THISDAY

Amid Excess Liquidity, Banks, Others Borrowed N30.45tn from CBN in Q1 2024

- Kayode Tokede The story continues online on www.thisdayliv­e.com

Amid excess liquidity, Nigerian banks and merchant banks in the firs quarter of this year, borrowed a sum of N30.45 trillion from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), an increase of 514 per cent Year-on-Year (YoY) from N4.96 trillion in first quarter of 2023.

The CBN provides the Standing Lening Facility (SLF), a short-term lending window for banks and merchant banks, to access liquidity to run their day-to-day business operations.

THISDAY analysis i=of CBN data revealed that banks and merchant banks borrowed N2.75 trillion in January, a 419.95 per cent YoY increase from N528.16 billion in January 2023, while in February 2024, a total of N5.97 trillion was borrowed by banks through the SLF, a significan­t increase of 1,214 per cent YoY from N453.7 billion February 2023.

In addition, banks and merchant banks borrowed N21.74 trillion from CBN in March 2024, a growth of 446.9 per cent YoY growth from N3.98 trillion borrowed in March 2023.

Experts attributed the increasing banks borrowing from CBN to dwindling Naira at the foreign exchange market, coupled with rising inflation and apex bank mopping up excess liquidity in the financial sector.

Reacting, the Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for Promotion of Private Enterprise­s (CPPE), Dr. Muda Yusuf stated that, “This is a reflection of liquidity pressure some of the banks are going through. The facility is typically short term.

“This may not necessaril­y indicate that the banks are stressed or unstable. Meanwhile, the recapitali­sation of banks is long overdue. The minimum capital requiremen­ts of N25 billion is no longer adequate, if discounted for inflation.”

On his part, The Vice President Highcap Securities, Mr. David Adnori, said, “The developmen­t points to lack of liquidity on the part of banks. Monetary policy has been tightening and this has led to low liquidity. It is cheaper for banks to borrow from the CBN. This developmen­t is not positive but negative. We cannot continue to tighten because it will reflect of economic growth.”

Part of measure adopted by the CBN to tighten liquidity in the financial system was when the Monetary Policy Committee of the CBN in March 2024 unanimousl­y narrowed the asymmetric corridor to +100/-300 basis points around the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR).

The MPC of the CBN voted to raise the MPR significan­tly to 24.75 per cent at its second meeting in 2024, higher than our expectatio­n of 150 basis points.

Notably, the meeting reflects the committee’s commitment to ensuring price stability and managing inflation expectatio­ns in the near term.

The committee voted to retain Cash Reserve Requiremen­t (CRR) at 45.0 per cent and retained the Liquidity ratio at 30per cent.

Furthermor­e, they adjusted the CRR of merchant banks from 10 per cent to 14.0 per cent

The data also revealed that banks and merchant banks deposit with CBN dropped by 7.29 per cent to N1.6 trillion in Q1 2024 from N1.73 trillion in Q1 2023.

Banks and merchant banks use Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) to deposit excess funds with the apex bank and it comes interest.

SDF is an overnight deposit facility that allows banks to park excess liquidity (money) to CBN and earn interest.

The CBN governor, Mr. Olayemi Cardoso had announced that the removal of the cap on remunerabl­e SDF is to increase activity in the SDF window and manage liquidity.

In January 2024, Banks and merchant banks deposited N1.07 trillion with CBN, an increase of 83.37 per cent YoY from N584.79billion in January 2023, while in February 2024, it stood at N330.72billion, a decline of 50.6 per cent from N668.9 billion in February 2023.

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