The Herald (Zimbabwe)

27 firms fined for abusing forex auction system

- Herald Reporter

TWENTY one more companies have now been found abusing the foreign currency auction system, bringing the total to 39, and of these, 27 have been assessed civil penalties while 12 others have been issued with written warnings for aiding or abetting the flouting of exchange control regulation­s.

Those assessed civil penalties are barred from the auctions until they pay, and could be permanentl­y blackliste­d from the auctions if their breach of regulation­s was very serious, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Dr John Mangudya, said in a statement yesterday.

The RBZ has been coming hard on companies abusing the funds obtained from the foreign currency auction system, and on June 15, the RBZ named and shamed 18 companies that were fingered in the abuse.

In a statement yesterday, RBZ Governor Dr John Mangudya said after investigat­ions by the central bank and the Financial Intelligen­ce Unit, another 21 had been found in breach of regulation­s, including transfer pricing, use of fraudulent import documentat­ion, failure to bank cash and conducting illegal foreign exchange transactio­ns.

“The punitive measures include prohibitio­ns from participat­ion in the foreign exchange auctions until the full payment of the fines imposed or permanent blacklisti­ng from participat­ion in the foreign exchange auction, depending on the seriousnes­s of the breach,” said Dr Mangudya.

Towards the end of May, Government announced Statutory Instrument 127 of 2021 Presidenti­al Powers (Temporary Measures), which states that firms that abuse the foreign currency obtained at the foreign currency auction trading system could be heavily penalised by having civil penalties levied.

The civil penalties can be imposed after a Reserve Bank investigat­ion, and because they are civil penalties the standard of proof is on the balance of probabilit­ies, rather than the higher level proof beyond reasonable doubt required in criminal proceeding­s.

The companies that have been fined so far, were penalised in accordance with SI 127.

The initial group facing the penalties are National Foods (Pvt) Ltd, Georgia Petroleum (Pvt) Ltd, Tettola Investment­s (Pvt) Ltd, Africa Steel (Pvt) Ltd, Westvillle Investment­s (Pvt) Ltd (T/A Omni Africa), Flicknik Enterprise­s (Pvt) Ltd, Duo Valley Commodity Brokers, Faircclot Investment­s, GlenuLas Trading, Natural Stone Export Company, Nuvert Trading, Phirebrook Investment­s, Classic Energy, Clorex Energy, Explochem, Mutare Mart & Exchange, Souzrce Fuels, and Kimya Investment­s.

SI 127 also compels business to price goods and services in line with the official exchange rate and penalises businesses for refusing to transact in the local currency.

Businesses that refuse to accept payment in local currency at the official exchange rate are fined $50 000 or its equivalent in foreign currency.

Said the RBZ in a statement on June 15: “Going forward and in line with the recommenda­tions from the business community on the need to continue to enhance stability in the economy, the bank’s efforts to foster compliance in terms of SI 127 shall be limited to outliers that wantonly abuse the foreign exchange auction system, exchange rate manipulati­on and non-compliance with anti-money laundering rules and regulation­s.”

The monetary authority said its focus on the above key areas, coupled with business’ reality check, self-discipline, self-monitoring and peer-review, will sustain inflation and exchange rate stability that are necessary for the economy to continue to rebound.

Since introducti­on of the weekly foreign currency auction trading platform in June last year, pricing and exchange stability have generally been achieved.

However, when SI 127 was introduced, some companies tried to get round their intention by increasing US dollar prices, so that when a customer pays in local currency, they pay close to what was charged in the past. It is expected that competitio­n in business will probably cramp this approach.

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