The
Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, has raised the Cash Reserve Ratio, CRR,
on public deposits from 50 per cent to 75 per cent with effect from next
month. - See more at:
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2014/01/cbn-bars-banks-lending-25-public-funds/#sthash.9NB20wlg.dpuf
The Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, has raised the Cash Reserve Ratio, CRR, on public deposits from 50 per cent to 75 per cent with effect from next month.
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| CENTRAL Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi |
The
Governor of the apex bank, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, who announced the new
measure to further tighten monetary policy, in Abuja, yesterday, said the
action was necessary to save the Naira from further fall in value.
MPR
remains at 12 per cent +/- 200 basis points and liquidity ratio (LR) at 30 per
cent while private deposits’ CRR remains at 12 per cent.
He
expressed concern over the continued depletion of the Excess Crude Account,
ECA, which balance stood at less than US$2.5 billion on January 17, 2014 compared
with about US$11.5 billion in December 2012.
“This
absence of fiscal buffers increased our reliance on portfolio flows thus,
constituting the principal risk to exchange rate stability, especially with
uncertainties around capital flows and oil price,” he said.
Sanusi
queries oil revenue
On
the depletion of fiscal buffers, the committee decried the continuous fall in
revenue from oil despite stable price of oil and production in 2013.
Although
the committee acknowledged output losses due to theft and vandalism, this could
not wholly explain the magnitude of the shortfall in revenue.
As
a consequence, accretion to external reserves remained low while much of the
previous savings have been depleted, thereby undermining the ability of the
Central Bank to sustain exchange rate stability.
He
said: “On the depletion of fiscal buffers, the committee decried the continuous
fall in revenue from oil despite stable price of oil and production in 2013.
“Although
the committee acknowledged output losses due to theft and vandalism, this could
not wholly explain the magnitude of the shortfall in revenue.”
As
a consequence, accretion to external reserves remained low while much of the
previous savings have been depleted, thereby undermining the ability of the
Central Bank to sustain exchange rate stability.
The
committee therefore, urged the fiscal authorities to block revenue leakages and
rebuild fiscal savings needed to sustain confidence and preserve the value of
the naira.
Falling
reserves
Sanusi
noted that reserves had fallen to $42.85 billion, representing a decrease of
US$ 0.98 billion or 2.23 per cent compared with $ 43.83 billion at end-December
2012, in spite of good international oil market prices in 2013.
The
governor, therefore, urged the “fiscal authorities to block revenue leakages
and rebuild fiscal savings needed to sustain confidence and preserve the value
of the naira.
Widening
gaps at forex
He
expressed concern about the widening gap between the official and the BDC
exchange rates, noting that this could precipitate speculation and
round-tripping.
“Though,
the BDCs represent a small component of the foreign exchange market, the
widening spread appeared to have fed into creeping increases in core
inflation,” the CBN boss said.
He,
however, re-affirmed the bank’s commitment to a stable exchange rate regime
while urging the fiscal authority to provide support by reducing fiscal
leakages, improving controls around oil revenues and reviewing terms around
production sharing agreements with oil companies, while awaiting the passage of
the Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB.
According
to him, there was need for a complementary monetary policy response to ensure
sustained exchange rate stability and convergence of rates in various segments.
CBN,
he said, was faced with either of two options: either allowing a depreciation
of the Naira to avoid further tightening and depletion of reserves or
maintaining our commitment to currency stability while stressing that monetary
policy is almost at its limits and needs support from the fiscal side in the
form of excess crude savings if currency stability is to be maintained in the
future.
In
the end, Sanusi said the monetary authorities settled for the later because
“the costs of a weaker naira far outweigh the benefits to the Nigerian economy
and the core mandate of the CBN.”
The
CBN boss who presided over the last Monetary Policy Meeting before his exit
from the bank pledged to take “immediate steps to redress the supply-demand
imbalance in the Bureau de Change segment of the forex, while maintaining its
focus on Anti-Money Laundering, AML, activities.”
He,
however, tasked the fiscal authorities to immediately act to save the economy,
as according to him, the monetary policies were at their limits.

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