Tag: slump

  • Woman slumps in court looking for lawyer she paid money

    Woman slumps in court looking for lawyer she paid money

    An elderly woman collapsed Thursday afternoon on the first floor of the Igbosere Magistrates’ Court, Lagos.

    She was looking for a lawyer to whom she allegedly paid money to facilitate the settlement of her son’s criminal matter.

    The Nation learnt that the unidentified woman told her rescuers that she regularly gave an undisclosed sum to the lawyer, who was defending her son in a criminal matter.

    It was part payment for a settlement agreement that her son, who is on bail, entered with the complainant so that the charge against him can be dispensed with.

    But she arrived in court yesterday and, after asking around the four-storey multi-courtroom edifice, could not find the lawyer.

    She, again, climbed the staircase from the ground floor but slumped on the first floor a few metres from the Prosecutors’ Office.

    The staircase is right in front of the out-of-service twin elevators.

    Chief Security Officer (CSO) Lateef Bello alerted his colleagues and they tried to revive her.

    But she began shivering, passing urine and could neither speak nor get on her feet.

    After some minutes, Commissioner for Oaths O. A. Mustapha was informed and she went to the nearby High Court on Igbosere Road, to get a Toyota Hiace bus.

    The bus, with the inscription ‘Lagos State Judiciary Probate Registry’ and registration number: EL822LSD, conveyed the unconscious woman to the Lagos Island General Hospital.

    A lawyer, who declined to be named, said she saw the woman being carried into the bus.

    “She was dressed in a native attire and looked elderly,” the source said, adding, “I didn’t really know what was happening at that time, but I saw the security officers carrying her into a bus.”

    An eyewitness, who spoke to The Nation on condition of anonymity, said the woman was revived at the hospital.

    “I learnt she gave money to a lawyer but he disappeared with it. She was running around looking for the lawyer before she collapsed.

    “We quickly informed the Commissioner for Oaths who sourced for a vehicle and we took her to hospital where she was revived.”

    Another source said the woman’s son was arraigned last year before Magistrate for allegedly obtaining money from the complainant under the pretence of helping him to clear his goods from a Lagos port.

    He was said to have spent the money without clearing the goods.

    “He was on bail already and, in accordance with the terms of the settlement, had been paying a certain amount at regular intervals. His mother had been assisting him in paying the money.”

     

  • OTC 2016 attendance, exhibition dip over oil price slump

    OTC 2016 attendance, exhibition dip over oil price slump

    • As NNPC cuts turnout by over 50%

    The global oil price plunge had a negative impact on this year’s Offshore Technology Conference (OTC) attendance and exhibition.

    More than 68,000 from 120 countries attended against last year’s 94,700 attendees from 130 countries, while 2,500 companies participated in the exhibition against 2,682 in 2015.

    The Nation also learnt that due to the dwindling revenue because of fall in oil prices, representations of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the oil ministry, at the conference, were slashed by over 50 per cent.

    However, there were the usual exchange of ideas and presentation of papers on how to advance scientific and technical knowledge for safe, environmentally friendly operation and sustainable development of offshore oil and gas resources.

    The OTC Chairman, Mr. Joe Fowler, lamented the current industry reality, which is in its second year.  He however, stated that nearly 300 were new exhibitors, and international companies made up 51 per cent of the exhibitors. “As it has since 1969, the world came to OTC to make critical decisions, share ideas and develop business partnerships to meet global energy demands.

    “The commitment from OTC’s volunteers and staff ensured, regardless of the price of oil per barrel, that OTC upheld its unwavering commitment to delivering attendees unparalleled information on new technologies and global developments. Also, revenue from OTC directly benefits the member programmes of its 13 nonprofit sponsoring organizations.”

    OTC 2016 featured 11 panel sessions,24 executive keynote presentations at luncheons and breakfasts, and more than 325 technical paper presentations. Speakers including international and national oil companies; federal and regional government officials; and academic, presented their views on a wide variety of topics, including future industry directions, operational integrity and risk management.

    The industry downturn also affected Nigerian companies that had set up exhibition stands to attract Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) into the country. Besides, unlike last year, the Nigerian pavilion had few exhibitors.

    Kachikwu who was represented by NNPC’s Group Executive Director, Gas and Power, Mr. Saidu Muhammad while opening the Nigerian pavilion said: “There is need for us to look inwards and see how we can optimise cost to reduce the cost of production per barrel so that we can remain afloat.

    “You cannot reduce cost of production if you do not have Nigerian expertise in development of procurement materials.”

    The Chairman of the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN), Bank Anthony Okoroafor stated that the association in partnership with the NNPC was considering measures to certify the competencies of companies that execute projects in the country’s petroleum industry. He also called for the deployment of about $600 million that has accrued to the Nigerian Content Fund (NCF) for upgrade of the industry’s in-country capacity.

  • ‘Economic slump will not mar book fair’

    Despite the present economic hardship, the Nigerian Book Fair Trust (NBFT) promises to make the 2016 Nigerian International Book Fair (NIBF) holding May 9-14 at the University of Lagos (UNILAG) a memorable one.

    At a briefing to announce the fair held at Excellence Hotel, Ogba, Lagos, Mr Rilwanu Abdulsalami, chairman of the Trust, the umbrella body of all stakeholders in the book industry (authors, publishers, printers, booksellers, librarian groups etc), said organising the fair this year has been particularly challenging.

    “The challenges we face this year in putting the book fair together are awful.  Some are poor registration, bad economy, government policies and fuel crisis,” he said.

    Though scarcity of foreign exchange has made it difficult for regular foreign exhibitors to participate, Abdulsalami, who was represented by the vice chairman, Mr Babs Fashanu, said the Trust has introduced innovations to attract participants, including registration discounts.

    He promised that the fair would feature better exhibition stands, cyber café, transport facilities, and affordable hotel accommodation.

    He also said the week-long fair, which has as theme: “Book – The Untapped Entertainment Treasure in Africa”, will feature a conference, workshops for publishers, teachers, printers, authors, in addition to the sale of original books and other learning resources at discounted prices.  He also said participants would get opportunities for business and networking with major stakeholders in the book sector as well as government officials expected to attend the international conference scheduled to hold on May 10, the second day of the fair.

    Keynote address for the conference is to be delivered by Prof Hope Eghagha, former Delta State Commissioner for Higher Education, and professor of English at UNILAG.  Education Minister, Mallam Adamu Adamu is the special guest of honour at the conference to be chaired by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Basic and Secondary Education, Senator, Aliyu Wamakko.

    Also expected are: Lagos State Governor, Mr Akinwunmi Ambode (as Host), Executive Secretary, Universal Basic Education Commission, Dr. Dikko Suleiman, and the Chairman, National Council for Women Societies, Mrs Nkechi Mba.

    Members of the governing board of NBFT hope that the presence of these highly-placed public servants at the fair would help address issues in the book industry such as piracy, high cost of publishing books locally, poor reading culture, among others.

  • ‘Oil price slump not death sentence’

    ‘Oil price slump not death sentence’

    For oil service industry, these are not the best of times. The falling oil prices are doing harm to business. But Solewant Group, Pipe/Metals Coating Company Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer Mr. Solomon Ewanehi says there is a good side to it all. In this interview with EMEKA UGWUANYI, he calls on the government to provide an enabling environment for business to thrive. According to him, the enactment of the Nigerian Content Act has curbed capital flight, boosted indigenous capacity and job creation.

    How would you rate the oil service companies?

    Their services are okay. You must provide an effective and efficient service to the oil and gas companies to enable you stay afloat within the industry.

    To what extent has the Nigerian Content Act helped the service sector?

    When you talk about the Nigerian Content Act, and before the Act, you will discover that these are two areas. Before the Act, we were operating in the industry, and nothing was coming in from the Nigerian Content policy but when the Act was put in place in 2010, it meant people would work within the confines of the industry and that shows there is a law, there is something that would hold people liable if they run foul of what the law says in the industry. In a nutshell, it has helped to checkmate people doing what is required of them within the industry and ensured the standard required within the industry is adhered to.

    Has the Act improved the volume of jobs indigenous service companies get?

    This one is not personal, it has to do with Solewant as an organisation and it has to do with the entire industry. The Act has to do with the following questions: is the industry now employing more Nigerians that don’t have jobs? Is there capacity that was tapped before that is being tapped into now? Do we now offer services that we were not offering before or we don’t look into? Yes, we are offering a lot of jobs to Nigerians that we were not giving them before. We are also helping to reduce the capital flight because most of our activities and services are being domesticated in Nigeria. Things that we normally import full blown; we can now import them in parts like our hysteron plate, we get and give them partial finishing in-country. On our production of pipe-coating, the pipes were being imported before but production of the polyethylene on the pipe is done in-country now, the production of the epoxy and anexy is done in-country now. Polypropylene is not done in-country before but right now it is being done, these are being done by Nigerians and with equipment we have in-country. What we are saying is that definitely the Nigerian Content Act has helped to enhance and increase the services that Nigerian companies offer. The Nigerian content programme has really reduced capital flight because most of the jobs are being done in-country.

    Has the drop in oil price affected your operation or the volume of jobs you do?

    I will say yes and no. Yes, in the understanding that the rate at which the industry leaders (the IOCs) were doing more business with us before has reduced. It is not as it was not before, but also no in the understanding that you must protect your facilities not minding whether there is oil price drop or not because definitely you must transport your services from one location to the other. In doing that, you will discover that we are in one way or the other doing much business even when the oil price has dropped because you must protect the pipes. And that has nothing to do with the fact that the pipe that you are protecting will not transport the gas, or the crude. So, the oil price drop is affecting the crude pipes but the gas as it were, a lot of gas pipelines that we have been coating in the past eight months are still the pipes we are coating right now with just few crude lines as part of what we are providing service for.

    What is the major challenge of the oil service industry?

    There is no how challenge shall cease to exist. When we execute projects, we do encounter challenges. Challenge on the understanding that it is not easy for you to go into project and come out the way you went into the project because you always have on two hiccups, which is why we provide that type of training. Challenges could come in the area of financing, maybe high cost accessing funds. There is a challenge that has to do with the enabling environment. The government needs to encourage us by ensuring that the right enabling environment to do business is in place. The difference between Solewant and other companies that operate in the country is that the problems are there but we always come out of them by ensuring that we execute the projects the way they should be and hand them over to the clients successfully.

    How can insecurity and militancy in the Niger Delta be addressed to make the oil industry operate seamlessly?

    Although I don’t work on pipelines that are prone to security issues and attacks but within our space, we have factory where we secure the line pipe that we have coated for clients. With that, you will discover that we offer that type of service for the client that we work for, and ensuring that what we have are properly protected for the clients to come and pick up their pipes.

    How do you cope with the protection of your facilities and those of your clients, especially in the area of vandalism?

    We don’t have security issues in that line because our service is just within our factory. In our factory, clients accept to bring in pipes; we coat them, and they take their pipes back to their right of way but in any case, we have in-house security that provides security to protect the clients’ infrastructure.

    Do you have challenge in terms of access to finance?

    No.

    So you have all the finance you need from Nigerian banks?

    There is no way you can have all the finance you need because finance is a core resource and if we are talking of resources they are always limited and not in abundance.  But within the limit of our operation, that is what we have now, we do have what it takes to run the industry. We have what it takes to take the industry to the next level. We have what it takes to service the industry and ensure that we are providing adequate service to the oil and gas industry.

    What contributions do your foreign technical partners make to the operation?

    The technical partners that we have are the partners that we discuss with to have an enabling advantage in the area of know-how because we need to continuously discuss with the partners and also know the new technology and materials that are coming into the industry. For instance, we are having a relationship with Kema Coatings of Canada, Canusa CPS of United Kingdom (UK). We are also having partnership representation of Raychem RPG of India. We have an understanding and relationship with XYT Steel Pipe of China – producer and manufacturer of line pipes from China. So, by and large, the industry is a team and group work activity-based area; so, it is not an individualistic area. So, within the country we have own strength and we also try to seek some strength from other parts of the world. That is why you see that in Houston, United States, we have an office there. I will also mention to you that Solewant is internationally recognised by the regulators of the industry – the National Association of Corrosion Engineering, gave Solewant its gold membership certification. We are also ISO certified by Ocean Certification. We are also a member of British Safety Council and when you look at this, you will discover that for those who are in the industry, they understand that for you to be a world-class oil and gas company, you require these certifications, and if you have these certifications, you will be able to provide quality service that the industry requires of you.

    Do the partners have direct contributions in your daily activities or in training only?

    Solewant is 100 per cent Nigerian company.  They do not have shareholding in Solewant but when you talk about materials, training, equipment, these are the areas they come in because we need tested and proven materials to do our work. We also require tested proven equipment to do our work. By and large these are the areas where we have strength.

    The major challenge indigenous firms have is access to funds, how do you source your funds?    

    In the industry you need to partner with other organisations. We also have financial partners who we do business with. When we go into business and we discover that there is need for us to do the business together, we work together and they also do business with us. Within the Nigerian space, we have financial partners, which we do business with, especially equipment financing partners.

    How do you build capacity?

    We train our personnel across board. We train them abroad and at home. For instance, our members of staff who work in Houston, Texas, United States, are resident there. Of course they will not come to Nigeria to receive training. Those in Nigeria equally receive training in Nigeria. But when have projects that need to be carried out within Nigeria, for instance, we are working on Erha North project for ExxonMobil, the training was done in Lagos before the workers went to site. So we have that type of training. The project we carried out for Total, we did the training in Port Harcourt before we commenced the project. These are areas where we solemnly carry out training.

    What is the major challenge facing the oil service industry?

    There is no how challenge shall cease to exist. When we execute projects, we do encounter challenges.  Challenge on the understanding that it is not easy for you to go into project and come out the way you went into the project because you always have on two hiccups, which is why we provide that type of training. Challenges could come in the area of financing, maybe high cost accessing funds. There is challenge that has to do with an enabling environment. The government needs to encourage us by ensuring that the right enabling environment to do business is in place. The difference between Solewant and other companies that operate in the country is that the problems are there but we always come out of them by ensuring that execute the projects the way they should be and hand them over to the clients successfully.

    How can the insecurity and militancy in the Niger Delta be sustainably addressed to make the oil industry operate seamlessly?

    Although I don’t work on pipelines that are prone to security issues and attacks, within our space, we have a factory where we secure the pipelines that we have coated for clients. With that you will discover that we offer that type of service for the client that we work for, and ensuring that what we have are properly protected for the clients to come and pick up their pipes.

  • Equities slump to 37-month low amidst crude oil decline

    Nigerian equities slumped below its three-year low yesterday as global decline in crude oil price exacerbated concerns over Nigeria’s fiscal and macroeconomic outlook. After a loss of 1.08 per cent or N104 billion on Tuesday, quoted equities dropped by 1.92 per cent or N 181 billion on Wednesday as investors reacted sharply to similar decline in crude oil price.

    The average decline at the Nigerian stock market yesterday correlated with 1.95 per cent decline in the Brent Crude Oil price to $43 per barrel. Crude oil incomes account for about 85 per cent of Nigeria’s national revenue. Nigeria’s N6 trillion budget for 2016 was benchmarked against crude oil price of $38 per barrel.

    “OPEC’s decision to abandon its production quota which has led to a further decline in oil prices, seems to have fuelled the renewed sell pressure on the Nigerian Bourse,” said Afrinvest Securities- a Lagos-based dealer at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE).

    Aggregate market value of all quoted equities on the NSE slumped from N9.466 trillion to close at N9.285 trillion, representing a loss of N181 billion. The All Share Index (ASI)-the value-based common index that tracks prices of all quoted companies, also dipped by 1.92 per cent from 27,533.03 points to close at 27,004.50 points, its lowest point in the past 37 months.

    The successive decline built up the negative average year-to-date return at the stock market to -22.08 per cent. With 24 losers to 15 gainers, widespread losses across the sectors and losses within the highly capitalised stocks group. The NSE Industrial Goods Index dropped by 2.6 per cent. The NSE Consumer Goods Index declined by 0.6 per cent while the NSE Insurance Index slipped by 0.3 per cent. However, the NSE Oil & Gas Index rose by 0.9 per cent.

    Dangote Cement, the most capitalised stock at the stock market, recorded the highest loss of N8.53 to close at N162.19. Guinness Nigeria followed with a loss of N1.90 to close at N123. Nigerian Breweries, the second most capitalised stock at the market, lost 99 kobo to close at N112.01. Cadbury Nigeria declined by 98 kobo to close at N18.68. GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Nigeria lost 66 kobo to close at N36. PZ Cussons Nigeria dipped by 50 kobo to close at N26.50. Guaranty Trust Bank lost 37 kobo to close at N18.53. Zenith Bank declined by 35 kobo to close at N14 while Ecobank Transnational Incorporated and Fidson Healthcare lost 14 kobo each to close at N16 and N2.69 respectively.

    Afrinvest Securities stated that the downtrend reflected the waning investors’ appetites consequent on the ongoing decline in crude oil prices that has sparked concerns on Nigeria’s fiscal viability and macroeconomic fundamentals.

    “As outlook for the oil market remains bearish, strong policy responses from fiscal and monetary mangers to adjust to the reality of a lower oil revenue environment are medium term factors that could lead to an improvement in sentiments. In the interim, our short term outlook for the market remains bearish although we anticipate that bargain hunting might result in a mild uptrend in the trading session ahead,” analysts at Afrinvest Securities stated.

    Total turnover stood at 240.8 million shares valued at N2.41 billion in 3,073 deals. Zenith Bank was the most active stock with a turnover of 64.3 million shares worth N856.04 million in 590 deals.

  • 10 nursing students slump from inhaling stench

    10 nursing students slump from inhaling stench

    No fewer than 10  students of the Lagos State School of Nursing, Midwifery and Public Health at Igando General Hospital, have allegedly slumped from inhaling the stench from a dumpsite behind the hospital.

    Many of them slumped from the smell.

    They reportedly slumped last week, raising the students’ fear that their health is at risk.

    An eyewitness said: “Last Wednesday’s incident was the third this year. There had been cases of students becoming unconscious as a result of the smell they inhaled from the dump site beside the school. They were, however, revived with oxygen and immuniser. Some were taken to the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), Ikeja. Where they were attended to and we suspect they might have ended up with asthma.”

    A source said: ‘It is alarming to have parents send their children and wards to school only to end up being exposed to an hazardous environment that could lead to asthma. My child was among the victims and she was asked to buy Augmentin tablets, Inhaler and Salburtamol tablets by LASUTH where they were taken to. I refused to take any action since the school has promised to look into it.”

    A victim told The Nation: “We were receiving Anatomy and Physiology lecture that Wednesday between 9am and 10am. When we ended the lecture, we just observed that some of our colleagues were collapsing; they were taken to the Igando Hospital and were attended to. But as we got to our hostel, more people slumped. That was when the alarm was raised.

    “I did not know when I slumped too. I found myself at LASUTH. More than 10 of us were involved. Three were older students. At LASUTH, we were treated for asthma-related complications. The first batch was attended to at Igando while I was among the second batch treated at LASUTH.”

    The management, it was learnt, is working to get the waste managers to clear the site. “This is why we resumed lectures as early as 9am,” the student said.

    An official of the Ministry of Health said the ministry was aware of the matter adding that it is the present government that would address it.

    When The Nation sought to know what was being done by the school,  its coordinator, Mrs Orenuga Oyefunso said: “I am a civil servant. If you need any information on the matter, go and speak to the Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Ministry of Health. I am not going to answer your questions.”

    A resident, Mr David Odeh, said the smell from the dump site is terrible, adding that it is capable of causing serious health hazard. He said: “But what can we do than wait for the government to look into the issue. Health is wealth. So, they need to look into the issue and not sweep it under the carpet.”

    Odeh described the problem a recurrent, urging the government to do something fast about it.

    A bus driver, Mr Lukman Rasheed said: “Most passengers often urge me to drive fast anytime I am plying the route. The kind of odour oozing out from there is very bad.

  • Meat sellers groan as sales slump

    Meat sellers groan as sales slump

    Meat sellers at abattoirs across the Lagos metropolis would be counting their losses today. This is because of the general elections scheduled for tomorrow, TONIA ‘DIYAN reports.

    Ideally, Saturday is supposed to be the peak of their weekly sales due to the fact that it is about the only day in the week that most families have the time to stock their deep freezers with meat, for meat sellers across the country, this may not be so.

    This is because of tomorrow’s general elections. Already, most meat sellers and butchers are gnashing their teeth because tomorrow will not fetch them any dime.

    There are fears that there will likely be scarcity of meat as well as a hike in the prices of food items across Lagos markets this weekend. According to Lagos abattoirs, the northerners that  transport cows from the north to Lagos  have registered for the elections  in their various states and as such, will want to stay back to perform their civic responsibilities in their states.

    At the Oko Oba abattoir in Agege area of Lagos,  Chairman, United Butchers Association, Alhaji Umar Adams, lamented that beyond the fear that the presidential elections for tomorrow will obstruct business activities for them at the abattoir, they have been experiencing scarcity of cows since the announcement of the elections for tomorrow and April 11.

    Adams who is popularly called Galadima Yama told The Nation Shopping that Oko Oba abattoir slaughters between 600 and 1000 cows in the week, adding that Saturdays are the days more cows are slaughtered. According to him, between 1000 and 1500 cows are slaughtered. “Tomorrow’s election will affect our business, we slaughter more cows today and tomorrow, but we won’t be able to do so tomorrow. This means no work and no income,” he said

    To meet up with the demands of the crowd who would be buying meat today, meat sellers  in Lagos have said they will slaughter more cows than they have ever done on any Friday before. This is because there would not be cow slaughtering tomorrow evening after the elections. The abattoirs will be empty tomorrow as meat sellers would also be at the polling booths to carry out their civic responsibilities.

    One of the workers in the abbatoir, Kamurudeen Ayodele said: “The election is a day and it is most important to all Nigerians. Therefore, we will go out and vote tomorrow. Our business will wait,” he said.

    Adams said these abattoirs are equipped with cold rooms to preserve unsold meat. This takes care of the fear that unsold meat would get bad before the following day. The case will not be different by tomorrow when these abattoirs will be closed, Unsold meat today will be preserved and sold on Sunday.

    Retailers who won’t be able to buy fresh meat to resell tomorrow when sale of this staple food item will highly be driven, will have to wait till Monday to buy fresh meat from the abattoirs.  Findings have it that cow slaughtering business is a profitable one depending on the type and size of the cow.

    A member of Lagos State Butchers Association, Itire Branch, Mr Ogun Omomeji  said 150 cows are slaughtered on Saturdays alone, adding that during the week, about 100 are done. But  tomorrow’s case will be different as the abattoir will be shut and every butcher will be at their various polling booths to cast their votes.

    He said: “Since election date was announced, we began to reduce the quantity of cows we buy on a daily basis to avoid waste of meat at any point in time. Some of us slaughter three cows daily depending on how financially buoyant we are and we make over N500, 000 particularly on Saturdays.

    “Election will affect the price of meat today and the quantity we sell normally for N2000 will cost N3000 and more.“

    He added also that the price of meat has been affected because of the fall in the value of the naira to the dollar.

    Alhaji Idowu Iwa Akinbola blames the increment in the prices of meat and other stapple items on the devaluation of naira. He said, he nolonger makes profit on the sale of  cows like he used to do, lamenting that he loses between N5000 and N10, 000 daily.

    Chairman, Lagos States Butchers Association, Itire Branch, Alhaji Sulaimon Yusuf, however, said shoppers have been patronising the abbatoir despite the distractions the country is facing.

    He said cow has been very expensive with the small size costing as much as between N100,000 and  N160, 000, a medium size cow costs N250,000. He  also lamented that tomorrow’s election has affected the prices of cows because those who bring them into Lagos from Niger Republic, Chad and other neighbouring countries are avoiding coming to Lagos now because of insecurity.

    He advise that it is better for the cow transporters to stay back at their places as election period is a time to protect onesself.

  • Oil price slump: Experts task FG on non-oil sector

    Oil price slump: Experts task FG on non-oil sector

    As the managers of the country’s commonwealth continue to lament the parlous state of the economy owing to the drop in oil price at the global market, experts have impressed on the federal government the need to develop other streams of revenue outside oil.

    Giving these suggestions recently was a cross-section of experts at a public forum organised by the Institute of Credit Administration (ICA).

    The occasion was at the inauguration of the ICA 3rd Governing Council chaired by Mr. Adetunji Oyebanji, Chairman/Managing Director of Mobil Oil Nigeria Plc.

    In his acceptance speech tagged: ‘Managing Credit in Today’s Business Environment Gain Competitive advantage and protect cash’, Oyebanji said: “The power of credit economy to create wealth and jobs, the infrastructure necessary for sound credit system, business characters that encourage credit availability, government initiatives that facilitate access to credit, lenders attitude to borrowers, reasons for people and organisations defaulting in credit obligations, identifying and advocating removal of barriers against access to company information needed for credit business decision, legal issues in credit, consequences of credit abuse, uneconomic treatments of SMEs by big companies, are issues that we plan to focus on throughout the tenure of the ICA 3rd Governing Council.”

    While commenting on the prevailing economic crunch assailing the country, the ICA boss said it is high time: “Nigeria must engage free market economy in order to achieve remarkable overall resilience in economic activity, employment and fiscal performance.

    “Oil must be deemphasised, agriculture must become a major backbone of the nation’s economic growth,” he stressed.

    Echoing similar views, Executive Director, Accounts/Finance, Pipeline and Products Marketing Company, Mr. Adabonyan Opeyemi said, the ICA 3rd Governing Council will build a synergy of cooperation with other allied organisations both in the organised private and public sector to boost the nation’s credit system.

    The president noted that ICA has since 1992, being the only accredited national professional body for credit management in Nigeria and has helped a number of firms to reduce credit risks in their business dealing, thereby growing the economy.

    Other members of the third governing council with whom Oyebanji hopes to drive the institute to a greater height are: a former Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Skye Bank and currently, Chairman, Heritage Bank, Mr. Akinsola Akinfemiwa; the Registrar/Chief Executive Officer, ICA, Prof Chris Onalo; a Former Executive Director/Chief Risk Officer, Zenith Bank Plc, Mr. Andy Ojei; Deputy Group Managing Director and Group Executive Director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr. Bernard O.N. Otti and Executive Director, Accounts/Finance, Pipeline and Products Marketing Company, Mr. Adabonyan Opeyemi. Others are the Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, Standard Alliance Insurance Plc, Mr. Thomas Omokhai; Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, Airtel Nigeria, Mr. Segun Ogunsanya and Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria, Gimba Ya’u Kumo.

  • Russia cuts key rate to 14% as inflation eases amid slump

    Russia cuts key rate to 14% as inflation eases amid slump

    Russia’s central bank lowered its key interest rate in line with most economist forecasts, as stabilising inflation clears the path to boosting an economy buckling under low oil prices and sanctions over Ukraine.

    The one-week auction rate was cut by one percentage point to 14 per cent, the central bank said in a statement on its website Friday. Seventeen of 32 economists in a Bloomberg survey predicted the move, with nine seeing no change and five forecasting a bigger reduction. Another analyst predicted a half-point cut. Policy makers will hold a news conference later in the day.

    The Bank of Russia is slowing the pace of decreases after a surprise 2 percentage-point cut at its previous meeting in January as oil prices slipped and inflation in February soared to the fastest since 2002. Even with price growth more than fourfold its mid-term target, the regulator is answering calls from business to unwind December’s emergency increase to 17 per cent to buoy an economy entering its first recession in six years.

    “The current monetary policy and low economic activity will be conducive to the slowing of annual consumer price growth,” the central bank said in the statement. “As inflation risks abate, the Bank of Russia will be ready to continue cutting the key rate.”

    Inflation has more than doubled from the start of last year following a 46 per cent drop in the ruble in 2014. The Russian currency traded 0.3 per cent weaker at 61.3520 to the dollar at 1:37 p.m. in Moscow.

    The ruble’s collapse and Russia’s bans on food imports in retaliation for U.S. and European sanctions over the conflict in Ukraine helped stoke inflation in February to 16.7 per cent from a year earlier, compared with 15 per cent in January. Even so, it’s started slowing on a weekly basis. Price increases in the weeks ended March 2 and March 10 fell to four-month lows of 0.2 per cent.

    Higher inflation readings are the result of past factors and the Bank of Russia estimates price growth will decelerate amid economic contraction and shrinking consumer demand, Governor Elvira Nabiullina said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. Price growth may peak at 17 per cent to 17.5 per cent, according to the Economy Ministry.

    “There is no reason for the central bank to focus on current inflation, which will continue to accelerate for some time,” said Dmitry Polevoy, the chief economist for Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States at ING Groep NV in Moscow, who correctly predicted a rate cut to to 14 per cent. “Its policy is traditionally based on inflation expectations.”

    Pushing ahead with the rate-cut cycle will enable policy makers to focus more on jumpstarting the economy and pulling loan growth from four-year lows. Some banks in Russia have been blocked from global debt markets by sanctions that are hobbling consumer spending and choking investments.

    Gross domestic product contracted 1.5 per cent in January from a year earlier, according to a preliminary estimate by the Economy Ministry. GDP may shrink 3 per cent this year after 0.6 per cent growth in 2014, according to the government’s official forecast.

    “While inflation is yet to peak, the unexpected 200 basis- point cut in January indicated that the central bank is determined to ease the burden on the economy as soon as possible to reduce the risk of severe recession,” said Piotr Matys, a London-based foreign-exchange strategist at Rabobank International who correctly predicted the 100 basis-point rate cut.

  • Foreign reserves slump to $44b

    Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves have declined to $44.1 billion as at December 17, losing $700 million in one month. The reserves, which stood at $44.8 million in November 18, maintained steady fall in the last three months. The reserves were at $44.6 billion as at November 27, contrary to $45 billion recorded in October 14.

    Data obtained from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) website showed that at $45.2 billion, the reserves had increased by $200 million from October 14 to 28, before dipping further.

    The reserves were also at $45.2 billion on November 1 before they kept dropping on daily basis till November 27.

    Other figures showed that the reserves were at $47.7 billion on July 1, and dropped to $47 billion on July 15, entering August 1 at $47 billion. The foreign currency reserves had, fives year ago, specifically in August, peaked at $68 billion before the global financial crises impacted negatively on it.

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

    He explained that manipulating reserves levels can enable CBN intervene against volatile fluctuations in currency by affecting the exchange rate and increasing the demand for the naira. “Reserves act as shock absorber against factors that can negatively affect a country’s exchange rates and, therefore the CBN uses the reserves to maintain a steady rate,” he explained during training for financial journalists in Lagos.

    Analysis of foreign exchange utilised by sectors revealed that $7.83 billion was expended on the importation of visible goods into the country in the second quarter as against $6.63 billion and $7.74 billion in first quarter and second quarter of 2012, respectively.