Tag: forex

  • Forex: 3,239 BDCs access $520m in four weeks

    Forex: 3,239 BDCs access $520m in four weeks

    The 3,239 bureaux de change (BDCs) approved by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) got $520 million from the apex bank dollar interventions in the last four weeks, The Nation has learnt.

    The funds, followed $40,000 per BDC weekly dollar allocations from the CBN, in its commitment to deepen liquidity in the foreign exchange market.

    A circular from the CBN confirmed the number of BDCs, even as the regulator has reiterated its commitment to continue funding key segments of the forex market.

    The last review of approved BDCs was in January when the CBN approved licences of 3,147 operators and 71 Finance Houses that met its N35 million and N100 million mandatory capital bases.

    The reviewed BDCs’ list was the first since May 29, lat year when the apex bank approved 2,998 operators to meet the foreign exchange needs of customers at the retail-end of the market.

    The CBN also approved 71 Finance Houses licences, from previous 65 operators, created to operate at the middle tier of the financial system and cater for the financial needs of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).

    The reforms in the Finance Houses sector have been ongoing for years. The CBN, to sanitise the sub-sector, revoked the licences of 208 finance companies and cancelled the approvals-in-principle of 462 others.

    The reforms, the CBN said, were made to have Finance Houses that were strong. The CBN said it woul continue to sanction Finance Houses that operate without licences.

    The CBN said the new approvals in BDCs and Finance Houses sectors was in line with its plan to deepen the foreign exchange market by getting more operators involved in the retail end of the market.

    Earlier, the CBN refunded almost N100 billion mandatory caution deposits to all the BDCs, after it stopped operators from accessing foreign exchange from official windows.  Each licensed BDC received N35 million from the apex bank.

    Another circular signed by CBN Director, Financial Policy & Regulation, Kelvin Amugo, said the decision was reached, following recent development  in the operations of BDCs in the economy. He added that the regulator will retain the N1 million licensing fee paid by each of the operators.

    The Association of Bureau De Change Operator of Nigeria (ABCON) President, Aminu Gwadabe, said the licensing of new BDCs was a positive development  expected to deepen dollar liquidity.

    He said the CBN reviews the list of operators on quarterly, adding that the list has growed from over 1,400 to its current figure.

    “There are more approvals expected. It is a welcome development,” he said.

    According to him, ABCON believes that despite the challenges facing the economy, the CBN and BDCs will continue to work together and find sustainable solutions that can help the country wriggle out of the ongoing forex crisis and achieve full economic recovery.

    “We have continuously assured the CBN and taken appropriate measures to ensure that purchased funds are disbursed to end users and for eligible transactions only. We also render weekly returns on purchases from the banks to Trade and Exchange Department of the apex bank.

    ‘’We also ensure strict compliance to the provisions of the anti-money laundering laws observance of appropriate Know-Your-Customer principles in the handling of forex transactions,” he said.

    The ABCON chief reiterated the need for the public to deal with only CBN-licensed BDCs and for the public to report erring operator for sanction.

  • We will meet revenue target – Customs

    We will meet revenue target – Customs

     Comptroller of Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Area I Command, Port Harcourt,  Mr. Kabiru Isiyaku, said the command is optimistic that it will meet its N33.3 billion revenue target for the year.

    Isiyaku stated this on Friday in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    “The revenue we collected in the first quarter of 2017 is more than what was collected in the first quarter of 2016.

    “Our revenue estimate for each month is N2.6 billion.

    “In the month of January 2017 we collected N1.5 billion,  February was  N1.9 billion and March was N6.8 billion;  almost N10 billion was collected for the quarter.

    ‘’We are expected to collect about seven billion naira but we collected about N10 billion so we have surpassed our target for the first quarter of 2017,” he said.

    Isiyaku attributed the first quarter performance to capacity-building and hard work of officers of the command.

    He said 100 per cent physical examination of cargoes had enabled NCS to identify some classification issues and valuation and raised demand notice.

    “It has helped us in meeting revenue collection in the first quarter,” he said.

    Isiyaku, however, said the depth of the Rivers ports had robbed the command of huge amount of money.

    “But I am sure that we will meet our revenue target of N33.3 billion since we have surpassed our revenue target in the first quarter of 2017.

    “The challenge we have at the wharf is the depth of the sea; it can only accommodate only about 25-tonne or 26-tonne vessels.

    ‘’You can see that it is affecting the number of vessels coming to berth in this Sea Port,” Isiyaku said.

    He pointed out that Central Bank of Nigeria’s policy which removed importers of 41 items from accessing from obtaining foreign exchange (FOREX) through the official market had affected importation.

    “The importers must have FOREX before they can do importation.

    “Our responsibility is to collect revenue; to bring in the cargo is outside the jurisdiction of NCS,” he said.

  • Forex: Reps reject move to prioritise construction industry

    The House of Representatives yesterday rejected the idea of encouraging the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to consider listing the construction industry in the priority list for foreign exchange (forex) liquidity along with other sectors.

    The lawmakers felt there was no need to prioritise forex access to construction industry players in spite of apparent infrastructural deficit facing the country.

    Segius Ogun (PDP, Edo) moved a motion that construction companies be prioritised along other critical sectors of the economy in accessing forex but was roundly defeated in a voice vote.

    The outcome of the vote shocked Speaker Yakubu Dogara but was left with no option but to rule against the motion.

    In his debate,  Ogun had noted that the construction industry plays a critical role in the socio-economic growth and enhancement of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of any nation through the development of infrastructure, provision of skilled and unskilled labour and generation of income.

    He said: “Most construction materials cost a lot of dollars to import and due to an increased cost of doing business, there are bound to be major price fluctuations with ongoing construction projects that will affect previous budgets negatively because the money quoted for some of the projects might no longer be enough to complete them due to increase in the prices of machineries and materials occasioned by forex challenges.

    “We are all aware of fluctuations in the rate of exchange of the naira to the dollar which is threatening the completion of those projects as the naira has been devalued from N155 to $1 to around N305 to $1 at the official rate and around N405 to $1 at the black market.

    “We should be concerned that there are many road projects that were awarded in the various states of the federation and the cost of completing them is over N2 trillion, while the value of the naira attached to those contracts had reduced as a result of the forex crisis, and paucity of fund is a major reason why many construction projects are abandoned, to the detriment of the nation’s infrastructural development.”

    His prayers that Committees on Works, Public Procurement and Banking and Currency be mandated  to work out modalities for achieving the objective and also breaking down payments into naira and dollars for all major construction projects also fell through.

  • New forex window triggers market confidence

    New forex window triggers market confidence

    foreign investors who exited Nigeria in the wake of the crash in crude oil prices and the subsequent currency crisis may be on their way back. The Investors’/Exporters’ Forex (FX) Window introduced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is the attraction. The window, which offers investors the opportunity to sell dollars at rates of their choice, provided they find willing buyers, is gradually restoring confidence to the forex market. Last week’s rally in equities market and stability enjoyed by the naira in the official and parallel markets have been attributed to rising investors’ confidence in the market over the new window, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    For two years, the Nigerian equities market and the foreign exchange (forex) market were in shambles.  The All Share Index (ALSI) was continuously shrinking and the naira weakened against other currencies, especially the dollar.

    But on April 24, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) opened a special forex window for investors and exporters. The “Investors’ & Exporters’ FX Window”, CBN’s Director in charge of Financial Markets Alvan Ikoku said, would boost liquidity in the forex market and ensure timely execution and settlement for eligible transactions by all parties.

    In this market, the FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange (FMDQ) gives a price quote based on its bi-daily survey of market rates. Many investors have welcomed the new window but not a few are concerned about the rate and the degree to which it will be allowed to truly float. So far, the feedback from the window has been positive for the market. In its first week, the rate traded between N374-380/$. The window closed at N382 on May 4.

    Group Head, Global Markets at Access Bank Plc, Dapo Olagunju, said the new window allows investors to sell dollars at any rate they choose and is expected to help bring investors’ confidence into the market.

    He said: “Investors/Exporters FX Window helps participants execute deals as based on their own market agreement. Today, both the dollar demand and supply sides are beginning to talk to each other and there is likely to be rate convergence soon,” he said.

    Continuing, he said that previously, the CBN had over $4 billion forex backlog, and found it difficult to settle ticket remittances of airlines. “Today, we are seeing customers buying Business Travel Allowances and Personal Travel Allowances with ease. It has been a difficult time for banks. We also see a regulator that is ready to sanction any bank that violates its set rules,” he said at a forex seminar organised by Access Bank in Lagos.

    Speaking on exchange rate stability, the Managing Director of Renaissance Capital (RenCap) Nigeria, Temi Popoola, described as inconsequential the naira’s exchange rate against the dollar. He said coming in and exiting without encumbrances remained the most important thing to investors.  “The argument should not be whether the naira is exchanged at N300 or N450 to the dollar. It should be whether investors will be able to come in and go out of the market at will”, he said.

     

    Forex interventions to continue

    Despite the lull in forex trading activities at the close of last week, the CBN has assured of its continued intervention in the inter-bank market.

    A reliable source at the CBN said that the bank was determined to ensure that the gains made by it in recent times, with regards to the stability of the exchange rate, are not eroded.

    Disclosing that the apex bank did not make major interventions all through the week ending May 12 because there was a surfeit of forex in the system, the source maintained the apex bank would continue to make necessary interventions to ensure the stability of the naira.

    The source further disclosed that the windows established by the CBN for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) as well as for investors and exporters were yielding the desired results by providing access to forex and easing pressure on the market.

    Speaking on the issue, CBN’s Acting Director, Corporate Communications, Isaac Okorafor, reiterated the bank’s commitment to ensure adequate forex supply to genuine customers to achieve the goal of forex rates convergence.

    The CBN had since February been involved in massive interventions in all segments of the interbank market to ensure forex liquidity and availability.

    Managing Director, Afrinvest West Africa Plc, Ike Chioke, said the Investors’/Exporters’ Forex (FX) Window is winning the confidence of foreign investors. He said the window attracted foreign investors’ appetite for Nigerian assets last week, leading to impressive appreciation in the equities market and stabilising the naira.

    He explained that renewed investor participation in equities saw the banking, consumer goods, oil & gas, industrial goods and insurance sector indices, gaining 22.3 per cent, 16.7 per cent, 8.4 per cent, 4.1 per cent and 2.7 per cent respectively since the launch of the I&E window.

    The volatility in the forex market has also subsided. The Nigerian Autonomous Foreign Exchange Rate Fixing (NAFEX) rates as published by FMDQ stood at N378.87/$1 at the beginning of last week while slightly appreciating by mid-week.

    However, a reversal of trend saw the rates inching back to N378.87/$1, indicating a flattish week-on-week close, but the CBN’s daily forex interventions continued to keep the rates stable at the official market. The rates opened the week at N304.70/$1 and appreciated to N304.60/$1 at the close of the week. At the parallel market, rates opened the week at N390/$1 and remained unchanged on four to five trading days, save for Friday, when rates appreciated to N386/$1.

    The ALSI trended on a 10-day bullish streak, due to the improvements in the forex market. Within the last two years, the exit of foreign portfolio investors from the equities market, given the perceived mispricing of the domestic currency, accounted for the drag witnessed in the equities market.

    The benchmark index has recorded a decline on only two trading days since the launch of the window on April 24, while appreciating 11.9 per cent post launch with year-to-date return currently at +4.9 per cent.

    “Our interactions with FX traders and Afrinvest equity brokerage desk suggest that the launch of the I&E FX window on the 21st of April, 2017 was the major “game changer” as the equities market has witnessed improved participation from foreign portfolio investors, especially last week,” the investment and research firm said in an emailed report.

    It hinged the current bullish trend in the market on foreign investors’ perception of activities within the forex market, particularly the  sustainability of the newly launched I&E FX window.

    “If managed appropriately, we expect to see influx of foreign investors which could potentially spark massive rallies in the market given the comparably cheaper valuation of Nigerian equities,” it said.

    The report also said that in the last two years, foreign investors’ appetite for local assets waned significantly on the back of currency crisis which in turn has fundamentally weakened macroeconomic performance, dragged corporate earnings and also impacted on equities market viability.

    The condition also lingered into this year as investors dumped equities for less risky investment opportunities in the fixed income market, especially given the current relatively high yield environment.

    “Accordingly, the negative performance of the Nigerian Bourse in 2016 (-16.9 per cent) was sustained as the year-to-date return of the benchmark index deteriorated as low as -8.5 per cent in March before marginal improvements were subsequently recorded,” it said.

    The Afrinvest report also linked the market rally to recent improvements in global oil prices above the $45/barrel benchmark, improvement in domestic production, currently above two mbpd, fiscal responsiveness – including the launch of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) by the Fedweral Government.

    Other reasons also include the successful issuance of $1.5 billion Eurobond, passage of 2017 budget – as well as recent positive readings in manufacturing PMI, which suggest possible rebound in economic activities from second quarter of this year.

    The report projected that this week:  “a similar performance as the I&E FX window has brought about a new price discovery in the forex market with rates on all segments of the market starting to show a bit of convergence. Also, at the official market we expect the CBN to continue to boost market liquidity through its forex interventions while keeping rates at this segment stable”.

    The benchmark indices at the Nigerian stock market showed average week-on-week gain of 7.46 per cent, equivalent to a net capital gain of N677 billion within the five trading sessions last week. The performance of the Nigerian equities outpaced returns in the global advanced and emerging markets as well as key African markets.

    The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) ALSI gained 8.74 per cent during the review period to close at 27,546.68 on May 10. Total market capitalisation closed at N9.52 trillion on May 3 – a 8.55 per cent gain from N8.77 trillion on April 19.

     

    How the new window works

    According to the CBN, forex supply to the window shall be through portfolio investors, exporters, authorised dealers and other parties with foreign currency to exchange to naira. The CBN said, it will be a market participant at the window to promote liquidity and professional market conduct.

    As part of the operational requirements of the window, the CBN said the exchange rates of the transactions would be as agreed between authorised dealers and their counterparties.

    The regulator also reserved the right to intervene as a buyer or seller, as it deems fit, in the window, even as information on transactions between authorized dealers shall be reported to the CBN on a daily basis.

    The approved transactions covered under the new window included invisible transactions, such as loan repayments; loan interest payments; dividends/income remittances; capital repatriation; management service fees and consultancy fees. Also on the list are: software subscription fees; technology transfer agreements; personal home remittances; bills for collection and any other trade-related payment obligations at the instance of the customer. Other eligible transactions, like ‘miscellaneous payments’ detailed under Memorandum 15 of the CBN foreign exchange manual, were covered by the new window.

    Ikoku said that transactions and bills for collection were eligible to purchase foreign currency sourced from the CBN forex window limited to secondary market intervention sales, wholesale (spot and forwards) only.

     

    Other forex windows

    The CBN has also opened a special forex window for SMEs. The window, which would allocate $20,000 per business per quarter, is to help the SMEs import “eligible finished and semi-finished items” needed for their businesses.

    The CBN said the bank’s special intervention was necessitated by its findings that a large number of SMEs were being crowded out of the forex space by large firms.

    “The sum of $20,000 per SME customer per quarter can be done through telegraphic transfer, subject to completion of Form ‘M’ supported with pro forma Invoice and the importer’s Bank Verification Number (BVN),” it said.

    He added that all the processing banks are to ensure that the importers submit relevant shipping documents not later than 60 days from the date of the transfer.

    The information posted on the CBN website defines SMEs as enterprises that have asset base (excluding land) of between N5 million and N500 million and a labour force of between 11 and 300.

  • Naira appreciates against dollar at parallel market

    Naira appreciates against dollar at parallel market

    The Naira on Monday appreciated against the dollar at the parallel market, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    The Nigerian currency gained three points to exchange at N388 to the dollar, stronger than N391 it traded on Friday, while the pound sterling and the Euro closed at N495 and N425.

    At the Bureau De Change (BDC) window, the Naira was sold at N362 to the dollar, while the pound sterling and the Euro closed at N495 and N423.

    Trading at the interbank market showed that the Naira closed at N305.7, while the pound sterling and the Euro closed at N453.18 and N386.28.

    Currency traders said the liquidity boost at the FOREX market had forced the naira to appreciate.

     

  • Tough times for heavy forex users

    Tough times for heavy forex users

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has overtime, pledged to meet all genuine foreign exchange (forex) demands of individuals and manufacturers. But that promise has collapsed in the face of rising forex scarcity and ongoing rationalisation of available forex for qualified users, especially manufacturers. Findings showed that banks now peg maximum forex approval per Letter of Credit (LC) at N50 million ($158,000). Manufacturers now source extra dollar for raw materials imports from the parallel market, with dire consequence on product costs and sustainability of their operations. That this is happening at a time more productive activities are needed to steer the economy out of recession and cut job losses across different segments of the economy is worrisome, writes COLLINS NWEZE. 

    It was Monday morning on April 24. As usual, the managing director of a Tier-1 bank was going through several files/requests on his table that needed urgent approval.

    The first on the list was a Letter of Credit (LC) of $200,000 from a leading Fast Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) manufacturing company meant for the importation of production raw materials.

    The LC is a letter from a bank to another bank (especially one in a different country) guaranteeing that a buyer’s payment to a seller will be received on time and for the correct amount. In the event that the buyer is unable to make payment on the purchase, the bank will be required to cover the full or remaining amount of the purchase.

    On seeing the LC, the bank chief took a deep breath, picked up the intercom and called the Head of Treasury to justify the request at this period of ‘severe dollar scarcity’.

    Expectedly, the request was promptly adjusted to N50 million ($158,000), before it was approved. In the face of severe dollar scarcity and need to ensure even distribution of available funds to critical segments of the economy, including manufacturers, lenders now peg maximum value of LC for approval at $158,000.

    The practice, which was confirmed by several bank customers affected by policy shift, is affecting the production volumes of major manufacturers and hurting turnover of major businesses.

    A source within the bank said any LC above $158,000 has to be approved by the managing director and such approval will depend on the forex availability within the period.

    “Customers can actually do LCs above $158,000, but have to source the excess from autonomous sources. The bank pegged it at that amount to ensure that the scarce dollar goes round. We know it is hurting businesses of our major customers, but we are only complying with directives from above,” the source told the reporter.

    Speaking further, the source explained that even where the LC customer is drawing from a facility account, the credit can only cover $158,000.

    “Anything outside this limit has to be approved by the managing director no matter how important the customer is,” the source said.

    Speaking also on the trend, Managing Director, Tempo Paper & Packaging Limited, Seun Obasanjo, said he opened three LCs before he was able to access $250,000 needed to import raw materials for his company.

    The company based in Otta, Ogun State, produces Adstar type polypropylene, agro-allied and shopping bags needed for the production requirements of cements and other products.

    “The money came in three tranches- $100,000; $100,000 and $50,000 for the required amount to be achieved. I believe the investor /exporter window opened by the CBN will increase dollar liquidity and help banks to meet their obligations better,” he said in a telephone chat with the reporter.

    Obasanjo said the banks have a big role to play in supporting the manufacturers, while the government should strive to fix the fundamental problems currently facing the economy, which include over dependence on crude oil, too much import and small export.

    He said every major manufacturer has felt pains of forex scarcity, adding that he bought dollar at N520/$ before the CBN interventions helped to stablise the local currency at current level. “For those of us employing people, we have no option than to stay in business no matter how much the naira exchanges against the dollar. People that need dollar to pay school fees, and perhaps medical bills may decide to wait until a favourable exchange rate is achieved, but manufacturers have to maintain their customer base, and remain in business. For us, commerce has to go on,” he said.

    He said the CBN has done well in stablising the exchange rate, but believed that more stills needs to be done. “The CBN is doing its best based on the volume of dollar at its disposal, but more still needs to be done,” he said.

    A manufacturer, who does not want his name in print, claims the policy is affecting his operations, and also clarifies what is going on. “The CBN has, in trying to manage the available dollar for imports and ensure that it goes round all genuine manufacturers and prevent a situation whereby a few people get allocations, and a majority of others do not get, pegged each invoice to be financed for import at $158,000. Before now, only very few people were getting forex, in short it was a matter of ‘who you know’ and that was perhaps why they adopted this new strategy,” he said.

    Continuing, she said the apex bank preferred to make the dollar spread round more importers rather than giving $1 million or $2 million to few people and majority of others get nothing.

    “They want the little available dollar to go round everybody. But the big question is: ‘For big manufacturing companies, what will $158,000 do for them? That will lead to retrenchment and underutilisation of production capacity,” he said.

    Sounding optimistic, he hoped that in the future, if the availability of dollars improves, the CBN may review that plan but for now, that is the situation.

    The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) called on the CBN to review its forex policy and give manufacturers better opportunity to thrive. Its Director-General, Muda Yusuf, picked holes in the rationing of forex by banks, saying it would cut production volumes and discourage investments in the economy.

    He said: “The recovery of the Nigerian economy will be driven largely by investors’ confidence.  The good news is that some progress has been made in the last couple of weeks to shore up this confidence.  The banks should therefore avoid any actions that could reverse this progress or undermine the growing confidence level.”

    Yusuf said reports of rationing by banks could give wrong signals to the players in the economy, trigger another round of uncertainties and activate new momentum of speculative activities in the forex market.   “What the economy needs is a forex market framework that ensures that all legitimate demands for forex are met.  There are indications that the CBN has commenced the creation of this framework with the easing of restrictions in the export and investors windows,” he said.

    The  Investors’ and Exporters’ FX Window, which started on April 24, is the CBN’s latest attempt to lure back investors who fled in the past two years, exacerbating a crisis that caused the economy to shrink in 2016 for the first time in a quarter century.

    The idea is that by creating a market for some types of investment transactions, policy makers can satisfy calls to float the currency without risking an inflationary spiral that may come from a formal devaluation.

    Managing Director, Cowry Assets Limited, Johnson Chukwu, said $158,000 maximum amount of LC is a significant improvement compared to what obtains earlier in the year when companies could not even access $10,000.

    He said that Nigeria’s forex earnings have improved, but the CBN does not have the capacity to meet all the forex demands. He said that the ongoing forex rationing is likely to end when the CBN has enough dollar to go round.

    On whether the ongoing rationing can lead to job losses, he said: “Every economic situation has implications. Six months ago, you cannot even get $100,000. I believe we have suffered the worst of situations. The CBN has to prioritise its dollar disbursement plans because it does not have the wall chest to meet all demands,” he said.

    Former Executive Director, Keystone Bank, Richard Obire, said the era of full forex availability is over, and we are in a regime where forex is scarce. He said the rationing of forex is not good enough for genuine manufacturers and could lead to more contraction in the economy if forex is not accessed at and when needed. “The economy has contracted and industrial capacity utilization at the end of 2016 was 25 per cent.  “If companies are producing at 25 per cent capacity, expanding production to boost the employment market will require providing enough forex needed to fund import of raw materials for real sector operations.

    He said although forex availability has improved, there is need for companies to also use local raw materials so as to reduce the demand for forex. He said that forex scarcity has led to many banks closing their branches, job losses in telecoms and other key sectors of the economy.

    MTN Nigeria, for instance, a fortnight ago sacked 280 workers while Ecobank Nigeria closed 74 of its branches as rising cost of operations worsened.

    Obire said not adequately providing forex to real sector operators can worsen the fate of the companies, as rising cost of operations impact on their profitability.

    Still, Group Chief Executive Officer, Ecobank Group, Ade Ayeyemi, defended the forex policies and actions of the CBN.

    He spoke in South Africa at the 2017 World Economic Forum for Africa. Ayeyemi said the CBN was in the best position to decide forex management issues based on facts available to the financial regulator.

    In a note to investors, Managing Director, Afrinvest West Africa Limited, Ike Chioke, said the CBN’s- Purchasing Managers’ Index Report for April, showed an upturn in manufacturing activity in the first month of the new quarter.

    Buoyed by knock-on effects of the significant improvement in fiscal balance and the forex market – particularly related to forex liquidity – April manufacturing PMI expanded to 51.1 points (relative to 47.7 points in March 2017) after three consecutive months of contraction, settling in the positive region for the first time in 2017.

    The major drivers of the expansion in composite PMI were production level (58.5 points), new orders (50.1 points), and inventories (50.6 points) sub-indices which grew 7.7 percentage points (ppts), 4.5ppts and 1.5ppts month-on-month respectively to more than offset sustained contraction in employment level and relapse in supplier delivery time which posted an increase in March.

    He said: “Whilst we believe that the improvements in the manufacturing and non-manufacturing sectors reaffirm that the economy is on the path to recovery in the second quarter, as other macroeconomic indicators also suggest the decline in the employment sub-index of the manufacturing and non-manufacturing sectors remains a concern.”

    Chioke said the step-up in the CBN’s forex interventions has had a greater-than-expected impact arguing that the regulator may not abandon multiple currency practices and move to unification of the many rates. “We do not feel that these practices will generate sufficient autonomous inflows to create a fully functioning forex market. A downward adjustment to the interbank rate is likely,” he said.

    Other analysts said ongoing rationing of forex will adversely affect the manufacturing sector, and reverse the gains of recent months.

    For instance, at the height of forex scarcity last year, South African firms, Truworths and Clover announced their exit from Nigeria back in February last year, due to difficult operating environment. Tiger Brands also sold off its stake in Nigeria-based Dangote Flour, following challenging economic environment, biggest of which was forex scarcity.

    Managing Director, Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Bismarck Rewane, said the CBN supplied total of $1.2 billion in April into the interbank market, with intervention frequency of two to three times per week.

    Also, the cumulative forex supply since February 20, this year to date remained at $3.61 billion, compared to $5.83 billion sold in January to April 2016.

    Rewane explained that the new forex window for investors and exporters is trading at N374 to 380/$ leading to an acute naira shortage. However, the external reserves grew marginally to $31 billion and can take care of import and payment cover of 6.9 months.

    He said that foreign portfolio investors shun the Nigerian market as they await an adjustment in the official rate and remain skeptical about the investor/export forex window.

    Rewane said Nigeria is expected to return to positive growth this year at 0.8 per cent, and that will be driven by a recovery in oil production, continued growth in agriculture, and higher public investment.

    Speaking at the Access Bank Forex Seminar 2017 held in in Lagos at the weekend, with the theme: “The Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market- Paving the Way towards Restoring Confidence: A Market Perspective”, Rewane attributed the current naira appreciation to a sharp increase in Nigeria’s oil revenue estimated at a monthly value of $2.5 billion as well as the opening of a new investor/exporters window as a proxy for price discovery.

    Speaking on exchange rate stability, Managing Director, Renaissance Capital (RenCap) Nigeria, Temi Popoola, said the rate at which the naira exchanges against the dollar is inconsequential. He said the most important thing was for the investors to be able to come in and exit at will without encumbrances.

    “The argument should not be whether the naira is exchanged at N300 or N450 to dollar. It should be whether investors will be able to come in and go out of the market,” he said.

    Group Head, Global Markets at Access Bank Plc, Dapo Olagunju, said the new window allows investors to sell dollars at any rate they chose and is expected to help bring investors’ confidence into the market.

    He said: “Investors /Exporters FX Window help participants execute deals as based on their own market agreement. Today, both the dollar demand and supply sides are beginning to talk to each other and there is likely to be rate convergence soon,” he said.

    Continuing, he said previously, the CBN had over $4 billion forex backlog, and found it difficult to settle ticket remittances of airlines.

    “Today, we are seeing customers buying Business Travel Allowances and Personal Travel Allowances with ease. It has been a difficult time for banks. We also see a regulator that is ready to sanction any bank that violates its set rules,” he said during the forex seminar organised by Access Bank at the weekend.

    Assuring Access Bank customers that it will continue to meet their demands, Olagunju said: “There was a time Access Bank alone sold $1.5 billion to its customers in 2015. That shows we are with you all the time. We will ensure we protect your businesses because we know that if the exchange rate deteriorates further, many people will be hurt”.

    The Chief Executive Officer FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange, Bola Onadele, said foreign investors are warming to the foreign-exchange window to ease a severe shortage of dollars.

    The naira opened on Monday at 380.31 per dollar in the window. That’s about 17 per cent weaker than the interbank rate of 315 and close to the rate of 391 on the black-market, which many Nigerian businesses were forced to utilise as hard-currency supplies through official channels dried up.

    Eligible transactions in the window include those for loan repayments, interest payments, capital repatriation and remittances.

    While Nigeria devalued the naira on the interbank market last June, it stopped short of allowing a free float and intervened to prop up the exchange rate. Investors, concerned that the currency was overvalued, have stayed on the sidelines.

    Onadele, a former chief trader at Citigroup Inc.’s Nigerian unit who criticised the CBN last October for not freely floating the naira, said this time around Governor Godwin Emefiele was relaxed about the weaker rate.

    “The governor isn’t calling up, worrying about the rate,” Onadele said. “The CBN is ready to sell into this window, via the commercial banks. Any foreign portfolio investor that wants to leave Nigeria will get its money. If a foreign portfolio investor wants $100 million tomorrow, its bank should present the trade to the central bank. As long as the investor’s satisfied paying the rate, it will be done.”

    The CBN has consistently warned lenders to play by the rule in the forex market and equally sanctioned those that violate regulations. Last week, the CBN barred 16 commercial banks from accessing forex from the newly instituted SMEs Forex Window for refusing to sell forex to genuine Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) that met disbursement requirements.

    CBN spokesman Isaac Okorafor said banks were barred for refusing to sell forex to the SME actors after accessing over $300 million offered to them via the SMEs wholesale forex window since its creation in April.The SMEs Forex Window, which opened about a month ago was designed to help SMEs import eligible finished and semi-finished items not exceeding $20,000 for an enterprise per quarter.

    Okorafor said appropriate sanctions are spelt out by the CBN Act and the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA). He said staff and even chief executives of banks the affected banks could be punished where necessary.

    The CBN spokesman said the apex bank has already received series of complaints from bank customers, especially those that operate in the SMEs segment of the market that banks are frustrating their efforts at getting forex.

    He said some entrepreneurs still complain that banks are frustrating their efforts at obtaining forex for their eligible imports after the stipulated 48 hours.

    He appealed to bank customers and the SMEs to “please give us concrete evidence against these banks so that we can hold them responsible by way of sanctions.”

    He added: “Get a photocopy of your Form Q, Form X, Form A or Form M. Give us the name of the bank, branch and send to us and we will deal with them as example to others.

    “The only way we can make things better for Nigerians is for them to call the CBN whenever they are in trouble or whenever, or are getting frustrated by banks.”

    He warned that the CBN would not allow any form of instability in the interbank forex market. He urged  stakeholders to play by the rules for the benefit of the country and its economy.

  • Real sector: Sectoral forex allocation to the rescue

    Real sector: Sectoral forex allocation to the rescue

    The 60 per cent special foreign exchange (forex) allocation to manufacturers may have raised their capacity. This has prompted the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to extend the initiative to Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) operators. Experts say this can be the wedge for this troubled segment of the real sector, if effectively monitored and enforced. CHIKODI OKEREOCHA and OKWY IROEGBU-CHIKEZIE report. 

    It has been particularly tough for real sector operators, especially those in the Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) segment. For long, they watched helplessly as the crisis in the foreign exchange (forex) market hit hard on their businesses. Because of scarcity of forex, many of them could not fund the importation of essential but eligible raw materials and finished goods critical to their operations.

    Given that SMEs were crowded out of the forex market, many of them who could not stand the heat either disappeared from the manufacturing landscape or scaled their operations, leading to massive job losses. This has been the situation since mid-June 2014 when global oil prices began declining, forcing a number of fiscal and economic distortions on SMEs’ operations.

    Some of the distortions included drop in foreign earnings, decline in foreign reserves and an unstable macro-economic environment among others. The crisis in the forex market, which was also a fallout of the oil price crash, was, perhaps, the most devastating for real sector operators, especially SMEs.

    The crisis was also an addition to the multitude of business environment-related woes plaguing SMEs, such as lack of electricity supply, rising inflation, declining consumer purchasing power, multiple taxation, weakening manufacturing base and policy inconsistency, among others.

    However, a turnaround in the fortunes of this segment of the real sector appears to be in the offing. This is sequel to the recent unveiling of a special form X by the Federal Government through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to ease access to forex for SMEs.

    On the strength of the intervention, which came on stream about two weeks ago, SMEs were granted special consideration for $20,000 to import essential but eligible raw materials and finished goods critical to their operations.

    CBN spokesman Isaac Okorafor explained that the purpose of the intervention was to ease the difficulties encountered by small manufacturers. He said the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN) acknowledged that the earlier 60 per cent forex allocation to the sector raised their capacity hence, they canvassed more forex to be made available for SMEs.

    Last year, the CBN waded in to avert the collapse of more companies by creating a 60 per cent special forex allocation window for manufacturers. This was after manufacturers, through several representations and stakeholders’ engagements, sought the creation of a special forex window to allow them fund the importation of raw materials.

    MAN President and arrowhead of the advocacy Dr. Frank Udemba Jacobs lamented that the inclusion of essential raw material inputs for manufacturing in the CBN import prohibition list forced many outfits to close shop and relocate to neighbouring West African countries.

    The CBN in June 2015 announced a forex policy that restricted importers of 41 items from accessing its official window. Even those who export products that fall under the 41 items listed in the CBN circular were barred from using their export proceeds to fund the importation of their raw materials, which were unfortunately classified as not valid for forex.

    The CBN had explained that the policy was necessary to promote locally-produced goods, build robust foreign reserves, and also create jobs. “…..We needed to aggressively begin the process of feeding ourselves and producing much of what we need in this country.

    “The huge amounts of money the country spends on importing things we can produce locally have become a significant drag on our foreign exchange reserves …,” CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele said.

    But manufacturers and other members of the Organised Private Sector (OPS) kicked, arguing that the forex restriction was “obnoxious, superfluous, and ill-conceived’’. They also pointed out that the vague nature in which the items in the import prohibition basket were described in the circular impeded the access of several local manufacturers to forex for procurement of raw materials.

    Following persistent requests by real sector operators, the CBN directed that a special 60 per cent forex allocation window be set aside for manufacturers. The apex bank said that the gesture was to address an observed imbalance in the sector, as a negligible proportion of forex sales were being channelled towards the manufacturing sector.

    Obviously encouraged by the success of the intervention, manufacturers were said to have requested for its extension to SMEs. The request, according to Okorafor, was examined and the result of the examination showed that indeed, SMEs were being crowded out of the forex market hence the need for steps to address their challenges.

    The Nation learnt that with the opening of the special window, genuine SME operators are no longer patronizing or sourcing forex through unofficial windows. By extension, this has reduced the pressure on either the Bureau de Change operators (BDCs) or any other unofficial sources.

    However, the special forex window for SMEs was the latest of such sectoral forex allocations by the CBN aimed at stabilizing the value of the naira and galvanising the real sector, which is credited with the capacity to create jobs and engender economic growth and development.

    For instance, the CBN created a special forex window for investors and exporters on April 21, 2017. This was to boost liquidity in the forex market and ensure timely execution and settlement of eligible transactions, which included invisible transactions such as loan repayments, loan interest payments, dividends, income remittances, capital repatriation, management service fees and consultancy fees.

    Other transactions on the eligible list are software subscription fees, technology transfer Agreements, personal home remittances including ‘miscellaneous payments’ as detailed under Memorandum 15 of the CBN Foreign Exchange Manual.

    The invisible transactions under this window excluded international airlines ticket sales’ remittances. CBN said the window covered bills for collection and any other trade-related payment obligations, which are at the instance of the customer.

    It clarified that the permitted invisible transactions and bills for collection were eligible to purchase forex sourced from the CBN forex window limited to secondary market intervention sales (SMIS) wholesale, which is spot and forwards sales.

    “International airlines ticket sales’ remittances shall only be eligible to access the CBN FX window (SMIS-Retail and Wholesale) spot and forwards. The supply of foreign currency to the window shall be through portfolio investors, exporters, authorised dealers and other parties with foreign currency to exchange to Naira,” CBN’s Director, Financial Markets, Dr. Alvan Ikoku, explained.

    Like the forex intervention for SMEs, the special forex window for investors and exporters was music to real sector operators. For instance, the Lagos Chamber of Commerce & Industry (LCCI) has applauded the policy, noting that its significance lies in the widening of the scope of the market in forex transactions.

    LCCI Director-General Mr. Muda Yusuf said the policy was an important step towards the restoration of normalcy to the foreign exchange market as it signposts the easing of restrictions in the forex market.

    Yusuf said the policy has implications for the economy because of its capacity to boost the confidence of foreign and domestic investors while also moderating the effect on the country’s risk.

    He also said it will impact positively on the liquidity in the forex  market by impacting positively on forex inflows from the autonomous sources, increase transparency in non-oil export transactions and further reduce pressure on foreign reserves as autonomous inflows increase.

    The LCCI DG listed other benefits to include improvement in the stock market performance, positive impact on investment growth, and reduction in the transparency problems and sharp practises that exist in the foreign exchange market.

    Besides, the policy, he said, would significantly check the phenomenon of round tripping including the reduction in the gap between the official rate and parallel market exchange rates.

    Yusuf said: “We seek the cessation of the multiple windows in the forex market. Multiplicity of windows hurts the economy. The CBN could intervene from time to time to modulate the rates in a manner consistent with its capacity.

    “Investors need to be assured of CBN’s commitment to a market-based exchange rate policy as enunciated in the Economy Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) of the Federal Government”. He, however, stressed the need to review the CBN’s policy restriction on 41 items.’’

    Similarly, a financial expert, Dr. Uche Uwaleke, believes that the policy will encourage return of portfolio investors to the capital market.

    According to Uwaleke, who is Head of Banking and Finance Department, Nasarawa State University, Keffi, the new policy will impact positively on the capital market with more portfolio investors returning to the market.

    He noted that constraints in the forex market caused illiquidity in the market, leading to exit of foreign investors from the capital market.

    “CBN’s conscious attempt to ease forex access through a special window for foreign investors promises to impact the capital market positively with more portfolio investors returning to the market,’’ Uwaleke stated, adding that the development has brightened Nigeria’s chances of re-admission into the JP Morgan Index.

    Earlier last November, the CBN granted manufacturers access to over $660 million foreign exchange through the inter-bank forex market to source raw materials and spare parts for their industries. The apex bank was emphatic that the intervention was in keeping with its promise to strengthen the real sector of the economy.

    The Chairman, Apapa branch of Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Mr. Babatunde Odunayo, described CBN’s interventions in the real sector as “welcome development.” He said such gestures would bring some relief to manufacturers affected by the restrictions on the sourcing of forex.

    Encouraged by the anticipated positive spin-offs from such interventions, the CBN has vowed to sustain its intervention in the forex market. The apex bank believes that this would not only stabilise the value of the naira, but also galvanise the real sector.

    The CBN boss noted that the country’s foreign reserve currently stands at $31 billion, and that the increasing strength of the nation’s foreign reserve is giving CBN the necessary firepower to play in the forex market.

    “You will all have observed that in the last two months, CBN has been involved in some form of intensive intervention in the forex market and this has fortunately resulted in a downward trend in the parallel market price of foreign exchange, Emefiele said, shortly after a closed door meeting with Senate President Bukola Saraki, in Abuja.

    Continuing, he vowed, “We are going to continue this intervention because the reserve looks very good. Our reserve stands at above $31 billion and that provides us enough of firepower or ammunition to be able to defend the currency and we will do so with all intensity to ensure that foreign exchange is procured by everybody.

    “You want to import raw materials, you will get foreign exchange, you want to import plant and equipment you will get foreign exchange, you want to pay school fees or you are a small business that wants to buy foreign exchange for you to import your small items you will procure foreign exchange.”

    However, there are fears that CBN’s sustained sectoral interventions particularly in the real sector where it now targets SMEs might fail to make the anticipated impact unless they are backed by proper monitoring, supervision and enforcement.

    Perhaps, to demonstarte its resolve to make it work this time, the CBN on Tusday

    suspended 12 banks from participating in the weekly forex intervention to the SMEs.

  • Buhari excited over forex stability, says CBN

    Buhari excited over forex stability, says CBN

    The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele, yesterday in Abuja,  briefed President Muhammadu Buhari on the stability in the foreign exchange (forex) market and other activities of the apex bank.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the closed door meeting, Emefiele said the president was delighted over the stability in the forex market.

    He explained that the parallel market is currently stabilising at between N380 and N385 against one US dollar.

    He said: ‘`Basically, as it is expected, what we normally do is from time to time to brief the president about activities about the CBN particularly at this time as it relates to the efforts that the bank is  making to stabilise the forex market

    “We briefed him regarding the activities so far and he was very delighted to hear that the market is stabilising at the level that it is right now and I am saying the parallel market which currently stabilises at between N380 and N385,’’ he said.

    According to him, the sudden rise in crude oil production and the subsequent increase in export of the commodity are the main factors responsible for the stability in the forex market.

    He said  the crude oil prices which have been oscillating between $50 and $56 per barrel, have helped to boost the nation’s revenue position and also provided some ammunition for the CBN to defend the currency.

    He said: “Given what we have right now, the fact that the revenues are looking good, the state of the economy is good and I believe that we are going to pull out of the problem in due course.’’

  • Japanese investors fret over forex restrictions

    Japanese investors have expressed concerns over Nigeria current foreign exchange (forex) restrictions.

    Led by the Japanese Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs and member, House of Representatives, Mr. Shunsuke Takei, the investors appealed to the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun to intimate the Japanese trade and investment delegation on government’s measures to address the forex issues “which have not been resolved.”

    Takei made this request yesterday in Abuja when a delegation of Japanese Public and Private Joint Mission promoting Trade and Investment in Nigeria paid a courtesy visit to Mrs Adeosun.

    Takei led  32 private sector and government organisations to the Ministry of Finance for the engagement. 12 private sector firms on the delegation were from the banking, insurance and manufacturing sectors.

    Takei said the delegation was in Nigeria to look for investment opportunities given the country’s huge population and market as well as the new Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) which has potential for growth.

    Japanese investors, he said “were desirous of investing in Nigeria, but were also concerned about challenges in the areas of security, legal and power environments.”

    Mrs Adeosun explained to the Japanese delegation that “Africa’s biggest economy is now out of recession and wants to grow again; the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) articulated by the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari was designed to stabilise the economy and propel it into growth.”

    She told the Japanese mission that “the country is open and ready to continue to do business with the rest of the world and urged the big Japanese companies to invest in the country by setting up manufacturing plants, instead of shipping-in finished products.”

    She said Nigeria welcomes Japanese investors in banking, insurance, manufacturing and other sectors. She said: “We will assist you to do well. Many companies came into Nigeria and are doing very well and there is nothing to stop Japanese firms from doing very well.”

  • $150m forex intervention coming

    $150m forex intervention coming

    •N140b bonds for auction May 10

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) plans to offer $150 million on the spot and forward markets within the week, traders said, citing a notice from the regulator.

    The apex bank has been intervening on the currency market since February in a bid to boost dollar liquidity and narrow the spread between official and black market naira rates.

    The regulator said it has suspended several lenders from its weekly dollar interventions after they made it difficult for small firms to access foreign exchange. The naira yesterday closed at 306.25 on the spot window and the black market rate was quoted at 391/$ .

    Also, the Debt Management Office (DMO) plans to auction N140 billion in bonds on May 10, the Debt Management Office said.

    The debt office will sell N40 billion of bonds due in 2021 and N50 billion each of bonds due in 2027 and in 2037, using a Dutch auction system. Settlement is expected the day after the sale. The bonds are re-openings of previous issues.