Tag: cbn

  • CBN recovers N50bn excess charges from banks

    CBN recovers N50bn excess charges from banks

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) said on Wednesday it has recovered over N50 billion from banks in excess charges imposed on customers in the last three years.

    This amount, the CBN said has been returned to bank customers who suffered from these excessive charges.

    Speaking at the ongoing Abuja International Trade fair, the Acting Director of Corporate Communications at the CBN, Mr. Isaac Okorafor, said the apex bank was committed to ensuring that bank customers are not burdened with excessive charges from their banks.

    Okorafor urged bank customers to go to the CBN website to see the approved charges required by banks.

    Besides visiting the website, Okorafor advised the banking public to report excessive charges they feel their banks had imposed on them.

    The CBN spokesman also said the apex bank has so far disbursed N43.92 billion to local farmers through the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP), an agricultural intervention programme initiated by the bank.

    Okorafor said the programme was done in partnership with 13 participating financial institutions with over 200,000 small holder farmers from 29 states.

  • CBN boosts forex market with $195m injection

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday intervened in the Inter-bank Foreign Exchange Market to the tune of $195 million.

    The excercise was  in continuation of its efforts to sustain foreign exchange (forex) liquidity.

    Figures released by the apex bank showed that it offered a total sum of $100 million to the wholesale segment, while the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) segment received the sum of $50 million. The invisibles segment, comprising tuition fees, medical payments and Basic Travel Allowance (BTA), among others, received $45 million.

    The CBN Acting Director, Corporate Communications Department, Isaac Okorafor, while confirming the figures, said the apex bank was pleased with the state of the forex market, adding that the Bank will continue to intervene in order to sustain the liquidity in the market and guarantee the international value of the naira.

    Okorafor reiterated the apex bank’s determination to sustain the provision of foreign exchange with a view to ensuring liquidity in the market and enhance accessibility and affordability for genuine end users.

    According to him, the bank remained determined to achieve its objective of rates convergence, hence the unrelenting injection of intervention funds into the foreign exchange market.

    It will be recalled that the CBN last week intervened in the various segments of the Forex market with the sum of $698.5 million.

    Meanwhile, the naira continued to maintain its stability in the forex market, exchanging at an average of N364/$1 in the BDC segment of the market.

  • CBN: why Nigerians are scared of retirement

    CBN: why Nigerians are scared of retirement

    The Programme Director of the North Central Zonal Outreach of the Central Bank of Nigeria Entrepreneurship Development Center (CBN-EDC), Professor Cashmir Obialom,  said civil servants are scared of retirement because they have not embraced entrepreneurship which could secure their future.

    Cashmir who delivered an entrepreneurship talk at Independence Day Party organized by ATM Beauty Empire in Minna, said after retirement, the future of the civil servant is unsecured as their gratuity and pension is not been given as at when due.

    He said entrepreneurship can secure the future of every civil servant and individuals, and urged  civil servants to acquire a skill that will help them to be entrepreneurs.

    “Nigerians are afraid of retirement because they do not know what is next after retirement especially when their gratuity is not being given to them on time.”

    Cashmir said entrepreneurship is the only solution to the increasing rate of unemployment in the nation, lamenting that most of the youths are not ready to go into entrepreneurship. “The problem with Nigeria youths is that they do not like wasting their time and they remain jobless because they do not value time.”

    In her address, the Director, ATM Beauty Empire, Antonia Asabe Moses, said  the programme is intened to encourage the youths into exploring their talents and embracing entrepreneurship as well as to celebrate the nation’s 57th independence day.

    She sued for peace and unity among Nigerians, saying although conflict was inevitable, the ability to resolve conflicts would go a long way in keeping the nation together as one entity. “Conflict is inevitable, it always comes. The ability to resolve conflict is what is  necessary for us as a nation . We need to have respect for each other and value every tribe, religion and culture.”

    She urged youths to stop looking for white collar jobs, adding that the nation is in need of the services the youths can offer, especially as so many gifts and talents are wasting in the nation.

    “Stop waiting for the government. Stand up and do something. The world and our nation is waiting for the manifestation of your gifts and talents,” adding, “we can build up Nigeria if we embrace entrepreneurship.”

  • CBN stops banks from taking charges on bulk transfers

    CBN stops banks from taking charges on bulk transfers

    Commercial banks can no longer take Short Message Service (SMS) charges on bulk bank transfers done through the Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS), The Nation learnt at the weekend.

    The RTGS is an interbank funds transfer system on “real time” basis and “gross”. Settlement in the “real time” means that the transaction takes place almost immediately.

    The banks were previously charging N4 per transaction or text message fee on all bulk transfers, but were directed by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to halt such fees in the interest of customers.

    The CBN’s directive has further cut banks’ multiple revenue streams that form a major part of the huge profits they declared in recent years.

    A Customer Service Officer in one of the Tier-1 banks told The Nation that most salary accounts that are funded through bulk transfers are no longer getting transaction alerts because the fee cannot be absorbed by customers or charged on their accounts.

    The source said banks were complying with the CBN directive while customers under such arrangements are expected to use bank-specific digital codes to check their account balances as they can no longer get bulk-transfers related transaction alerts.

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) had directed that any person subscribing to any of the Nigerian GSM networks must not be charged more than N4 for SMS, sent to other networks. The NCC set a price cap of N4 per message for all domestic Off-Net Messaging Service in line with Sections 4 and Chapter V11 of the Nigerian Communications Act (NCA), 2003.

    Speaking on e-payment at a meeting with financial journalists in Lagos, CBN Director, Banking & Payments System Department, ‘Dipo Fatokun, described e-payment as any form of payment that allows the use of electronics system to initiate, authorise and confirm the transfer of money between two parties.

    The transaction reason, he said, could be for the payment for goods and services, settlement of obligations, gifts among others.

    He explained that e-payments are driven by a network of interconnected systems, which make it possible for exchanges of value between payer and payee, sender and receivers or donor and donee.

    “Banks, Payment Service Providers (PSPs), Financial Authorities and Central Banks play various roles in developing the payments system infrastructure to drive electronic payments, that is nationally utilized. The e— payments industry refers to all stakeholders, operators, regulators, infrastructures, merchants, retailers and the final consumers of the payments products and services. Payment technologies and platforms bind the industry together in a tight ecosystem,” he said.

    Fatokun disclosed that global non-cash (electronic payment) transaction volumes grew at 8.9 per cent to reach $387.3 billion in 2014, an increase, driven by accelerated growth in developing markets.

    “Cards have been the fastest growing payments instrument since 2010, as cheque use has declined consistently and significantly. Debit cards accounted for the highest share (45.7 per cent) of global e-payment transactions and were also the fastest growing (12.8 per cent) payments instrument in  2014,” he said.

    According to him, global non-cash volumes are estimated to have grown by 10.1 per cent to reach $426.3 billion in 2015, aided by high growth in emerging economies across the world, including Africa even as the Nigerian e-payments industry has been evolving in line with the evolution in global payments in both Wholesale and Retail systems.

    “Banks, PSPs, and the CBN have played various roles in developing the payments system and creating products and channels for electronic payments. The Retail Payments Transformation Programme of the CBN has led to the introduction of various electronic payments products and services by operators in the industry. The electronic products are gradually reducing the usage of cheques and cash, as noticed consistently in the annual performance report since the inception of the Cash-less Policy in 2012,” he said.

    He said the volume and value of transactions based on cheques and National Electronic Funds Transfer (NEFT) have been consistently reducing yearly since 2013, while same data for the Nigeria Interbank Settlement System- NIBSS Instant Payment (NIP), Automated Teller Machine (ATM), and mobile money channels have been on the increase. This is an indication of users’ preference for instant value channels over non-instant payment channels.

    “The ATM Channel accounts for the highest volume of transactions, while the NIP accounts for the highest value of transactions annually. This is because the ATM is usually the e-payment channel that new and lower value account holders always interface with, while corporates and upwardly mobile middle class customers make transfers using NIP,” he said.

    The CBN director disclosed that banks and other e-payment service providers operate in a highly regulated environment. “Regulation is necessary to ensure that operators focus on delivering products and services that enable compliance, efficiency, financial stability and a positive customer experience. The attempt to regulate electronic payments in Nigeria started with the CBN Electronic Banking Guidelines, issued in August 2003,” he said.

    Also, in furtherance of its effort to promote and facilitate the development of efficient and effective systems for the settlement of transactions, including the development of electronic payments system, the CBN has since 2008, issued and reviewed several e-payment related framework, guidelines and circulars.

  • CBN puts foreign reserves position at $32.16b

    CBN puts foreign reserves position at $32.16b

    The foreign exchange reserves were up 1.52 percent from a month earlier to $32.16 billion by September 22, latest Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) data showed on Friday.

    Nigeria’s dollar reserves were up almost 30 percent from a year earlier. The bank did not provide a reason for the increase, which could be a result of a rise in global oil prices and its own crude production at home.

    The reserves are regaining its lost grounds, after crude oil prices rose steadily to $55 per barrel even as the restiveness in the Niger Delta has been curtailed.

    CBN Acting Director, Corporate Communications, UgochukwuOkorafor, said the upward swing in reserves is coming despite continuous foreign exchange interventions by the apex bank to stabilize the naira. The CBN has disbursed over $7 billion into the interbank foreign exchange market in the last four months and has promised to sustain the interventions to keep the naira stable.

    The foreign exchange reserves rose by $7 billion in six months to hit $31 billion at the end of March, a figure that restored the total to a level last seen in August 2015. Also, contributing to the recovery are the disbursement of $600 million by the African Development Bank (AfDB) in November last year and the recent sale of N1.5 billion Eurobond.

    Also, the CBN said it is not thinking about reviewing the policy or removing any of the 41 items on the list of items not valid for forex from the official window.

    The CBN said the forex restriction policy was introduced in 2015 given that the country was facing the most difficult time in its economic history, following the collapse of the commodity prices, unprecedented foreign exchange crunch, depleting foreign reserve and highly devalued naira.

    The CBN said it was the need to manage the excessive demand for foreign exchange that made it crucial for it to adopt a policy that prioritised the supply of dollars to critical sectors of the economy to provide inputs to keep production.

    It underlined the need to establish appropriate structures to support robust domestic production, with imports used to supplement shortfalls of inputs or final products.

  • Expert advocates raise in capital requirements for microfinance banks

    Expert advocates raise in capital requirements for microfinance banks

    The Chairman of Enhancing Financial Innovation and Access (EFInA), Miss Modupe Ladipo, has advised Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to raise capital requirements for microfinance banks to drive financial inclusion.

    Ladipo gave the advice at the Accion Microfinance Bank Financial Inclusion Conference held on Saturday in Lagos.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the conference had the theme: “Making Financial Inclusion a Certainty in Nigeria by 2020’’.

    The year 2020 Financial Inclusion targets to provide universal financial access to all working age adults by 2020.

    According to the EFInA boss, although more than 50 microfinance policies have been formulated to drive financial inclusion, a research conducted in 2016 shows that 41.6 per cent of Nigerians are financially excluded.

    “In 2008, research conducted by EFInA revealed that about 53.5 per cent were financially excluded but CBN monetary policies such as mobile money transactions, agency banking system and micro insurance reduced it to 29.1 in 2014.

    “ But as at 2016, the percentage of the financially excluded shot up to 41.6 per cent.’’ she said.

    She claimed that the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM)’s micro insurance policy had not impacted much on financial inclusion.

    The microfinance expert said that there was an urgent need for CBN to increase capital requirements for microfinance banks so that more Nigerians could be brought into the financial net through micro finance.

    “How many Nigerians will benefit from N20 million capital requirement for unit microfinance banks?’’ she asked.

    The Managing Director of ACCION Microfinance Bank, Mrs Olubunmi Lawson, said that the bank would continually drive financial inclusion using digital process.

    She said that the bank had granted N6 billion loans to 169,000 customers since it was established in 2006.

    “The bank also has 60 branches including in seven states.”

    NAN reports that Accion Microfinance Bank was established to economically empower micro-entrepreneurs and low income earners by providing financial services in a sustainable, ethical and profitable manner.

  • CBN deepens forex supply with $308.5m intervention

    CBN deepens forex supply with $308.5m intervention

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday continued to sustain liquidity in the foreign exchange (forex) market, boosting it with $308.5 million supply. This move is expected to further ensure liquidity and stability in the forex market.

    The CBN had opened the week with the injection of $195 million ahead of Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) decisions. A total sum of $195 million was offered in three segments of the market.

    In the wholesale Secondary Market Intervention Sales (SMIS) of the inter-bank Foreign Exchange Market, it auctioned $100 million and also intervened in the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and invisible segments, with the sum of $50 million and $45million respectively. This brings the total intervention for the week to a sum of $503.5 million.

    The CBN Acting Director, Corporate Communications Department, Isaac Okorafor, who gave the figures in Abuja yesterday, announced that the latest intervention of the CBN  in the retail segment was part of the regular interventions of the apex bank, in line with its commitment to sustain liquidity to meet genuine requests in the market.

    While warning against speculations in the market, Okorafor said the CBN had put necessary checks in place to guard against the activities of speculators.  He stressed the determination of the bank to continue its forex intervention. He encouraged genuine users of foreign exchange to approach their banks, as the banks had enough forex to meet their demand.

  • High yield of maize in 2017 excite Oyo farmers

    High yield of maize in 2017 excite Oyo farmers

    Farmers in Oyo State on Thursday expressed happiness following better yield experienced during their second set of maize harvesting in 2017.

    Mr Olumide Ayinla, the state Chairman of All Farmers Association of Nigeria ( AFAN ), made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Ibadan.

    He said the high yield was due to adequate rainfall and the sensitisation programme held for farmers on prevention of armyworm pest by research institute.

    “We have better maize yield this year than last year because of the improvement in the rains, rice farmers also started planting about four weeks ago and the rice is germinating well.

    “We hope the rain continues till November.

    “Also the sensitisation on how to plant maize, prevent/reduce the armyworm pest invading maize farms, by research institute, especially Institute of Agricultural Research and Training (IAR&T) helped us to get the good yield.

    “The herbicide sold to us at a subsidised rate at the Federal Ministry of Agriculture supported us too,” he said.

    According to the chairman, the best time to plant cassava and water melon is between September and November as the two don’t require much water to germinate.

    He, therefore, urged farmers to start planting the crops as soon as possible and hope for a good yield during the time of harvest.

    Ayinla urged the Federal Government through the CBN to look into the loan issue the farmers applied for in 2016.

    “We applied for loan from CBN since last year September but till now we have not seen anything, they promised it will be given to us within 31 days but now is getting to 13 months.

    “Lack of fund is seriously affecting our farming, also lack of good roads to our farms; Fulani herdsmen invading our farms are really giving us concern and limiting our production,” he said.

    He further appealed to the state government to provide storage facilities for farmers to store and preserve produce to avoid scarcity in dry season.

    “They can divide us into three zones in Oyo state for example and create the facilities in the zones, that will still be better for us,” Ayinla said.

  • Reps give CBN, Auditor-General six weeks to provide TSA’s report

    Reps give CBN, Auditor-General six weeks to provide TSA’s report

    The House of Representatives has given the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Office of the Auditor-Genera of the Federation (OAGF) six weeks to provide  detailed reconciliation and audit reports of the amounts generated so far in the Treasury Single Account (TSA) of the Federal Government.

    The House said it’s ultimatum was necessitated by the need to know the cureent and true status of the TSA, going by reports that not all Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) have complied with the August 2015 directives of the Federal Government on the policy.

    The Abubakar Danburam-led ad-hoc committee investigating the status of the TSA, said the November 10 deadline remained sacrosanct, adding that no Money Deposit Banks (MDBs) is excluded as long as they have MDAs’ account with them.

    The Committee held a closed door meeting with officials from the OAGF, the Auditor-General’s office as well as CBN and some commercial banks.

    Danburam said the Committee was forced to take the decision following revelation of the  Director of Funds, Accountant-General’s Office, Alexander Adeyemi, that there were still leakages in collecting funds from agencies despite the existence of TSA.

    The Committee learnt last month that the TSA has not been audited by the Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation since its inception, two years ago.

  • CBN plans N130.37b treasury bills auction

    CBN plans N130.37b treasury bills auction

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will sell N130.37 billion worth of treasury bills at an auction planned for October 4.

    The bank will offer N28.69 billion in three-month paper, N33.49 billion in six-month bill and N68.18 billion in one-year note. Results of the auction will be announced on the same day.

    The central bank issues treasury bills twice a month to help the government to finance its budget deficit, curb money supply growth and provide an avenue for lenders to manage liquidity.

    The T-bills’ maturities range between three months and a year and would be raised today, according to the CBN. T-bills are marketable short-term money market securities that serve the purpose of raising money for the government and also help in monetary policy management of the CBN.

    The CBN issues treasury bills to raise cash to fund the government budget deficit, help manage banking system liquidity and curb rising inflation.

    The CBN had on August 3, raised N245.18 billion ($773.44 million) worth of T-bills to settle short-term obligations. The CBN issued N45.18 billion in three-month debt, N80 billion of six-month paper and N120 billion, of one year bills in a Dutch auction, traders said. Indicative rates for the auction are 16 per cent for three-months, 18 per cent for six-months and 18.5 per cent for one-year bills. The auction’s results will be published the day after the sale.

    The main investors in government securities are mainly pension funds and commercial banks which control more than 60 per cent of the market, followed by insurance funds and a few micro-finance institutions.

    Yields on fixed income securities have been rising in recent months with the CBN mopping up naira liquidity to try to lure back foreign investors who sold naira assets following the plunge in the price of oil, Nigeria’s economic mainstay