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Naira Gains As CBN Injects $210m Into FX Market / CBN Injects $280M Into FX Market, Increases Sale To Bdcs / CBN Pumps Fresh $80m To FX Market For School Fees, PTA (2) (3) (4)

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Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by Adesiji77: 4:32pm On Apr 12, 2016
Nigerian banks are under pressure to revive two-way trading in the country’s foreign exchange (FX) market after it became clear that there were no legal impediments to them doing so, sources familiar with the matter tell BusinessDay.

This comes after the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), a private sector think-tank, wrote to the 22 commercial banks requesting clarification on their apparent violation of the Foreign Exchange (Monitoring and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2004 or FEA Act, by refusing to quote rates that are based on bilateral agreements between buyers and sellers of FX as enshrined in the law of 2004.

“We are informed that over the last year (February 13, 2015 to date) the foreign exchange rate quoted by banks to Authorised Sellers (such as, International Oil Companies, Importers, etc) has remained consistent at $/N199 regardless of the transaction amount or timing of the transaction,” the NESG said in the letter which was also copied to the CBN, the Chartered Institute of Bankers, the FMDQ OTC Securities Exchange and the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA).

According to the letter “despite recent events in the FX market which have led to exchange rate volatilities, the purchase price quoted to Authorised Sellers has remained stagnant – thus not providing a true reflection of the current state of the FX market.”
Nigeria has pegged the naira at N197- N199 per dollar since March 2015 and virtually frozen the market in an apparent bid to stem the currency’s slide amid a rout in oil prices.

The policy, seen to have worsened the foreign-exchange shortage and lack of dollar inflows, has been widely criticised by investors and businesses.

The FEA 2004 Act by virtue of the provision of its section 9 specifically states that: “the rate at which each transaction in the market is to be executed shall be at the rate mutually agreed between the applicant purchaser and the authorised dealer or authorised buyer concerned.”
Sources however say that by virtue of the FEA 2004 law, the purchase price ought to be based on bilateral agreements, and as such, is inconsistent with the current practice of quoting a fixed FX rate.

“The FEA 2004 Act was envisaged to create a free FX market, however, there is none today,” Oluwakonyinsola Ajayi, a professor of law and Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), said in response to BusinessDay questions.
“The banks are currently lacking courage to stand up for their rights. They should simply trade FX as the law provides,” Ajayi said.
The shutting down of the autonomous market has led to a slide in FX trading volumes, with attendant negative impact on the market’s ability to fund real sector activities of companies that need dollars.

Nigerian FX turnover was around $500mn a day, when the foreign exchange trading position for banks was 1 percent of shareholders’ funds, and as high as $1 billion a day when the FX net open position was at 20 percent of shareholders’ funds in 2008.

Today, daily trading volumes have collapse to only about $10 million, according to data from Standard Chartered Bank.
“The market should be liberalised and CBN should allow anybody that has forex outside the country to bring it in. Diaspora remittances, donor funds and foreign investment capital, should be exchanged at the prevailing market rate and not the CBN rate,” Muda Yusuf, director-general of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), said in response to BusinessDay’s questions on how to return liquidity to the FX market.
“The CBN should desist from fixing the exchange rate at a level the reserves cannot support. They should adopt a more flexible exchange rate regime. What this means is that they should allow the market fundamentals (the forces of demand and supply) determine the exchange rate.”
Yusuf added that the CBN should watch the growth of money supply, as excessive growth in money supply will weaken the naira currency.

The CBN’s FX reserves dropped 33 percent to $27.6 billion, between January 2014 and April 2016.
The naira has hit a record low of N320 to the dollar on the parallel market, as importers desperate to meet their obligations scramble for dollars.

Foreign investors have mostly shunned Nigeria’s bond and stock markets, as they await clarity from the CBN, regarding any update on proposed new FX trading rules.
Section 7 of exchange act, provides that transactions in the Autonomous Foreign Exchange Market (“the Foreign Exchange Market”) shall be as in the inter-bank system, that is between (i) the public and Authorised Dealers appointed under this Act; (ii) the Authorised Dealers appointed under this Act; (iii) the Authorised Dealers and Authorised Buyers appointed under this Act, said Asue Ighodalo, Founding Partner of Law firm Banwo & Ighodalo.

According to him, “a recurring theme in section 7 of FEMMA is the presence of ‘Authorised Dealers’ for dealings in the Foreign Exchange Market.
“Thus, transactions in the Foreign Exchange Market cannot occur without the presence of Authorised Dealers and the rate at which each transaction in the Foreign Exchange Market shall be executed shall be the rate mutually agreed between the applicant purchaser and the Authorised Dealer or Authorised Buyer concerned. Furthermore, section 37(2) of FEMMA, provides that where the provisions of any other law (including the CBN Act) are inconsistent with the provisions of FEMMA, the provisions of FEMMA shall prevail.

“Based on the foregoing, my understanding of section 16 of the CBN Act is that although the CBN can determine the exchange rate of the Naira by a suitable mechanism devised by the CBN; it cannot determine the actual exchange rate in the Foreign Exchange Market and accordingly, transactions involving Authorised Dealers,” Ighodalo said in response to questions.
“It is not the traditional role of the CBN to determine exchange rates in the market. Its role is simply to guide and control monetary policies. This is the traditional role of the CBN anywhere in the world,” Olisa Agbakoba, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) said in response to BusinessDay questions.

“It is not its place to interfere with the market. But let us even assume that it is (as we are not known as a country that thrives on the Rule of law), and the CBN is aware that it has no legal powers to do what it is doing. Commercially, should it even be doing this? No, because it makes no sense! The foreign exchange market is now determined narrowly by the CBN to mean the Foreign exchange reserves that Nigeria has.
This is totally wrong. The foreign exchange market includes everybody: you, me and everyone else.”

The CBN’s FX reserves dropped 33 percent to $27.6 billion between January 2014 and April 2016
The apex regulator’s monthly dollar inflows from oil taxes and royalties fell to less than $1 billion dollars in January, falling from a peak of about $3.2 billion in data from the CBN show.

The naira has hit a record low of N320 to the dollar on the parallel market as importers desperate to meet their obligations scramble for dollars.
“Exporters and investors are holding on to foreign currency, as no one would sell at the rate the government is setting, while the government does not have the reserves to keep the exchange rate at its official level in the market”, Lamido Sanusi CBN governor from 2009 to 2014, said in a recent interview.

Sources say one direction the CBN could take to return liquidity and improve the functioning of the FX market would be to authorise a second-tier FX market to ease the current dollar crunch.
A second-tier FX market has been tried in Nigeria in the past in the 1980’s
The second-tier foreign exchange market (SFEM) had three key components: CBN organised tender sessions, interbank dealings and OTC dealings between banks and their customers.

The SFEM system was relatively managed and required import documentation, but it ensured more market-determined exchange rate adjustment and a USD-NGN divergence from the Tier I exchange rate.

“A second-tier FX market may smooth the depletion of FX reserves, but it will most likely not prevent NGN depreciation if oil prices remain so low,” Samir Gadio Head of Africa Strategy and FICC Research at Standard Chartered Bank, said in response to BusinessDay questions.
“From an offshore investor standpoint, the key question is whether the non deliverable forwards (NDF) fixing will change.”

http://businessdayonline.com/2016/04/banks-under-pressure-from-industry-groups-to-deepen-fx-market/
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by ngmgeek(m): 7:04pm On Apr 12, 2016
La La la La Travel Travel Travel cheesy

6 Likes

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by babyfaceafrica: 7:05pm On Apr 12, 2016
K
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by gabazin080(m): 7:05pm On Apr 12, 2016
This is not our problem right now, we need fuel
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by frankobaba(m): 7:06pm On Apr 12, 2016
Indeed

1 Like

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by grandstar(m): 7:06pm On Apr 12, 2016
“The CBN should desist from fixing the exchange rate at a level the reserves cannot support. They should adopt a more flexible exchange rate regime. What this means is that they should allow the market fundamentals (the forces of demand and supply) determine the exchange rate.”
Yusuf added that the CBN should watch the growth of money supply, as excessive growth in money supply will weaken the naira currency.

“Exporters and investors are holding on to foreign currency, as no one would sell at the rate the government is setting, while the government does not have the reserves to keep the exchange rate at its official level in the market”, Lamido Sanusi CBN governor from 2009 to 2014, said in a recent interview.

The above exposes why Buhari's pegging of the exchange rate is a monumental failure. It has led to artificial scarcity of forex. The epic petrol scarcity was caused by the lack of forex by private marketers to import fuel and supplement governments efforts

The banks can not publish the true rates they do some transaction because it will expose round tripping!

It is best banks simply stand up for their rights and not be bullied by the CBN governor, Buhari!

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by MrPresident1: 7:06pm On Apr 12, 2016
Me sef I wan collect FX loan, I wan open ile ise sementi ati ile ise flowa cheesy

Mo fe na wo fun mama mi
mo fe fe eseosa
aye ni miami
mo fe lo wo bi Adenuga
mo fe ra Gulfstream bi Dangote awo Bill Gates olowo aiye

cheesy

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by sLentlover7778(m): 7:07pm On Apr 12, 2016
Make them sell this country (Nigeria) and give everybody thier own shares..

That's the only way....

4 Likes

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by ngmgeek(m): 7:08pm On Apr 12, 2016
kk
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by telim: 7:08pm On Apr 12, 2016
Buhari oh... Their is know fuel and light in my area. what kind of change is this for God sake. Even bear way I being they use cool my temper hot like say they put am for ovum. May God help Nigeria...

1 Like

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by mytime24(f): 7:08pm On Apr 12, 2016
Wen is buhari cmin back undecided

1 Like

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by joey150(m): 7:08pm On Apr 12, 2016
Just as long as you chasing money..do whats right and never give up on it
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by Firefire(m): 7:14pm On Apr 12, 2016
Bubuhary is on a foreign trip...

4 Likes

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by 4nobody4every1: 7:20pm On Apr 12, 2016
cool
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by lonelydora: 7:27pm On Apr 12, 2016
Though tribulations may tarry for the night but joy cometh in the morning. I still believe in this government.

1 Like

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by yomalex(m): 7:40pm On Apr 12, 2016
Okay
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by hotmolo(m): 7:41pm On Apr 12, 2016
mytime24:
Wen is buhari cmin back undecided
wen will he visit u mean?

1 Like

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by Ibangap(m): 7:41pm On Apr 12, 2016
telim:
Buhari oh... Their is know fuel and light in my area. what kind of change is this for God sake. Even bear way I being they use cool my temper hot like say they put am for ovum. May God help Nigeria...
Firefire:
Bubuhary is on a foreign trip...
mytime24:
Wen is buhari cmin back undecided
.

I bet these ones didn't even bother reading, not to talk of comprehending what the above article contained.

@Topic, one really needs to get a hold of this Fx act. So one can actually know who is trampling on whose rights.

2 Likes

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by DBossNG(m): 8:28pm On Apr 12, 2016
Hmm.....
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by miqos02(m): 8:43pm On Apr 12, 2016
ok
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by OlujobaSamuel: 8:52pm On Apr 12, 2016
good.
this is what people ought to be doing, constructive criticism with alternative to the status quo, not the devaluation noise.
the last administration devalued twice, yet we are still in this shitt, same set of people that shouted devaluation then still want us to tow that line.
pa bubu and godiwin, pls let bank follow this route if it's not against the law as cited.
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by Empiree: 9:07pm On Apr 12, 2016
MrPresident1:
Me sef I wan collect FX loan, I wan open ile ise sementi ati ile ise flowa cheesy

Mo fe na wo fun mama mi
mo fe fe eseosa
aye ni miami
mo fe lo wo bi Adenuga
mo fe ra Gulfstream bi Dangote awo Bill Gates olowo aiye

cheesy

Olohun A Gba Be o. Ameena


I Don't Even Think Higher Exchange Rate Should Drive Up Prices Of Goods At Local Market Except For International Traders In Import And Export. I doubt Nigerian Govt Will Be Able To Handle This Challenges Of High Rate. They Should Rather, In My Opinion, Regulate Local Businesses. It Is Extremely Difficult To Fight IMF.

Anyone Think This Devaluation Of Naira Happening By Accident?. I Don't Think So. It Is A Remote Devaluation By Oga At The Top. Keep Your Eyes Out While $ Reaches #400. It Is Quiet Positive Thing For Diaspora Brothers/Sisters.

1 Like

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by onatisi(m): 9:17pm On Apr 12, 2016
sLentlover7778:
Make them sell this country (Nigeria) and give everybody thier own shares..

That's the only way....

3 Likes

Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by masseratti: 11:15pm On Apr 12, 2016
Av being saying this since last year during the election, the exchange rate went up 25% under a month before the election,the CBN should stop fixing the price of the naira,let the IOCs sell directly to the banks or bdc,fixing FX is same as fuel subsidy,the us federal reserve do not fix the price of the dollar.
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by Zdoh(m): 11:20pm On Apr 12, 2016
Can I say am lost?Is this the direction of the economy or what?
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by Infinitikoncept(m): 11:12am On Apr 13, 2016
My grudge is against Naija banks claiming they got USD @ other sources apart from CBN so they sell @ whatever price they feel but when you want to collect your money gram, western union money or USD from your dorm they tell you its official buying rate & I wonder who is the scammer here. Why is CBN turning a blind eye to allocation of USD to banks & allowing them charge as much ad 330# above black market. If banks receive forex through t/t, western union, money gram, dorm account transfer but they will tell you we don't send USD out while others will even deactivate their cards from been used for international transactions what exactly are they using the Fx inflow for?
There is deep corruption in our banks
Re: Banks Under Pressure From Industry Groups To Deepen FX Market by diva90: 1:35am On Apr 14, 2016
Infinitikoncept:
My grudge is against Naija banks claiming they got USD @ other sources apart from CBN so they sell @ whatever price they feel but when you want to collect your money gram, western union money or USD from your dorm they tell you its official buying rate & I wonder who is the scammer here. Why is CBN turning a blind eye to allocation of USD to banks & allowing them charge as much ad 330# above black market. If banks receive forex through t/t, western union, money gram, dorm account transfer but they will tell you we don't send USD out while others will even deactivate their cards from been used for international transactions what exactly are they using the Fx inflow for?
There is deep corruption in our banks

Even western union is a scam currently. There's no longer any such thing as official rate in nigeria anymore. Sent WU to the US, N190,000 and recipient picked $754. Meaning WU was given to her at a rate of N251 per $... Meanwhile actual rate is supposed to be N193 per dollar. I really think that the FG needs to look into these issues. There's no other route to get genuine forex at bank rate. So unfortunate

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