Foreign Reserves Drop To $29.13b

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Thursday said that the nation’s foreign exchange reserves declined to 29.13 billion dollars as at Dec. 29.

 
The bank said on its Website that the drop represented 2.43 per cent from 29.31 billion dollars recorded as at Dec.23
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that the foreign reserves have been dropping since July 1, 2015.

 
The nation’s external reserves stood at 34.49 billion dollars as at Jan 5, 2015 from the 34.47 billion dollars recorded in Dec. 31, 2014.

 
But shortages of US Dollar has forced Nigeria’s external reserves into a massive decline hitting a new low of 29.73 billion dollar as at Dec. 11, while the value of the Naira declined in the unofficial foreign exchange market.

 
NAN also recalls that the central bank had spent around five billion dollars between January and July defending the Naira, which was hit by the 2014 plunge in oil prices.

 
The CBN in November said it was able to save 300 million dollars as at August from Bureau De Change (BDC), through its provision that request for forex must be accompanied by the BVN of the customers.

 
(NAN)

No Bank Has Capital Adequacy Problem, Says Emefiele

The CBN Governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele, said that no bank in the country had any problem meeting the required Capital Adequacy Ratio of 10 per cent.

Emefiele said this on Tuesday in Abuja while fielding questions from newsmen after the conclusion of the Monetary Policy Meeting.

It will be recalled that there were reports that the CBN had given three commercial banks until June 2016 to recapitalise after failing to meet required 10 per cent capital adequacy ratio.

According to the reports, the three unnamed banks stand to lose their licences if they do not meet the apex bank’s deadline.

“This has been a subject of topical discussion of late. Let me confirm that there is no bank in Nigeria that has capital inadequacy today. The news around is all false.

“The CBN has its own internal mechanism to monitor banks. We conduct monthly stress testing of the operations and activities of commercial banks.

“We stress test their balance sheets on regular basis, using different scenarios to determine the strength and strategic health of a bank.

“So when we carry out our stress test and a bank has, say 10.5 per cent liquidity ratio, we write an informal disclosure to the bank to let them know that they are close to the minimum ratio.

“We advise them on what to do not to fall below the minimum liquidity ratio benchmark of 10 per cent. That is what we do. And so far no bank has reached the minimum benchmark,’’ he said.

Emefiele said the introduction of Bank Verification Number (BVN) had brought sanity to the sale of foreign exchange at the Bureau de Change (BDC) segment.

He said that the CBN directive to BDC operators to take down BVN of all customers interested in purchasing foreign exchange had enabled the apex bank to track illicit financial flow in and out of the country.

He said also that the policy was already bearing fruit as naira continues to appreciate at the BDC segment.

 

 

(NAN)

Naira will not be devalued further -Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari said on Wednesday, in Paris, France, that he opposed a further weakening of the naira and openly endorsed the CBN’s policy of restricting foreign-exchange trading.

“I don’t think it is healthy for us to have the naira devalued further,” Buhari said in an interview with France 24.

“That’s why we are getting the central bank to make modifications in terms of making foreign exchange available to essential services, industries, spare parts, essential raw materials and so on – but things like toothpicks and rice, Nigeria can produce enough of those,” he said.

The nation’s revenue has been hit hard by the fall of global crude prices, and the CBN, which has been under pressure from foreign investors to further devalue the naira, has imposed increasingly strict foreign exchange rules to save the external reserves and avoid what would be the third devaluation in one year.

Nigeria had, last year, devalued the naira to N197 to the dollar from N160. The naira was further adjusted slightly in July to N199 to the dollar. As a result of the continued pressure on the naira, CBN introduced some measures to curb the excess demand for foreign exchange.

This, however, did not go down well with some of the foreign investors.

After the crash of oil prices last year, the CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, reacted to the naira’s drop to a record low in February by extending trading curbs and introducing bans on purchases of dollars by 41 items, which CBN said cannot access foreign exchange from the Nigeria market.

It will also be recalled that JP Morgan last week said it would remove Nigeria from its influential emerging markets bond index by the end of October, citing a lack of liquidity and the central bank’s currency restrictions.

Salary Arrears: CBN approves bank loans for 27 states

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has approved the request by banks to provide financial succour for States under the salary debt burden to enable them pay the backlog of salaries of their workers.

 

This follows the decision by the National Executive Council (NEC) at its meeting in June requesting the CBN, in collaboration with other stakeholders, to appraise and consider ways of liquidating the outstanding staff salaries owed by state and local governments.

 

Out of the 27 states involved, funds have been disbursed to two states, namely, Zamfara and Kwara, which met the requirements of their respective banks.

 

 

CBN said efforts will be made in the coming days to conclude disbursements to other states so that all outstanding salaries to civil servants can be cleared.

 

The conditions for accessing the loan facility, according to the CBN, include resolutions of the State Executive Council authorizing the borrowing and State House of Assembly consenting to the loan package, as well as issuance of Irrevocable Standing Payment Order (ISPO) to ensure timely repayment.

 

Chidi Anselm Odinkalu: The CBN, ATM Charges, and Regulatory Capture

On 13 August 2014, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) issued a circular announcing the “re-introduction of ‘Remote-on-Us’ ATM cash withdrawal transaction fee, which will now be 65 Naira per transaction to cover the remuneration of switches, ATM monitoring and fit-notes processing by acquiring banks.” The CBN explained that “the new charge shall apply as from the 4th‘Remote-on-Us’ withdrawal (in a month) by a card holder, thereby making the first three ‘Remote-on-Us’ transactions free for the card holder but to be paid by the issuing bank.”

This circular was not designed to be understood by even highly educated Nigerians and there’re legitimate questions whether its contents are indeed in the interest of the average Nigerian. The reasons it gave for introducing the charge on Automatic Teller Machine (ATM) transactions addressed the interests of bankers and did not at all advert to the interests of users of financial services or consumers of banking products.

To appreciate its implications, the CBN’s new policy on ATM transactions needs to be broken down in terms that mere mortals can understand. The ATM is an essential outlet for retail banking. Deposit money banks issue account holders with ATM cards, with which they can, by keying in their personalized identity numbers (PIN), access their deposits from the ATM.

It is not unusual for customers seeking to use ATMs to encounter problems. In many neighborhoods outside the big cities, many banks don’t deploy ATMs. Customers sometimes travel long distances to access them. May times, the ATM has no cash to dispense. At other times, it debits accounts for money not dispensed. Quite often, many of the ATMs are down or suffering some form outage.

Because of these not infrequent glitches, the Switch system enables customers to access their funds from ATMs operated by Banks other than the ones with which their accounts are domiciled. Clearly, the biggest single reason why account holders use ATMs operated by banks other than their own is system-wide inefficiency. The choice of sticking with the ATM deployed by your own bank doesn’t exist.

To any regulator interested in even-handedness between the industry and the consumer, it would make sense to take measures to progressively minimize these problems with a view, ultimately, to eliminating them. Rather than do this, the CBN chooses to penalize the customer, effectively making inefficiency a revenue stream for banks.

Thus, by this new directive, whenever any customer uses more than thrice in a month an ATM other than that operated by the Bank with which they have an account, they will be charged 65 Naira. To those who are rich and comfortable, this may sound like nothing. But in a country in which over 70% live around or below poverty lines, it’s like robbing the poor to make rich bankers even richer. It’s wrong. Even worse, it looks unlawful.

 The powers of the CBN are not at large. They are established and circumscribed by law. Section 42 of the CBN Act sets up two standards with reference to which regulatory measures by the Bank may be assessed, namely: “high standards of conduct in the banking system” and “in the national interest.” With reference to the former standard, this policy rewards banks for maintaining an abysmal ATM payments system. With reference to the latter, the CBN has manifestly failed to take account of the interests of customers. On both counts, the legality of the new CBN directive can be questioned.

The CBN provides no evidence of monitoring or performance of the ATMs. What is the penetration of ATM deployment relative to the footprint of retail banking? What proportion of ATM transactions are failed or frustrated? What are the statistics of down time or outage on ATMs? How many complaints are logged about ATM transactions; how many are resolved satisfactorily and what is the average resolution time? Why now?

Yet, these are necessary questions because they help to explain the logics of the decision making and ensure compliance with service quality by the banks. Banks have a legitimate interest to make profit from quality service delivery. But by “re-introducing” charges before guaranteeing service quality, the CBN penalizes customers for industry inefficiencies and offers to the industry that it is supposed to regulate a perverse incentive at the expense of the customer. That’s neither in the interest of higher standards of banking nor of the public.

Dr. Chidi Anslem Odinkalu is the Chairman of Nigeria’s Human Rights Commission Governing Board.

Views expressed are solely the author’s