Tag: CBN

CBN

  • We don’t know source of recovered $43million loot – CBN cries out

    We don’t know source of recovered $43million loot – CBN cries out

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has distanced itself from the $43million, that was discovered in an apartment in the Osborne Towers, Ikoyi.

    Spokesperson of the apex bank, Isaac Okorafor, insisted that they did not know the source of the money.

    He also explained that the CBN issues serial currencies to banks, who were then free to give such currencies to their clients.

    I do not know the source of the money; we (CBN) only issue currencies to banks which then transmit the currencies to their customers,” Okorafor told The Nation.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that operatives of the EFCC had last Wednesday stormed the apartment and found $43,449,947, £27,800 and N23,218,000 stacked inside a fireproof safe.

    However, since the discovery of the loot, there has been unending controversies over its ownership.

  • Forex: CBN issues new form for SMEs to facilitate easy documentation

    In order further simplify accessibility to foreign exchange by the Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has introduced a newly designed form to facilitate minimal documentation.


    Confirming this new development on Monday, the apex Bank spokesman, Mr Isaac Okorafor said the motive behind the new form is “to provide for the foreign exchange needs of SMEs, including those in retail business and to reduce the rigour of too much documentation.”


    According to him, the Bank has decided to ease the difficulty usually experienced by these category of businesses.

    Mr okorafor further explained that “henceforth, all SMEs seeking to obtain foreign exchange for eligible transactions shall now fill the newly designed form with basic documentation only for the importation of goods and services.”

    With this, the SMEs would be accommodated under the SME Foreign Exchange regime recently introduced by the apex Bank at the prevailing rate to import eligible visible and invisible items, he noted.

    This new measure will take immediate effect and importers in this category would no longer be required to fill Form M.

  • Forex: CBN releases additional $250m for agriculture, airlines, others

    Forex: CBN releases additional $250m for agriculture, airlines, others

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Wednesday released another 250 million dollars on 7 to 30 day forwards for agriculture, airline, petroleum products and raw materials.

    The acting Director, Corporate Communications, CBN, Mr Isaac Okorafor, said in a statement that the bank also called for bid for 100 million dollars wholesale spot for traveling allowances, medical and tuition fees.

    He said that the apex bank had also commenced heavy injections into the spot market in addition to the settlement of requests for wholesale spot bids for invisibles like school fees, medicals and personal travel allowance.

    It will be recalled that earlier this week, the apex Bank had disbursed 20,000 dollars each to the Bureau De Change (BDC) operators in two tranches of 10,000 dollars, to ensure liquidity in the foreign exchange market.

    On Monday, the bank auctioned 100 million dollars to be settled between one week and 30 days.

    It also auctioned 418 million dollars at N310 to a dollar to airlines, agricultural firms, petroleum and raw material importers in addition to the 350 million dollars it sold last week.

     

  • Forex: CBN opens special window for SMEs

    Forex: CBN opens special window for SMEs

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has opened a special Forex window for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) to enable SMEs import eligible finished and semi-finished items.

    The CBN spokesmsn, Isaac Okorafor, in a statement on Monday in Abuja, said that the SMES would be permitted to import items not exceeding 20,000 dollars for an enterprise per quarter.

    He said that 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 dollars per SME customer per quarter can be effected by telegraphic transfer subject to completion of Form ‘M’ supported with proforma Invoice and the importer’s Bank Verification Number (BVN).

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

    Information posted on the CBN website defines Small and Medium Scale Enterprises are enterprises that have asset base (excluding land) of between N5 million and N500 million and a labour force of between 11 and 300,” he said.

    Okorafor further disclosed that the Bank had begun the massive sale of foreign exchange in different sectors of the Forex market this week.

    He said that on Monday, the Bank intervened by offering 100 million dollars to authorised dealers at the forex auction in the interbank wholesale window.

    He said that 41 million dollars was also sold for BTA, PTA, medical and tuition fees.

    On the BDC segment, he said the Bank had sold 10,000 dollars each to BDCs to meet the needs of low-end users in the country.

    According to Okorafor, 99.544 million dollars was also picked up by dealers out of the 100 million offered by the Bank during the last wholesale auction on Friday.

    Meanwhile, operators in the Bureau De Change (BDC) segment have duly funded their accounts with the CBN in anticipation of picking up the dollar equivalent of 10,000 on Tuesday.

    Market analysts believe that the CBN may continue its special intervention in the market with the sale of more dollars to BDCs, thereby bringing down the price of Dollar.

     

     

    NAN

     

  • CBN to sustain forex intervention, releases fresh $418m

    CBN to sustain forex intervention, releases fresh $418m

    The Central Bank of Nigeria on Sunday vowed to sustain its intervention in the foreign exchange market to ensure liquidity in that segment of the financial sector.

    The Acting Director, Corporate Communications, CBN, Mr. Isaac Okorafor, stated this in a statement issued in Abuja.

    He said as part of its determination to make forex available to genuine users, the apex bank on Friday auctioned the sum of $418m at the retail segment at the rate of N310 to a dollar.

    He gave the sectors of the economy that benefitted from the intervention as aviation, agriculture, petroleum and raw materials/machineries.

    The statement read in part, “In its avowed determination to ensure ample supply of foreign exchange liquidity in the market, the Central Bank of Nigeria on Friday, 7th of April, 2017 auctioned the sum of $418m at a marginal rate of N310/$.

    “This was in addition to the sum of $350m sold as wholesale auction during the week. In the weeks ahead, the CBN will sustain its intervention through the sale of foreign exchange to all segments of the market.”

    The statement said the CBN would sell short-tenured forwards of seven-day to 30-day maturity to meet the demand of manufacturers and all other foreign exchange users.

    The apex bank said the injection of foreign exchange into the market should reassure all users of its determination to continue to meet all legitimate forex demand in the market.

    It added that the intervention was part of measures to achieve exchange rate stability in the financial market.

  • Forex: Again, CBN auctions $418m to stabilize naira

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has auctioned $418 million at a marginal rate of N310 to a dollar, to airlines, agriculture, petroleum and raw materials sub sectors.

    The CBN acting Director, Corporate Communications, Mr Isaac Okorafor said in Abuja that the $480m offered last week was in addition to the $350 million sold as wholesale auction for travel allowance and school fees at the same period.

    He said that in the weeks ahead, the CBN would further sustain its intervention through the sale of foreign exchange to all segments of the market, like the interbank and the Bureau de Change segment.

    The Bank will sell short tenured forwards of 7 to 30-day maturity to meet demand of manufacturers and all other foreign exchange users.

    These significant injections of foreign exchange into the market should reassure all foreign exchange users of our determination to continue to meet all legitimate forex demand in the market,” he said.

    Okorafor reiterated the bank’s commitment to achieving exchange rate stability in the Nigeria market.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the CBN in recent months had injected dollars to the inter-bank and Bureau de Change foreign exchange market in its bid to sustain forex supply to different categories of users.

    This translated to the appreciation of the Naira from an all time low of about N560 to a dollar, to N355 within two months.

    However, in the last two weeks, the Naira began to weaken again against the dollar, which was attributed to alleged hoarding of the greenback by commercial banks, and insufficient supply to the BDC segments and other stakeholders.

    To remedy this, the CBN had threatened to penalise any bank refusing to sell forex to customers.

    Also, forex supply to the BDC was increased from 8,000 dollars per week to 10,000 dollars.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the Naira now sells at N405 to a dollar in the parallel market

     

    NAN

  • Prevail on commercial banks to reduce 30 percent interest rate, ECCIMA charges CBN

    Prevail on commercial banks to reduce 30 percent interest rate, ECCIMA charges CBN

    The Enugu Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (ECCIMA) has appealed to the Central Bank Nigeria (CBN) to intervene in the high interest rate charged by the commercial banks.

    The President of ECCIMA, Rev. Ugochukwu Chime, made the appeal on Saturday while speaking with newsmen at the 28th edition of 2017 Enugu International Trade fair.

    “May we commend the CBN for its recent score in breathing life into the naira through its intervention to enhance the value.

    “However, we are worried how sustainable this could be without buoying up the productive sector, which will give a lot of value to our economic stability.

    “A situation whereby businesses could only access bank credit with the interest rate of 25 or 30 per cent is quite worrisome.

    “This cannot, in anyway, help in increasing our productive level, GDP and stabilising our economy.

    “Therefore, we wish to counsel that the CBN must find a way to intervene, to save indigenous businesses and the industrial sector from imminent cringe,’’ he said.

    Chime also said there was need for a policy to ensure continuous flow of low interest rate soft loans to Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).

    He said the policy became imperative since SMEs were the major employers of labour in the economy.

    Chime noted that SMEs had prospect for expansion through creation of jobs, wealth, reduction of poverty and checking rising wave of restiveness among youths in communities.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the Enugu International Trade Fair, supported by the Federal Ministry of Trade and Investment, is organised to showcase Nigeria’s non-oil products.

    The exhibition is also providing opportunity for local and foreign businesses to explore and access commercially viable markets in the South-East of the country.

    The theme of the fair, which will end on Monday, is: “Promoting Nigeria’s Industrial Sector and SMEs for Inclusive and Robust Economy”.

     

    NAN

  • Forex crisis: CBN to release another $10,000 to BDCs

    Forex crisis: CBN to release another $10,000 to BDCs

    The President, Association of Bureau De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), , Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe has said the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will inject additional 10,000 dollars proceeds of International Money Transfer Services Operators (IMTSO) to 3135 Bureau De Change Operators nationwide.

    Gwadabe said this in an interview with newsmen on Wednesday in Lagos.

    According to him, the move by the CBN is to checkmate the activities of currency hoarders and speculators.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the CBN had on Tuesday injected 10,000 dollars to BDCs nationwide.

    “Providing liquidity into the BDC subsector is the rat poison that will smoke the rat out of the hole in terms of speculation and hoarding.

    “The CBN’s action justifies its determination to continue to strengthen the Naira and get it out of the grips of speculators and hoarders,’’ Gwadabe said.

    The ABCON chief commended the “doggedness of the CBN in its interventions in the entire official window.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the CBN had on Monday vowed to stamp speculators out of the nation’s foreign exchange market through its interventions.

    The move by the CBN to rightfully explore the BDC window in stabilising the Naira exchange rate has shown the apex bank as a listening institution geared toward ameliorating the plights of FOREX end users.

     

     

    NAN

  • CBN’s complicity in Naira clash

    By: Henry Boyo

    “LCCI blames CBN over depreciating Naira” was title of a report on pg 17 of the Guardian edition of January 19th 2009, in which, Kayode Onafowokan, who is chairman, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, blamed the Central Bank (CBN) for “the drastic drop in the naira value”.

    Otunba Onafowokan noted that “through acts of omission or commission, CBN created an environment which spurred speculative activities, leading naturally to bloated demand for foreign exchange and an inevitable drastic depreciation in the exchange rate”. The Chamber also noted that CBN’s “various pronouncements and actions did not give a clear policy direction and were sometimes inconsistent; a disposition which significantly fueled speculative activities leading to unbearable demand pressure on forex”. The LCCI chairman, further observed that it would seem that CBN top officials do not appreciate the gravity of the damage, its actions have caused the economy”. Truth, they say, has no hiding place!

    However, probably unknown to the LCCI, the path to the naira’s fall and our dislocated economy had infact been plotted and the process steadily implemented by CBN since February 2005; thus, the recent Naira crash was actually a dastardly predetermined blow delivered under cover of the global economic meltdown.

    “THE N.E.E.D.S PROGRAMME AND MONETARY POLICY CIRCULAR NO. 37 (1&2), are two articles published, respectively, on 14th and 21st February 2005, in which this writer warned on CBN’s plot to attack the naira, and emasculate the economy with odious policies! Evidently, Nigeria’s unyielding oppressive economic challenges, despite over four years of embarrassingly abundant foreign exchange, may have validated our prognostication.

    Notwithstanding, Omolara Akanji, CBN Director “Trade & Exchange” boasted at the 8th Annual CBN Seminar for Business Editors, in August 2006, that “the apparent convergence (of Naira exchange rates) signaled an effective foreign exchange management and efficient foreign exchange market”. The Director also suggested that the convergence was brought about by its recent liberalization of the foreign exchange market,

    Indeed, consequent upon its quest for market liberalization, CBN hastily removed the traditional documentary controls that inhibited the nebulous patrons of the black market from accessing relatively cheaper, officially sourced dollars from commercial banks. CBN therefore met the expected upsurge in forex demand, with monthly allocations of $400,000 to every registered bureau de change (BDC), despite the threat of capital flight and the likely possibility that the major patrons of BDCs could be smugglers and Treasury looters.

    CBN’s jiggery-pokery on the forex market, has been decried in an earlier article (published 9/4/2006) titled “PSEUDO LIBERALISATION OF FOREX MARKET”, in which I had observed that “What is apparent from all the above is that CBN appears overwhelmed by its new found seemingly inexhaustible pool of dollar inflow from the exceptional rise in crude oil prices. Indeed, the euphoria of huge dollar reserves may have regrettably also translated to reckless dispersal of our foreign exchange earnings with the shadowy objective of convergence of forex rates”

    “Conversely, a truly liberalized market would have many sellers and buyers! However, an arrangement where CBN, alone supplies over 80% of dollars traded, would invariably represent a stranglehold market monopoly”.

    Consequent on CBN’s poliy, the predictable boom in BDC business and free supply of dollars prompted an article published on 9/4/2007 titled “WHAT A LIBERALISING POLICY” in praise of CBN’s ‘acclaimed wisdom’ by Vanguard’s Babatunde Komolafe; Komolafe’s shallow evaluation of the forex market was conversely appraised in another article, published on 30/4/2007, with an identical title, in which I noted that… “As if in a prodigal desperation to wastefully spend our bountiful dollar reserves rather than apply such to the benefit of the real sector, the CBN gave away $7bn to 14 Nigerian banks at possibly less than 5percent interest rate or at no cost whatsoever, to facilitate their engagement in international banking and finance; furthermore, CBN equally approved $20,000 as basic travel allowance for every Nigerian (even when less than 1percent of Nigerians earn $20,000 or N2,600,000 per annum); worse still, despite valuable ample idle reserves, CBN continues to lead us down the path of unnecessary local debt accumulation by returning to borrow funds at over 15% from the same banks to whom CBN had placed a significant portion of both our dollar and Naira revenue.

    Notwithstanding the insolicited advice, the CBN marched on aggressively, like a soldier without ammunition, into battle, and today, the chickens have come home to roost; CBN has inevitably since returned to a prescription for accountability in forex usage; a process it earlier glibly discarded in 2006! According to reports, CBN would now also cease further sales of forex to BDCs, thus belatedly admitting that it is not best practice, anywhere in the world, for central banks to fund BDCs; in addition, banks will also henceforth only purchase forex specifically for their customers who have appropriate cash cover.

    But, the question still remains whether CBN’s turnaround or born-again posturing is truly altruistic. Unfortunately, the pattern of forex sales to banks in 2008, as published in Vanguard’s Business Edition of 12/1/09 is worrisome! The CBN, reportedly cumulatively auctioned $4.7bn between January-September 2008; regrettably however, the Naira liquidity surplus, knowingly precipitated with the late release of 100 percent accumulated 2008 capital expenditure budget in late October, invariably triggered a sudden surge in dollar demand between October/ November, such that despite, Soludo’s assurances that our economy was well-insulated from the global meltdown, the CBN inexplicably ultimately auctioned over $7bn to defend the Naira in just two months, a significant difference from the $4.7bn auctioned from January- September 2008.

    In a farcical twist, the CBN has now blamed the sudden surge in dollar demand to speculation, and has therefore threatened to deal with round-trippers; nonetheless, the Apex bank was conspicuously silent on whether it was forced to open the treasury vaults to meet alleged speculative dollar demand between October – November 2008, since the dollar amount demanded by banks in both months was clearly out of sync with trend! Indeed, the abnormal dollar demand and supply notwithstanding, the CBN still liberally simultaneously funded BDCs with dollars till late November 2008!

    A cursory examination of the money market will show that demand for forex often peaks after the disbursement of monthly Naira allocations to constitutional beneficiaries. Consequently, the greater the monthly distributable dollars, the greater the naira supply in banks and the greater, also is the capacity of banks to extend credit ultimately, the greater also, will be the demand for dollars, with an inverse downward pressure on naira exchange rate. Thus, CBN is undeniably the architect of the recent Naira crash, while the CBN Governor is the godfather of forex speculation, especially when serious sanctions are rare, despite the pervasive and brazen round-tripping in banks!”

    Now fast forward to march 2017,

    “EFCC arrests two CBN Directors for forex manipulation” was the front page headline of the Punch Newspapers on 30th March 2017. The related story suggests that sources at the EFCC have reasons to believe that the activities of these Directors contributed to dollar scarcity and weakening of the Naira exchange rate”.

    Nevertheless, it is plausible that the most sustainable effective antidote to unending Naira depreciation would be for CBN to relinquish its skewed monopoly in the foreign exchange market and the abolition of its auctions of rations of dollars in a market, that is uncomfortably flush with excess Naira liquidity. Evidently, even if dollar supply for example, fortuitously quadruples, the Naira rate will ironically eventually still continue to weaken, so long as CBN’s stranglehold dollar monopoly subsists. Clearly our recent monetary history has not recorded any meaningful Naira appreciation even when CBN was in custody of best ever reserves above $60bn!!

    SAVE THE NAIRA! SAVE NIGERIANS!!

     

  • CBN injects fresh $240m to boost forex liquidity as Naira exchanges for N388/1$

    CBN injects fresh $240m to boost forex liquidity as Naira exchanges for N388/1$

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Monday continued boosting the country’s foreign exchange liquidity with 240 million dollars, part of which 150 million dollars will go to dealers in the interbank wholesale window.

    Those who stand to gain from the sales through the interbank wholesale auction window include manufacturers, importers of aggro-machineries, plants and critical raw materials.

    The Bank’s Acting Director, Corporate Communications, Mr Isaac Okorafor in a statement, said that the bank also released 90 million dollars to meet requests for invisibles such as travel allowances, medical and school fees.

    He said that henceforth, the apex Bank would sell 10,000 dollars only to low-end Forex dealers once a week rather than the bi-weekly sales it announced earlier.

    He said that the CBN had adjusted BDC sale days to Tuesdays only, to reduce logistic difficulties.

    According to Okorafor, the CBN has also directed all banks to pay cash over the counter to desiring foreign exchange customers to further ease the access of customers.

    He further urged customers to report any un-cooperating bank to the CBN through available platforms.

    The CBN, in the recent months, has made offers and releases of over 2 billion dollars to the inter-bank foreign exchange market in its bid to sustain Forex supply to different categories of users.

    Last week, the Naira began to weaken against the dollar, which was attributed to alleged hoarding of the dollars by commercial banks, in spite of receiving over 200 million dollars.

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the Naira on Friday closed at N394 to a dollar.

    It, however, later showed signs of recovery, as it exchange for N388 to a dollar on Monday in Abuja.