure unemployment is reduced in the country.”

    Speaking on the forthcoming general elections, Ladan urged the youth to mobilise their members to take advantage of the ongoing voters’ registration so as not to be disfranchised.

    He advised them against being used by politicians as thugs to disrupt the process of electioneering in the country.

  • CBN: Nigeria risks relapse into recession

    • ‘Skye Bank had N800billion deficit’

    •CBN reviewing MTN documents for resolution

    Nigeria risks a relapse into recession, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said yesterday.

    CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele told reporters at the end of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja that MPC members were worried that “the exit from the recession may be under threat as the economy slowed to 1.95 per cent and 1.50 per cent within the first and the second quarter 2018”.

    The CBN raised a similar alarm in 2015 and 2016 of an impending recession if certain threats to the economy were not addressed.

    The economy plunged into recession shortly after from end of 2016 through 2017.

    Emefiele said:  “The Monetary Policy Committee  appraised the microeconomic environment and noted that at its July meeting, modest stability was achieved in key indicators, including inflation, exchange rate and reserves. In particular, relative stability returned to the foreign exchange market, going by a robust level of external reserves with inflation trending downward for the 18th consecutive months. These gains so far achieved appear to be under threat of reversal following the new data which provides evidence of weakening fundamentals.”

    This threat to the economy, he said, comes from “rising inflation and pressure on the external reserves created by the capital flow reversal as the current challenges grow”. He noted that the inflationary measure was rebuilding, and “capital flow reversal has intensified as shown by the bearish trend in the equities market even though the exchange rate remains very stable.”

    The MPC, Emefiele said, “noted that the slowdown emanated from the oil sector, with strong linkages to employment and growth in the key sectors of the economy”.

    The committee urged the government to take advantage of the current rising trend in the oil prices to rebuild fiscal buffers, strengthen government finances in the medium term and reverse the current trend of decline in output growth.

    Other threats to the economy, which may aggravate the onset of recession, Emefiele warned, include “the potential impact of liquidity injection from election related spending, and increase in FAAC distribution, which is rising in tandem with increase in oil receipt.”

    The Committee “was concerned with the rising level of non-performing loans in the banking system, traced mainly to the oil sector and urged the banks to closely monitor and address the situation.”

    Members of the MPC were concerned over the weak intermediation by the Deposit Money Banks and its adverse impact on credit expansion and investment growth by the private sector.

    The MPC noted that the economy was still confronted with growth challenges and inflationary pressure but reiterated the need for synergy between the monetary and fiscal authorities as availed option for macroeconomic stability.

    The MPC also called on the fiscal authorities “to intensify the implementation of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) to stimulate economic activities, bridge the output gap and create employment.”

    The committee lamented that the threats to the food supply chain in major food producing states due to poor infrastructure, flooding and security challenges may lead to a “rise in food prices, contributing to the uptake in the headline inflation”.

    However, the committee was optimistic that as harvests progress, “in the coming months, pressure on food prices would gradually continue to recede while growth enhancing measures would over the medium term, have some moderating impact on food prices”.

    The MPC called on the government to fast track implementation of the 2018 budget to help jump start sustainable economic recovery and to facilitate passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill to increase contribution to the overall GDP.

    Takeover of Skye bank

    On the takeover of Skye Bank and the change of its name to Polaris Bank, Emefiele said: “The strategic health of the Nigerian banking system remains sound. In every chain, there will always be strong points and weak points in a chain, but what we will continue to do is to make sure that that chain remains strong in all aspects of it.”

    On Skye Bank, the CBN Governor maintained that he would “love to see a situation where banks are not liquidated, that we have to think outside the box to see how much we can ensure that we have more banks in the country than have less number of banks in the country, and that is what we are doing.”

    The situation with Skye Bank, he explained, “is that as at two years ago when the news broke that the bank had slid into negative capital as a result of Non-Performing Loan at that time, we compelled the entire board and executives to resign and they did”.

    “After that, before we conducted an internal audit, the hole (financial gap) was about N370 billion .After the forensic audit, it came to the level it was today, which is almost about N800 billion. So what we did was to say that having established a hole at this level, tax payers’ money will be invested in this bank as a loan.

    “So we decided that there is a need to let shareholders know, particularly those that have lost their investment, we will try to make sure that small investors remain protected.

    “It is for this reason that the name had to be changed from Skye bank to a sexy name, Polaris Bank. The name had to be changed for legal reasons, having got to the point where the Central Bank of Nigeria has invested close to N800 billion in this bank. At some point it must be seen to be owned by the CBN until we find investors that can pay a fair price for the bank. That is the reason why the name had to change from Skye Bank to Polaris Bank.”

    On whether Polaris was registered or not before it assumed control of Skye bank, Emefiele said: “The insinuations that the company wasn’t registered is false. It was first of all registered as a limited liability company about three weeks ago and it was registered as a bank on Friday, which is a day before we took that action.

    “We should look beyond all that and focus on the real issue, which is that we are embarking on a journey to keep a bank alive, to protect depositors’ monies and also ensure that we don’t throw over 5,000 staff out into the labour market.”

    Face off with MTN

    On the face off with MTN and four other banks, the CBN Governor explained that it was “important to know that the $8.1 billion is the dollar equivalent of MTN’s naira generated from their profit. So, I would neither call it a fine or a penalty.

    “What CBN sought by asking MTN to return that money is that we want a reversal of that transaction because it was not finally authorised by the CBN, and because the fund moved through these four banks, the quantum of dollars that passed through the banks is what we said the banks needed to remit back, or the company needed to remit back to the CBN through the banks,”Emefiele said.

    He went on: “It did not mean that these were the banks’ obligation and we understand that there was some interpretation in some quarters that aside from the naira penalty, that there was some conclusion that those dollars attributed to have been remitted by these banks on behalf of MTN were indeed the liabilities of the bank and that is why we provided a clarification to the banks when they called us that the liability is that of MTN and not theirs and that the CBN was not in any position or in any way going to debit the banks for the dollar because it was not their liability.”

    Emefiele said he felt vindicated that “in the history of the banking sector, I, at least gave a chance where the regulator, the governor sitting in the meeting, the Director, Banking Supervision, with over 20 examiners sitting in a hall, with the company (MTN) and the banks, asking them to resolve the issue, because we agreed that MTN is an important telecom company in Nigeria.

    “After that meeting of May 25, 2018, the discussion was inconclusive. The CBN gave MTN and the banks one week to send documents, but it was not done. But realising the importance of this company, we gave extra two weeks for them to provide relevant documentation to the examiners. Unfortunately, this didn’t happen and we felt that we couldn’t wait indefinitely and that is the reason we released the investigation reports.”

    “Right now, they have responded and provided documents which I have sent to the examiners to review. We will go through the pain again to invite the banks and MTN to prove their case, because it is normal that we should allow them to clear themselves and that is what we are doing. I believe that in due course, we should make a final call on this subject.

    At the end of the MPC meeting, the committee decided by a vote of seven members to retain the MPR at 14 per cent. However, three of the seven members voted to raise Cash Reserve Requirement by 150 basis points. The other three members voted to raise the MPR by 25 basis points.

    The MPC retained the MPR at 14 per cent, retained the Asymetric Corridor at +200 and -500 basis points around the MPR, retained the CRR at 22.5 per cent. However, other members believed that the CRR should be raised to 24 per cent, which actually signaled that they preferred to tighten and to retain the liquidity ratio at 30 per cent.

    Before arriving at this decision, the committee identified two likely policy options: tightening or maintaining the status quo ante.

    By tightening, it would have tamed inflationary measure, tamed the reversal of portfolio capital, improved the external reserves position and any other position and maintained stability in the foreign exchange market.

    Conversely, the committee noted that raising rate would further weaken growth, as credit would become more expensive, non-performing loan will increase further, leading to a deceleration in output.

    “In the committee’s opinion, the upward adjustment would not only signal the bank’s commitment to price stability but also its desire to maintain all policy interest rate,” Emefiele said.

    A decision to hold all policy parameter, however “will sustain natural improvement in output growth,” Emefiele said, adding: “There is need to maintain the current policy stance and await a clearer understanding of the quantum and timing of liquidity injection into the economy before deciding on possible adjustment.

  • CBN revokes Skye Bank’s licence

    It is all over for Skye Bank Plc in Nigeria after the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) last night withdrew the operating licence of the commercial bank.

    However, the CBN said depositors’  funds remain safe .

    Governor of the CBN,  Godwin Emefile,, broke the news at a press conference in Lagos.

    Emefiele with whom were   Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) Managing Director, Umaru Ibrahim, and Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria Managing Director, Ahmed Kuru, said the apex bank took the decision to stop Skye Bank from continuously relying on CBN’s intervention to remain afloat.

    A new bank, Polaris, has been established to assume the ownership of the assets and liabilities of Skye Bank.

    The NDIC  has injected N786 billion into the new bank.

    The funds , according to Umaru Ibrahim, the NDIC Managing Director, are a long-time loan priced at single digit interest rate.

    He said the liquidation of defunct Skye Bank will commence immediately and that depositors’ funds remain safe.

    Ibrahim said that new investors are expected to see the value in the new bank and buy it from the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria which is the new owner of Polaris Bank. The management of the defunct bank was however retained for its good performance.

    The defunct Skye Bank had been on the CBN’s lifeline since July 2016 and the apex bank says it can no longer continue to intervene to keep the bank liquid.

    Emefiele  said the defunct Skye Bank relied on the liquidity support of the CBN, and for the CBN to continue to support it, it must be owned by the Federal Government.

    He said: “You will recall that on 4th July, 2016, we took a regulatory action on Skye Bank Nigeria PLC. Specifically, this action led to the resignation of the chairman, all non-executive directors on the board as well as the managing director, deputy managing director, and the two longest-serving executive directors on the management team.”

    Continuing, he said the proactive action was informed by unacceptable corporate governance lapses as well as the persistent failure of Skye Bank PLC to meet minimum thresholds in critical prudential and adequacy ratios, which culminated in the bank’s permanent presence at the CBN Lending Window.

    The focus of the action then, he added, was to save depositors’ funds and to ensure that the bank continued as a going concern, being a systemically important bank. Part of our intention was also to stem the imminent job losses to staff if a liquidation option had been adopted. These objectives have been fully achieved and the bank has been able to meet customer obligations, having curtailed the liquidity haemorrhage and restored depositor confidence, he stated.

    Emefiele said the bank’s performance has improved considerably compared to the pre-July 2016 era.

    “The result of our examinations and forensic audit of the bank have, however, revealed that the Skye Bank requires urgent recapitalisation as it can no longer continue to live on borrowed times with indefinite liquidity support from the CBN. The shareholders of the bank have been unable to recapitalize it.

    “As a responsible and responsive regulator and in consultation with the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation(NDIC), we have decided to establish a bridge bank, Polaris Bank, to assume the assets and liabilities of Skye Bank. The strategy is for the Asset Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON) to capitalize the bridge bank and begin the process of sourcing investors to buy out AMCON. By this decision, the licence of the defunct Skye Bank is hereby revoked.

    “We wish to assure all depositors that under this arrangement, their deposits shall remain safe and that normal banking services shall continue in the new bank on Monday, 24th September, 2018, to enable customers to transact their businesses seamlessly.

    “Thus, all customers of Skye Bank shall be automatic customers of the new bank and their accounts and records duly purchased by Polaris Bank.

  • Abia to establish Microfinance bank to assist SMEs

    Mr Gabriel Igboko, Abia State Commissioner for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), says the State Government has concluded plans to establish SME micro finance bank in October to assist small scale entrepreneurs in the state.

    Igboko disclosed this in an interview with the Agency of Nigeria on Friday in Umuahia.

    He said the bank was one of the three agricultural SME programmes of the state government already approved by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    The commissioner explained that the government would, through the bank, do disbursements to other SME bodies, so that they could have soft loans that were not normally available in commercial banks.

    He said: “by October, we would have completed all formalities to have Abia SME microfinance bank established.

    “The governor has since given his approval. We have gone to the CBN and we have met all the conditions.

    “We are just trying to tie all the necessary loose ends in terms of documentation.

    “The micro-finance bank identifies those businesses that would come for as small as N20,000 loans or N50,000 and even up to N500, 000 loans.”

    Read Also: ‘Emenike is Abia APC’s only credible governorship aspirant’

    He explained that the bank would be disbursing funds to other CBN approved programmes of government that included the Commercial Agricultural Scheme (CAS) and the industrial starch plant.

    Igboko further said that the state government would engage over 10, 000 youths within six months in the commercial agriculture programme also billed to take off in October.

    According to him, everybody in the state, including civil and public servants would be encouraged to have their own farms under the scheme.

    He said that the state government had already made available about 10, 000 hectares of land for the scheme.

    “Every person will have a farm of at least one hectare, but no individual is allowed to have more than three hectares, so that it is not monopolized,” Igboko said.

    The commissioner also said that the industrial starch plant would be the first of its kind in West Africa.

    He said the foreign partners had already done the feasibility study, adding that it would take the state to another level of industrialization.

    “We already have an off taker that is asking for 38 metric tonnes of cassava starch per annum. The whole of Southeast of Nigeria cannot produce up to 30 metric tonnes per annum.

    “In fact, we will involve our neighboring states like Akwa Ibom, Imo and Ebonyi. Abia alone cannot meet the demands for the kind of farming we are talking about,” he said.

    NAN

  • N5.87b fine: CBN reviews new evidence from banks, MTN

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is reviewing new evidence from four banks and MTN Nigeria over the sanctions slammed on them by the regulator, it was learnt yesterday.

    The banks – Standard Chartered Bank, Stanbic-IBTC, Citibank and Diamond Bank – were last month fined N5.87 billion by the apex bank for breach of capital importation policy.

    The CBN had accused the banks of remitting foreign exchange with irregular Certificates of Capital Importation (CCIs) issued on behalf of some offshore investors of MTN Nigeria Communications Limited. The banks and MTN Nigeria have denied any wrongdoing.

    According to the CBN, the lenders were asked to refund $8,134,312,397.63 for what it described as ‘flagrant violation of extant laws and regulations of the country, including the Foreign Exchange (Monitoring and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1995 of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Foreign Exchange Manual, 2006’.

    In a statement yesterday, CBN Director, Corporate Communications, Isaac Okorafor, said: “In response to the recent regulatory actions, the banks and MTN are engaging the CBN and have provided additional information which is currently being reviewed with a view to arriving at an equitable resolution.

    “We assure all investors that the integrity of the CCI regime remains sacrosanct and there shall be no retroactive application of foreign exchange rules and regulations.”

    The regulator also defended its N5.87 billion fine on the banks over alleged capital importation breaches on $8.1 billion transactions involving MTN Nigeria. The apex bank has insisted that the sanctions will not deter foreign investors from coming to invest in Nigeria.

    Okorafor, said the apex bank acknowledges the public interest over sanctions recently imposed on four deposit money banks (DMBs). The apex bank said it welcomes all legitimate investors to take advantage of the enormous investment opportunities in Nigeria.

    “We wish to restate that the CBN will continue to welcome foreign investments and investors. Indeed, some of our recent innovations and reforms of the Foreign Exchange regime such as the introduction of the Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange (NAFEX) window are designed to simplify foreign exchange regulations.

    “Furthermore, the delegation of the issuance of Certificates of Capital Importation (CCIs) to commercial and merchant banks some years ago was done to instill confidence in the investor community and encourage the flow of foreign direct and portfolio investments into the Nigerian economy.

    The sanctions on the banks arose due to irregularities with respect to repatriations made on behalf of MTN Nigeria Limited and were not in any way designed to restrict access to investor returns.

    “In response to the recent regulatory actions, the banks and MTN are engaging the CBN and have provided additional information which is currently being reviewed with a view to arriving at an equitable resolution.

    “We assure all investors that the integrity of the CCI regime remains sacrosanct and there shall be no retroactive application of foreign exchange rules and regulations”.

  • DMO: CBN didn’t increase rates to attract investors

    The Debt Management Office (DMO) has dismissed claims that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) ‘increased’ rates to ‘attract’ investors at the Nigeria Treasury Bill (NTB) auction.

    The debt office also denied insinuations that the higher interest rates on NTB are due to fears of capital flight ahead of the 2019 general election.

    It said sinceforeign investors still participate in the domestic fixed income securities markets, it  is wrong to attribute the Auction Rate to fears about capital flight. To buttress this point, Interest Rates on NTBs in the first half of 2017 were much higher than the present rates, at a time when there was no election approaching”.

    Shedding more light on how NTB interest rates are derived, the statement said “investors bid at the NTBs Auction at their own Interest Rates, thus the Rates on NTBs are not predetermined or determined by the CBN or the DMO. The Rates at which the investors bid is entirely at their discretion, but will typically depend on prevailing secondary market rates, their portfolio needs and investment preferences.”

    It added that “in allotting to bidders oftentimes, the DMO and CBN will also be guided by similar factors and the implications for markets and macroeconomic stability. Taking into account all these factors, the Interest Rates at the Auctions will ultimately be determined by demand and supply.”

    NTBs are the Federal Government of Nigeria’s short-term debt instruments issued regularly by the DMO through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), which in this instance, is the DMO’s agent.

  • CBN, MTN, 4 Banks working to resolve impasse

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the four banks recently sanctioned and alongside MTN are reviewing new information to reach a mutually agreeable resolution of the impasse.
    Director, Corporate Communications of the CBN Mr. Isaac Okorafor made this disclosure last night in Abuja. According to him, “four Banks and MTN Okorafor disclosed “are engaging the CBN and have provided additional information which is currently being reviewed with a view to arriving at an equitable resolution.”
    The recent sanctions on the banks he said “arose due to irregularities with respect to repatriations made on behalf of MTN Nigeria Limited and were not in any way designed to restrict access to investor returns.”
    Okorafor noted that “the delegation of the issuance of Certificates of Capital Importation (CCIs) to commercial and merchant banks some years ago was done to instill confidence in the investor community and encourage the flow of foreign direct and portfolio investments into the Nigerian economy.”
    According to the CBN spokesman, “some of our recent innovations and reforms of the Foreign Exchange regime such as the introduction of the NAFEX window, are designed to simplify foreign exchange regulations.”
    The CBN assured all investors that the integrity of the Certificates of Capital Importation (CCIs) regime remains sacrosanct and there shall be no retroactive application of foreign exchange rules and regulations.
    Okorafor also assured foreign investors that there will not be retroactive application of its foreign exchange rules and regulations
    He said the assurance had become necessary in order to let foreign investors know that “the CBN will continue to welcome foreign investments and investors.”
    This overture to foreign investors Okorafor noted is in reaction to tension generated over the sanction it imposed on four banks and Telecoms company MTN.
    The CBN he said “welcomes all legitimate investors to take advantage of the enormous investment opportunities in Nigeria.”