Cape Times

Zimbabwe shuts down finance institutio­ns in forex crackdown

- TAWANDA KAROMBO

ZIMBABWE is tightening the screws on financial institutio­ns in the country – closing down two monetary companies and suspending one bank – as the government starts acting on President Emerson Mnangagwa’s threats to punish businesses underminin­g the local currency through promoting dominant use of foreign money.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe on Wednesday night suspended Metbank, closed down a popular mobile money service, Innbucks, and halted bureau de change operations of Rolink Finance.

The monetary authority recently partially liberalise­d Zimbabwe’s exchange rate regime after allowing banks to negotiate exchange rates on a willing buyer/ willing seller basis with their clients.

But this has failed to provide some respite for the local unit of exchange and now central bank governor John Mangudya is turning the screws on the financial services sector.

The Zim dollar has further lost value and was trading at $1:ZW$320 on the streets of Harare compared to the official rate of $1:ZW$155.

Economists and finance institutio­ns such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund have advised Mnangagwa’s administra­tion to address these exchange rate distortion­s.

“The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe wishes to advise the public that it has, with immediate effect, suspended Metbank Limited from operating as an authorised dealer pending full investigat­ions for breach of exchange control regulation­s relating to trading in foreign currency,” Mangudya said on Wednesday night.

As a consequenc­e of this, Metbank “will not be permitted to deal in foreign currency, that is buying and selling foreign currency, and processing internatio­nal and domestic foreign currency transactio­ns” until further notice, said the central bank.

Media reports also show that senior management at Standard Chartered Zimbabwe, which has just announced that it is exiting Zimbabwe, is being probed for foreign currency dealings suspected to be in breach of exchange control regulation­s. In addition to the suspension of Metbank, Zimbabwe’s apex bank also read the riot act to Innbucks, a mobile-based money transfer service that allowed Zimbabwean­s to send and receive hard currency.

It started off as a loyalty and rewards initiative by Simbisa Brands – the franchise operator of Nando’s, Steers and Chicken Inn.

Mangudya said Innbucks had failed to regularise its licensing requiremen­ts since November 2021. The service has gained popularity as an alternativ­e to money transfer agencies and banks that levy higher charges.

Innbucks acknowledg­ed that it was yet to finalise its licensing with the central bank.

In a joint statement, Innbucks and Simbisa Brands said: “An impasse has occurred in respect of which the Simbisa board is engaging the regulator.”

In its notice of suspension of Innbucks, the central bank highlighte­d that it had “ordered Simbisa Brands to cease operating the money transfer service branded or styled Innbucks with immediate effect”.

This means that “customers shall no longer be able to deposit funds into Innbucks accounts or transfer the funds” to others.

A third finance institutio­n, Rolink Finance, which operated as a bureau de change, has also been suspended for “breaches of the exchange control” regulation­s.

Mnangagwa recently warned that he would put in place measures to deal with local businesses deemed as underminin­g the local unit of exchange.

 ?? ?? ZIMBABWE President Emerson Mnangagwa has warned that he would put in place measures to deal with local businesses deemed as underminin­g the local unit of exchange. | Reuters
ZIMBABWE President Emerson Mnangagwa has warned that he would put in place measures to deal with local businesses deemed as underminin­g the local unit of exchange. | Reuters

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