• FirstBank posts highest forex returns as CBN sells $186m to banks
By Obinna Chima
Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mr. Godwin Ifeanyi Emefiele has
described the current scarcity of foreign exchange confronting the
country as good riddance, saying local production of various essential
goods are now being given top priority.
Emefiele said this during
a tour of the farmlands cultivated under the Anchor Borrowers’
Programme in Kebbi State over the weekend. He stated that the commitment
of stakeholders and the expected output from Kebbi State alone had
proved critics of the central bank’s policy measures wrong.
In a
statement from the CBN, Emefiele, who was full of praise for the farmers
and the Kebbi State Government for their determination and commitment,
said that with the level of success attained under the pilot project in
the state, in addition to what he saw at the Sunti Golden Sugar Estate
in Niger State recently, it was becoming more of a reality that the
country can produce enough food to feed itself and even export in no
distant future.
The CBN governor held the view that with
agriculture being the bedrock of genuine economic growth of any nation,
Nigeria could not be an exception.
“As such, Nigeria with large
expanse of arable land ought not to be spending huge amounts of money
importing food items at the expense of other competing needs,” he added.
Emefiele
stated that the success recorded by the rice farmers in Kebbi State has
rekindled hope in the ability of Nigeria to be self sufficient in rice
and wheat production, adding that with the sum of N210,000 granted to
each farmer, they were able to cultivate a hectare of rice.
He
disclosed that 78,581 farmers were mobilised in the state under the
Anchor Borrowers Programme. The farmers are already looking forward to a
total of one million metric tonnes of rice this year, he added.
Speaking
further on what the programme has been able to achieve, the CBN
governor stated that with the disbursement of N4.9 billion as loans to
the farmers, over 570,000 direct jobs had been created with the
multiplier effect that, 70,871 rural farmers now own and operate bank
accounts and are captured under the Bank Verification Number (BVN)
biometric project, adding that the timely supply of inputs to 73,001
farmers was achieved.
According to Emefiele, the performance of
the programme also vindicated the stance of the central bank that with
the right incentives and the necessary support, Nigerian farmers would
be able to fill whatever gaps that exist between the demand and supply
of agricultural products like rice, wheat, cotton and palm produce.
On
his assessment of the programme, the Minister of Agriculture, Chief
Audu Ogbeh, said the level of activities in the rural areas visited by
the team showed that with Kebbi State alone targeting one million tonnes
of rice of the projected seven million tonnes required by the entire
country, self sufficiency in rice production was very much in sight by
the time 12 other states identified as rice producing belts harvest
their produce.
He commended the efforts of the CBN for reinventing agriculture into a profitable business venture.
The
minister further stated that rural areas remained the catalyst for
viable economic development and as such deliberate efforts were being
directed at opening up the rural areas.
The Kebbi State Governor,
Alhaji Atiku Bagudu, said farmers in the state had been adequately
mobilised towards the attainment of the one million tonnes of paddy rice
by providing them with the necessary inputs as and when due.
He
also noted that with the assurance of availability of markets for the
produce, farmers in the state were already looking forward to the
repayment of the loans extended to them at the beginning of the farming
season.
While acknowledging the pivotal roles of both the CBN and
the state government in the provision of loans, irrigation equipment
and fertiliser, the farmers said they were looking forward to a bumper
harvest this season.
They also appealed for an appreciable increase in loans to enable them cultivate more land and maximise output.
The team visited rice farms in Suru, Augie, Bunza and Argungu Local Government Areas of the state.
Meanwhile,
the CBN last week allocated a total of $186,356,794.86 to 15 commercial
banks and four merchant banks as demand for the greenback continued to
rise.
The amount sold to the banks last week was higher by
$8,479,981 compared to the preceding week, according to the banks’
returns on forex utilisation reviewed by THISDAY.
Demand was
buoyed by dollar purchases by Dangote Group which got a total of $14
million from different banks, the Nigerian Security Printing and Minting
(NSPM or the mint) Plc which purchased $9,740,000 for its foreign loan
repayment, and Forte Oil Plc which also purchased $6 million during the
week.
FirstBank of Nigeria, which got $31,427,590 from the CBN,
returned to the first spot. The bank sold forex to 578 customers –
corporates and individuals. NSPM which bought $9.74 million, was
FirstBank’s biggest customer for the week. The mint was followed by
Forte Oil which got $6 million and Dangote Cement which purchased $5
million from FirstBank.
Also, Stanbic IBTC was allotted
$16,495,298.46 to come in second place. Stanbic IBTC sold forex to 132
customers, of which 76 of them repatriated funds from Nigeria’s equities
and fixed income money markets.
Diamond Bank Plc with
$13,671,749.59 held the third slot. The bank sold dollars to 221
customers and its biggest customers in the week under review were Hyde
Energy Limited ($1.521 million), Bua Sugar Refinery Limited ($1
million), Dozzy Oil and Gas Limited ($2.539 million), Standard
Metallurgical Company Limited ($2.735 million), and Dangote Cement ($2
million).
Guaranty Trust Bank Plc (GTBank) with $13,474,564.26
returns on forex utilisation held the fourth position. The bank sold the
greenback to 209 customers. GTbank’s biggest customers during the week
were Dangote Industries Limited ($2 million), Iris Smart Technologies
Limited ($1.699), and Lufthansa Air.
Zenith Bank Plc with returns
of $12,914,395.81 occupied the fifth position. It sold the greenback to
274 customers, of which the National Salt Company of Nigeria (NASCON)
got $4.962 million.
United Bank for Africa Plc (UBA) reported
returns of $11,912,969.93 to occupy the sixth place. It listed 208
customers to which it sold the greenback including those who bought to
pay school fees abroad, for personal travel allowance (PTA), and for the
importation of industrial raw materials and other equipment.
UBA’s
biggest customers during the week were NFE Industries Limited ($1.764
million), Matrix Energy Limited ($1.877 million), and IATA ($1 million).
First
City Monument Bank Limited (FCMB) with $11,755,450.41 stood in the
seventh place. Its biggest customer during the week was the Dangote
Group which bought $ 5 million from the bank.
A report by
Afrinvest West Africa Limited indicated that the CBN was still unable to
adequately meet the dollar demands of banks on behalf of their
customers, “as the central bank continues to refund deposit money banks
for huge volumes of unfulfilled bids at the weekly forex auctions”.
According
to the report, the impact of forex unavailability was being felt across
sectors, especially the petroleum sector as difficulties with
importation of refined products continues to adversely affect economic
output.
In another report, Renaissance Capital Limited (RenCap)
said it foresees Nigeria’s forex policy becoming more flexible by
mid-2016.
The firm, in a report sent out at the weekend, said it
expects the country’s policy-based budget support to spur a change in
the CBN’s forex policy.
According to RenCap, this was the case the last time Nigeria sought financing from development finance institutions in 2009.
President Muhammadu Buhari’s government has described its first budget, which is yet to be signed into law, as reflationary.
It
plans to accelerate economic growth by spending N6 trillion, up from
N4.49 trillion that was planned for 2015. Of this, 30 per cent will go
towards capital expenditure, up from 20 per cent in recent years.
The government plans to borrow $5 billion externally (which is about N1 trillion at the official exchange rate of NGN199/$1).
The
country has approached the World Bank for $2.5 billion in budget
support and has also approached the African Development Bank (AfDB) for
$1 billion.
RenCap pointed out that “the budget support from the
World Bank is policy based, implying that it has to be underpinned by
policy reforms”.
“As the World Bank has in principle agreed to
the loan – the first tranche is expected to be disbursed by June, and
the second by the end of 2016 – we see Nigeria instituting policy
reforms, possibly as soon as mid-2016, that we think may include a more
flexible forex policy.
“We expect a couple of the policy reforms
that will underpin the budget support to involve easing some supply
constraints. In particular, we see forex policy becoming more flexible.
“As
it did in July 2009, when Nigeria eased temporary exchange
restrictions, resulting in a weaker naira, and fall in the spread
between the parallel market and official exchange rates to seven per
cent (from 25%).
“That was the year Nigeria first approached the
World Bank for budget support. Because of Buhari’s aversion to a weaker
naira, for fear it will hurt the poor, we rule out a transition from a
fixed peg of N199/$1 to a floating exchange rate which would weaken the
naira to N260/$1 today, according to our real effective exchange rate
(REER) model that tells us the official rate is 30 per cent overvalued,”
the company stated.
Rencap said it expected a policy compromise that would help conserve forex reserves by diverting heavy forex demand.
“Probably
to an additional exchange rate, a managed float that trades in a band
in the N200-260/$1 region. With that, it suggested that the fixed
(interbank) rate would apply to essential imports, as deemed by the
government.
“In so doing, it would subsidise sectors deemed to be
important, such as agriculture. Capital account transactions and luxury
goods would be left to the managed float market,” it added.
But
it noted that market participants in sectors deemed important by the
government and benefit from buying dollars at the stronger rate of
N199/$1, may lobby to try and keep the rates in place. And in so doing,
open up doors for corruption.
“The forex and fuel shortages are
overshadowing the gains made on the security and anti-graft front.
Buhari campaigned on an anti-corruption platform. True to his word, he
has followed up with credible anti-graft measures,” the report added
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