Business Day (Nigeria)

What CBN’S special bills mean for banks, economy

- HOPE MOSES ASHIKE

The Central Bank of Nigeria’s Special Bills create an avenue for banks to retrieve their excess Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) cash idling away at the apex bank’s coffers at zerointere­st while also aiming to control liquidity and deepen the financial market.

On Wednesday, the CBN announced that it was introducin­g what it called 90- day special bills with zero coupon as part of efforts to deepen the financial markets.

The CBN had released an ear

lier circular which stated that the special bills were a way of returning excess CRR in its possession to the banks.

While the official Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) for banks is 27.5 percent, bankers say the CBN currently holds as much as N12 trillion in CRR, which is well in excess of the regulatory threshold and is instead closer to 60 percent.

“The CBN’S so-called special bills are a way of giving the banks bills in lieu of cash,” a Lagos-based analyst said.

“But it is also a liquidity management tool that ensures you don’t have too much naira chasing scarce dollars,” the analyst said.

Bankers say the issue size could be anywhere between N1.2 trillion and N3 trillion, but the CBN is yet to confirm.

Businessda­y gathered that the CBN has discovered that the excess CRR charges on bank deposits were counterpro­ductive to its push to boost lending in an economy that has slipped into its second recession in five years.

But rather than injecting the money back into the system as cash, the CBN decided to offer special treasury bills for banks to discount and trade.

The instrument can be traded amongst banks, retail and institutio­nal investors. It will qualify as liquid assets in computatio­n of liquid ratio for deposit money banks, according to the CBN.

For investors, they will have their eyes on the yields and if it will offer any respite in an environmen­t of lowyields and where treasury bills return less than 0.5 percent.

“I suppose any instrument­s that help with the finetuning of liquidity management in Nigeria will help a great deal,” Razia Khan, managing director, chief economist, Africa and Middle East Global Research at Standard Chartered Bank, said.

“Depending on the yield, it might see demand from retail investors,” Khan said.

Ayodele Akinwunmi, relationsh­ip manager, corporate banking at FSDH Merchant Bank Limited, said the move is to deepen the financial market by introducin­g new instrument­s that will be tradable and to inject liquidity into the system.

“I think the CBN is being innovative by creating new liquidity management tool in a manner that supports economic recovery,” said Uche Uwaleke, professor of capital market and president, Capital Market Academics of Nigeria.

Uwaleke said the special Cb nb ills are in connection with Deposit Money Banks’ excess cash reserves with the CBN.

Many analysts from Fitch to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) have criticised the high effective CRR rate in Nigeria and said it was credit-negative for the banking sector and contradict­ed the CBN’S lending mantra.

Higher CRR hurts the

banks’ liquidity ratios, compels them to borrow and take extra trading risks.

Fitch Ratings says one of the reasons it has a negative outlook for Nigerian banks is due to the high CRR ratio.

“It is credit-negative for the sector as it restricts banks’ ability to lend and dampens their profitabil­ity,” analysts at Fitch Ratings said in a note to clients.

The CBN raised the CRR to 27.5 percent in January 2020 from the previous 22.5 percent rate, citing the need to mop up excess liquidity in the banking system to curtail inflation.

Banks do not only have to contend with the world’s highest CRR but a regulatory directive to maintain a loan to deposit ratio of 65 percent, which means for every N100 naira in deposits with the CBN, banks must lend N65.

Both policies, including another mandate to maintain a 30 percent liquidity ratio, make it mathematic­ally impossible to satisfy the CBN’S regulatory ratio requiremen­ts.

 ??  ?? Dapo Abiodun, Ogun State governor, presents the 2021 Appropriat­ion Bill tagged ‘Budget of Recovery and Sustainabi­lity’ to the State House of Assembly at Oke Mosan in Abeokuta, yesterday
Dapo Abiodun, Ogun State governor, presents the 2021 Appropriat­ion Bill tagged ‘Budget of Recovery and Sustainabi­lity’ to the State House of Assembly at Oke Mosan in Abeokuta, yesterday
 ??  ?? Nyesom Wike, governor, Rivers State, presenting the 2021 Appropriat­ion Bill before Rivers State House of Assembly in Port Harcourt. NAN
Nyesom Wike, governor, Rivers State, presenting the 2021 Appropriat­ion Bill before Rivers State House of Assembly in Port Harcourt. NAN

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