CBN Summersaults Buhari Policy, Directs Banks To Make Forex An All Comers Affair Or Face Sanction
The Oasis Reporters
May 27, 2018
With one year to go of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s four year tenure, the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, has realised it’s policy folly of 1984 forex regulation that saw Nigeria spiralling into an unprecedented recession and inflation. It quietly directed all banks to sell foreign exchange to anyone that is willing to purchase over the counter irrespective of whether the person is a customer or not, upon presentation of relevant documentation.
More or less like the free flowing business friendly environment that former president Goodluck Jonathan put in place that made Nigeria the number one FDI destination in Africa and the biggest economy in Africa, ahead of South Africa and Egypt.
But who will apologise to Jonathan and the many businesses that crumbled that the CBN guidelines upset under the guise of chasing corruption and intimidating enemies with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC ?
The apex bank said any bank that contravenes this directive will be sanctioned.
The CBN also increased the frequency of sales to licensed BDCs to three times weekly – Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays instead of twice weekly.
“All Deposit Money Banks are mandated to buy and sell foreign currency to travelers (both customers and non customers) upon presentation of relevant valid travel documents such as visa and tickets OVER THE COUNTER. All travelers shall be attended to immediately at the bank’s counters. Any contravention will be sanctioned by the CBN.”
“It is compulsory that all BDCs Access Currency at least three times weekly. Any BDC that fails to access the FX window at least three times weekly shall have their license reviewed by the CBN. Compliance is Compulsory,” it warned in a statement Saturday by Isaac Okorafor, its Ag. Director, Corporate Communications.
The CBN is expected to sell foreign exchange to BDCs on Mondays, the BDCs have Tuesdays to fund their accounts at the CBN and then come for another round of sales on Wednesdays, fund their accounts on Thursday and then purchase on Fridays. “This will make sufficient dollars available all days in the week… The BDCs must come and buy FX from the CBN and they must sell them all to end users,” a senior official of the bank said.
The CBN move is coming following the naira’s surprising fall against the dollar by about four points in that past days in what analysts believe is caused by deliberate hoarding of the greenback by dealers. The naira had stabilised at around N360 – $1 at the open market for over three quarters before the current pressure.
There is a consensus amongst analysts polled recently that with $47.7 billion in foreign reserves and price of crude nearing $80 per barrel, the CBN has enough firepower to continue to strengthen and stabilise the naira against other currencies.