CBN
Director, Banking Supervision, Mrs. Tokunbo Martins, said this at the
CBN-Financial Institutions Training Centre (FITC) continuous education
programme for Directors of Banks and Other Financial Institutions, held in
Lagos.
She
said the policy shift followed the continuous depreciation of the naira and
subsequent rise in foreign currency exposures of banks in naira terms.
“Banks
may, therefore, need to restrict extending foreign currency denominated loans
to customers that do not earn foreign exchange,” she said.
Speaking
on the theme: Current Regulatory Requirements and their Implications, Mrs
Martins said the CBN introduced the flexible forex policy to address the
challenges experienced in the forex market.
“The
objective of the new regime is to enhance efficiency and facilitate a liquid
and transparent Foreign Exchange Market. It is pertinent to note that, although
the regime is flexible, CBN intervention in the inter-bank market is allowed,
and can be direct or through dynamic secondary market mechanisms,” she said.
“One
of the fallouts of the flexible exchange rate regime is increase in volatility
in forex market, resulting in heightened exposure of banks to foreign exchange
risk. Consequently, banks may need to tighten their controls and monitor their
foreign currency positions more closely,” she stated.
On
Treasury Single Account (TSA) implementation, Mrs Martins said the TSA regime
precipitated some unintended consequences, affecting the operations of banks,
especially regarding deposit depletion, asset quality, decrease in revenues and
liquidity stress.
According
to her, the aggregate deposit transferred to the CBN from the inception of the
TSA regime to March 2016 was N2.67 trillion. This sum, which represents 15.14
per cent of the total deposits of commercial banks of N17.63 trillion as at
April 30, constitutes the volume of deposits “lost” by banks as a fallout of
the implementation of the TSA regime.
“This
loss impacted banks differently in line with the proportion of their balance
sheet that was sustained with Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) deposits. Due
to its large size and low cost, Federal Government of Nigeria deposits were a
huge source of revenue for banks. Although specific data on revenue attributable
to FGN deposits is not available, a good proxy is the yield on Treasury Bills,
which is currently around 14 per cent,” she said.
Mrs
Martins said assuming the entire government deposits were invested by the banks
in Treasury Bills, at the current yield of 14 per cent, it would generate
interest income of about N374 billion for the banks. This figure, she said,
provides an indication of revenue that is no longer available to commercial
banks due to introduction of TSA.
“These
teams, which were large and significant, were in some cases directly supervised
by top management staff. The introduction of the TSA regime and resultant
depletion in government deposits and related revenue has made these teams
unprofitable and their existence untenable. Therefore, most banks had scaled
back or disbanded the teams and, in extreme cases, released staff deployed to
the teams.
“Furthermore,
as part of risk management, banks with large government deposits mitigated
their positions by investing the liability in T-bills and FGN bonds. These
banks had to liquidate these investments in order to comply with the TSA
regime, thereby further reducing their stock of liquid assets,” she said.
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