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Economy in crisis: We target $2bn diaspora remittances monthly — CBN governor

Economy in crisis: We target $2bn diaspora remittances monthly — CBN governor

The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Godwin Emefiele, on Thursday said the target of the CBN was for the country to attract about $2bn monthly as remittances from citizens in diaspora.

Emefiele’s position is coming after the apex bank introduced its new Diaspora Foreign Exchange Remittances Policy.

The CBN boss told journalists during a press briefing on the new policy in Abuja that countries that had similar demographic features with Nigeria, such as Pakistan, often received about $2bn monthly from their citizens in diaspora.

His words:

“I’m aware from the data available that, for instance, Pakistan, even in the midst of COVID-19 receives $2bn monthly from flows from Pakistani in diaspora.

“If Nigeria is able to receive even if it is just $1bn monthly or moving close to $2bn monthly, I’m so certain you all know what will happen to the exchange rate in Nigeria.”

Emefiele noted that should the $2bn monthly target be met, Deposit Money Banks would after some time have no need of calling the CBN to fund their commercial operations.

“So that is why we are saying that we want to aggressively take on this and see how this will help our economy,” the governor stated.

He declared to Nigerians both at home and in the diaspora that the policy of recipients receiving their monies from abroad would kick off on December 4, 2020.

He noted that in a bid to block any loophole to manipulate the policy, the CBN had ordered all DMBs to close all their Naira General Ledger through which the naira remittances were hitherto being carried out.

He said the bank took the decision following resistance from international money transfer operators over its new decision on diaspora remittances.

Emefiele said, “The CBN observed some pushback by some of the IMTOs who were bent on continuing their nefarious activities of undermining our policy by attempting to resist the new policies.”




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New CBN policy: Naira gains N20 again, exchanges N470/$

New CBN policy: Naira gains N20 again, exchanges N470/$

The Nigeria’s Naira is gaining heavily in the parallel market following the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) amendments to the foreign exchange rule on diaspora remittances.

The nation’s currency exchanged at N470/$ on Wednesday December 2, 2020, gaining yet another N20 in 24 hour.

The currency, which had closed at a four-year low of N510 on Monday, had firmed up and gained N20 on Tuesday December 1, 2020 against the dollar as it exchanged for N490/$ after the CBN relaxed the policy on foreign remittances and domiciliary accounts.

On Monday, the CBN said beneficiaries of diaspora remittances through the international monetary transfer operators (IMTO) shall now have such inflows in foreign currency (US Dollar) through the designated bank of their choice.

The apex bank in a statement on Monday November 30, 2020, signed by O.S. Nnaji, director of trade & exchange of CBN, said recipients of such remittances may have the option of receiving these funds in foreign currency cash or into their domiciliary account.

The CBN statement reads, “these changes are necessary to deepen the foreign exchange market, provide more liquidity and create more transparency in the administration of Diaspora remittances into Nigeria”.

“In addition, these changes would help finance a future stream of investment opportunities for Nigerians in the Diaspora, while also guaranteeing that recipients would receive a market reflective exchange rate for the market.”

The apex bank also noted that beneficiaries shall have unfettered access and utilisation to such foreign currency proceeds, either in cash and or in their domiciliary accounts.

Under the new guidelines, operators of export domiciliary accounts will continue to operate based on existing regulations which allow account holders use their funds for business operations only with any extra funds sold in the import and export window.

Also operators of ordinary domiciliary accounts where accounts are funded electronically or wire transfer would be allowed unfettered and unrestricted use of these funds for eligible transactions. And where accounts are funded by cash lodgments, existing regulation will continue to apply.

The CBN had on February 23, 2020, explained that only electronic fund transfers into Domiciliary accounts can also be transferred from such accounts while cash deposits into such accounts can only be withdrawn in cash also.




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Banks swim in excess cash to lend customers as CBN relaxes CRR

Banks swim in excess cash to lend customers as CBN relaxes CRR

Commercial banks in Nigeria are now swimming in heavy load of cash to lend to customers as the Apex Bank has just relaxed its credit reserve ratio, CRR requirement which stipulates the minimum amount of cash the banks must deposit with it.

In a statement dated November, 30, the central bank’s Bello Hassan, director of banking supervision said, “the Central bank of Nigeria on November 30, 2020, approved the release of the excess above regulatory minimum cash reserve requirement of banks. This is part of measures to improve liquidity and support economic recovery through the increased extension of credit facilities to the real sector.”

This he said will be accomplished through the issuance of CBN special bills with the following features- “tenor of 90 days, subject to roll over at the instance of the CBN; zero coupons with an implied yield to be worked out by the CBN; the instrument will be traceable and will be discountable at the CBN window and finally, the instrument will qualify as liquid assets.”

It is the first time that the CBN has acknowledged it was holding cash beyond the CRR limit and this could be the most impactful action of the Apex bank yet as analysts have said it signals a shift from the dogged defence of the Naira which meant that the apex bank ruthlessly cleared away cash from the banking system to prevent the cash from chasing after scarce foreign exchange.

Two days ago, the CBN also amended the rules for receipt of diaspora remittances as part of its efforts to boost the foreign exchange market.

The Apex bank this will liberalize, simplify and improve the receipt and administration of diaspora remittances into Nigeria, beneficiaries of diaspora remittances through International Money Transfer Operators should henceforth, receive such inflows in foreign currency through the designated bank of their choice.




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New CBN Forex rule brings life back to Naira, exchanges N490/$

New CBN Forex rule brings life back to Naira, exchanges N490/$

Following the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) amendments to the foreign exchange rule on diaspora remittances, life came back to the Naira as it exchanged at N490/$ on Tuesday December 1, 2020, gaining a whopping N20 in 24 hours.

The naira, which had closed at a four-year low of N510 on Monday, was able to bounce back, gaining 4 percent against the dollar.

The local currency is expected to firm further as over 5,000 Bureaux De Change (BDCs) are to receive dollar disbursement from the CBN today.

On Monday, the CBN said beneficiaries of diaspora remittances through the international monetary transfer operators (IMTO) shall now have such inflows in foreign currency (US Dollar) through the designated bank of their choice.

The apex bank in a statement on Monday, signed by O.S. Nnaji, director of trade & exchange of CBN, said recipients of such remittances may have the option of receiving these funds in foreign currency cash or into their domiciliary account.

The CBN statement reads, “these changes are necessary to deepen the foreign exchange market, provide more liquidity and create more transparency in the administration of Diaspora remittances into Nigeria”.

“In addition, these changes would help finance a future stream of investment opportunities for Nigerians in the Diaspora, while also guaranteeing that recipients would receive a market reflective exchange rate for the market.”

The apex bank also noted that beneficiaries shall have unfettered access and utilisation to such foreign currency proceeds, either in cash and or in their domiciliary accounts.

The CBN had on February 23, 2020, explained that only electronic fund transfers into Domiciliary accounts can also be transferred from such accounts while cash deposits into such accounts can only be withdrawn in cash also.




Call 0803 239 3958 for free financial consulting advice for your businesses. Attend our bi-monthly Peachtree Sage 50 accounting and reporting seminar.
Reach us or send your financial updates and articles to info@skytrendconsulting.com.

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CBN battles forex market liquidity, amends diaspora remittance rule

CBN battles forex market liquidity, amends diaspora remittance rule

The Central Bank of Nigeria says it had amended the rules for receipt of diaspora remittances as part of its efforts to boost the foreign exchange market.

It said this in a circular on entitled ‘Amendment to procedures for receipt of diaspora remittances,’ which was signed by Director, Trade and Exchange Department, Dr O. S. Nnaji.

The CBN said to liberalise, simplify and improve the receipt and administration of diaspora remittances into Nigeria, beneficiaries of diaspora remittances through International Money Transfer Operators should henceforth, receive such inflows in foreign currency through the designated bank of their choice.

It added that such recipients of remittances may have the option of receiving these funds in foreign currency cash or in their ordinary domiciliary account.

Part of the circular read, “These changes are necessary to deepen the foreign exchange market, provide more liquidity and create more transparency in the administration of diaspora remittances in Nigeria.

“In addition, these changes would help finance streams of investment opportunities for Nigerians in diaspora, while also guaranteeing that recipients of remittances would receive a market-reflective exchange rate for their inflows.

“All authorised dealers and the general public should note that beneficiaries shall have unfettered access and utilisation to such foreign currency proceeds, either in cash and/or in their domiciliary accounts, in line with our circular TED/FEM/FPC/GEN/01/010.”

Meanwhile the naira closed on Monday November 30, 2020 at between N508 and N510/$
in the black market over persistent forex demand and speculative purchases.

Earlier in the day, the naira fell to N500 to the dollar after the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) adjusted the exchange rate by 3 percent across foreign exchange market segments.

This is according to SKYTREND CONSULTING prediction last week that the Naira will crash to N500 in exchange for the dollar early this week.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has however amended its foreign exchange rule by announcing that beneficiaries of diaspora remittances through the international monetary transfer operators (IMTO) shall now have such inflows in foreign currency (US Dollar) through the designated bank of their choice.

The persistent depreciation in the value of the naira is due to an increase in demand for the dollar by the end-users amid a shortage of the greenback.




Call 0803 239 3958 for free financial consulting advice for your businesses. Attend our bi-monthly Peachtree Sage 50 accounting and reporting seminar.
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Naira closes at N510/$ as CBN amends diaspora remittances procedures

Naira closes at N510/$ as CBN amends diaspora remittances procedures

The Nigeria’s Naira closed on Monday November 30, 2020 at between N508 and N510/$ in the black market over persistent forex demand and speculative purchases.

Earlier in the day, the naira fell to N500 to the dollar after the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) adjusted the exchange rate by 3 percent across foreign exchange market segments.

This is according to SKYTREND CONSULTING prediction last week that the Naira will crash to N500 in exchange for the dollar early this week.

CBN however amended its foreign exchange rule on Monday, by announcing that beneficiaries of diaspora remittances through the international monetary transfer operators (IMTO) shall now have such inflows in foreign currency (US Dollar) through the designated bank of their choice.

The apex bank in a statement signed by O.S. Nnaji, director of trade & exchange of CBN, said recipients of such remittances may have the option of receiving these funds in foreign currency cash or into their domiciliary account.

“These changes are necessary to deepen the foreign exchange market, provide more liquidity and create more transparency in the administration of Diaspora remittances into Nigeria,” the statement read.

“In addition, these changes would help finance a future stream of investment opportunities for Nigerians in the Diaspora, while also guaranteeing that recipients would receive a market reflective exchange rate for the market.”

The apex bank also noted that beneficiaries shall have unfettered access and utilisation to such foreign currency proceeds, either in cash and or in their domiciliary accounts.

The CBN had on February 23, 2020, explained that only electronic fund transfers into Domiciliary accounts can also be transferred from such accounts while cash deposits into such accounts can only be withdrawn in cash also.

The persistent depreciation in the value of the naira is due to an increase in demand for the dollar by the end-users amid a shortage of the greenback.




Call 0803 239 3958 for free financial consulting advice for your businesses. Attend our bi-monthly Peachtree Sage 50 accounting and reporting seminar.
Reach us or send your financial updates and articles to info@skytrendconsulting.com.

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Naira nosedives to N500/$, loses N140 in 12 months, CBN adjusts rate

Naira nosedives to N500/$, loses N140 in 12 months, CBN adjusts rate

The Nigerian Naira nosedives to N500 to the dollar on Monday 30th November, 2020 after the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) adjusted the exchange rate by N6 across foreign exchange market segments.

With the current rate, naira has lost N140 year-on-year when compared with N360 it stood in November 2019 and N1.25k day-on-day compared to N496.50k it exchanged with the dollar on Friday.

The persistent depreciation in the value of the naira is due to increase in demand for the dollar by the end-users amid a shortage of the greenback.

SKYTREND CONSULTING has predicted last week that the value of the Naira may plunge to N500/$ by this week

The foreign exchange market has been under pressure since March 2020 following a sharp drop in oil prices as a result of Covid-19 pandemic.

At the Bureau De Change (BDC) segment of the foreign exchange market, naira weakened by N5 as the dollar sold for N500 on Monday as against N495 on Friday.

The current exchange rate at the BDC and the black market has defied the CBN’s FX adjustment where it directed the BDCs to sell dollars at N392 to the end-users.

Nigeria’s Central Bank at the weekend adjusted the rates by N6 across foreign exchange market segments. This is in a bid to unify the exchange rates as recommended by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In a circular signed by Nnaji O.S, director, trade & exchange department, International Money Transfer Service Operators (IMTOs) are to sell to banks at N388, which is N6 higher than N382 in August 2020.

According to the circular, effective November 30, 2020, the CBN will be selling dollars to Bureau De Change (BDC) operators at N390 and the BDCs are expected to sell at N392 to the end-users. This represents N6 adjustment compared to N384 and N386 respectively, in August 27, 2020.

Banks are to sell dollars to the CBN at N389, which is also N6 higher than N383 directed in August 2020 by the regulator. However, the CBN retained the $10,000 sales to each BDCs since August 2020.

The CBN has sold over $1.0 billion to BDCs since September 2020, in a bid to inject more liquidity and ease demand pressures. However, the volatility in the market remained persistent, said analysts at FSDH research.




Call 0803 239 3958 for free financial consulting advice for your businesses. Attend our bi-monthly Peachtree Sage 50 accounting and reporting seminar.
Reach us or send your financial updates and articles to info@skytrendconsulting.com.

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How consumptive borrowing, wasteful spending landed Nigeria in recession — Peter Obi

How consumptive borrowing, wasteful spending landed Nigeria in recession — Peter Obi

Former Vice Presidential Candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Ex-governor of Anambra State, Mr Peter Obi says Nigeria slipped into recession because of her excessive borrowing and throwing same at consumption.

Peter Obi who appeared on Channels TV Live Politics interview says he is not against borrowing, but against borrowing for consumption.

He adds that if the Nation must borrow, such should be focused strictly on production and investment. The former governor says our economy is not protective; and that it is not creating jobs; and not putting food on people’s table.

His Words:

I am not against borrowing; but I am against borrowing for consumption. If you must borrow, and this is now critical that we must do that, you must borrow for production. The reason why we are in this mess is that the country is borrowing money and throwing at consumption. We must borrow strictly for production. The economy is not protective; that’s why it is not creating jobs; it is not putting food on people’s table.

As a businessman, the more you borrow money and invest properly, the more your business grows. Nigeria is borrowing money, the economy is not growing; our GDP is not growing, then there is something wrong. We now have a debt of almost a quarter of our GDP, of about $100 billion (hundred billion dollars).

So, where is investment for $100bn? If you invest one hundred billion properly, I assure you, we won’t be where we are now even if we are because due to Covid-19 pandemic, a lot of nations that have not experienced recession went into recession; it would have been a different thing. It would have been manageable; but I can tell you, the money we borrowed and are still borrowing is not being properly invested; even the little earning we are having we are still not investing properly, that is why we are headed south.

I am not against borrowing; borrowing is important, but you must borrow for investment. You must not borrow for consumption. What we do here is that we borrow money and waste it; because of it, you do not see the investment, and there’s nothing to payback; that’s why we are using about 90 percent of our revenue to service debt; because the money you are borrowing is not producing anything. People are making money without production. So, you are using your resources to service debt and because of it you do not have money for investment; to invest in critical areas.

And if you want to deal with the present recession, there must be properly articulated implementable and measurable policies. It is not just enough to say you are going to pull 100 million people out of poverty. The question is how?

If you say you are going from Lagos to Ibadan, you must be able to say, this is the route; this is the vehicle; and people can measure, so they know where you are moving to.




Call 0803 239 3958 for free financial consulting advice for your businesses. Attend our bi-monthly Peachtree Sage 50 accounting and reporting seminar.
Reach us or send your financial updates and articles to info@skytrendconsulting.com.

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Amidst dollar scarcity, CBN pegs official Naira rate to N392/$

Amidst dollar scarcity, CBN pegs official Naira rate to N392/$

As dollar scarcity bites harder, The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has directed Bureau De Change (BDC) operators in the country not to sell dollars higher than N392 to end users.

In a circular signed by O.S. Nnaji, director of trade and exchange at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), and dated November 30, 2020, it says the volume of sales for each market is $10,000 per bureau de change (BDC).

“Please be advised that the applicable exchange rate for the disbursement of proceeds of IMTOs, for the period Monday, November 30 to Friday, December 14, 2020, is as follows: International money transfer service operators (IMTSOs) to banks – N388/$1; Banks to CBN – N399/$1; CBN to BDCs – N390/$1; BDCs to end-users not more than N392/$1,” it read.

At the close of trading on Friday, figures from the financial market dealers exchange over the counter (FMDQ) NAFEX, an official market where the exchange rate is traded, also show that the exchange rate between the naira and dollar has depreciated to N390/$1 — lowest level since the introduction of the import & export (I&E) window in 2017.

This is about N4 higher than the N386 per dollar which the apex bank had sold dollars to the BDC operators

In the parallel market, the naira hit record lows, falling by 2.2 percent to N495.00/$1 as lack of access to forex at the official windows has funneled demand to the parallel market.

This also followed recent comments by Godwin Emefiele, governor of the CBN, saying that the parallel market makes up only 5 percent of the overall FX market which is patronized by people who go there for cash to offer bribe and corruption noting that it should not be used to determine the naira’s true value.




Call 0803 239 3958 for free financial consulting advice for your businesses. Attend our bi-monthly Peachtree Sage 50 accounting and reporting seminar.
Reach us or send your financial updates and articles to info@skytrendconsulting.com.

READ ALSO! Naira free fall: Parallel market not determined by demand, supply forces — CBN Governor

READ ALSO! Skytrend Consulting: Financial services and accounting solutions company

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Our $35bn external reserves enough to sustain 7 months imports — Emefiele

Our $35bn external reserves enough to sustain 7 months imports — Emefiele

Nigeria’s Apex Bank Governor, Mr Godwin Emefiele, says the nation’s external reserves, which currently stand at $35billion, are sufficient to take care of 7 months of imports of goods and services.

The Central Bank of Nigeria, (CBN) Boss adds that decline in crude oil earnings as well as the retreat by foreign portfolio investors significantly affects the supply of foreign exchange into Nigeria.

He made the submission during the 55th Annual Bankers Dinner organised by the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria in Lagos on Friday.

Emefiele says that in order to adjust for the decrease in the supply of foreign exchange, the naira depreciated from N305/$ to N360/$, and subsequently to N380/$.

His words:

“Our external reserves currently stand above $35billion are sufficient to cover seven months of import of goods and services.

“The decline in crude oil earnings as well as the retreat by foreign portfolio investors significantly affects the supply of foreign exchange into Nigeria.

“With the decline in our foreign exchange earnings and successive exchange rate adjustments, the CBN has continued to implement a demand management framework, which is designed to bolster the production of items that can be produced in Nigeria, and aid conservation of our external reserves.

“Due to the unprecedented nature of the shock, we continued to favour a gradual liberalisation of the foreign exchange market in order to smoothen exchange rate volatility and mitigate the impact which, rapid changes in the exchange rate could have on key macro-economic variables.

“This we believe is in line with international best practices in countries where managed float arrangements are in operation.”




Call 0803 239 3958 for free financial consulting advice for your businesses. Attend our bi-monthly Peachtree Sage 50 accounting and reporting seminar.
Reach us or send your financial updates and articles to info@skytrendconsulting.com.

READ ALSO! Naira free fall: Parallel market not determined by demand, supply forces — CBN Governor

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