The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has declared the removal of cash deposit limitations on domiciliary accounts, saying account holders can withdraw up to $10,000 per day.
The foreign exchange market is expected to witness increased liquidity following the removal of restrictions on domiciliary accounts by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), according to analysts.The CBN had on Friday in a letter to all banks said cash
deposits into domiciliary accounts would not be restricted, and that customers
would have unfettered and unrestricted access to funds in their accounts.
The letter, signed by Haruna Mustafa, the CBN’s director, banking
supervision department, said the new FX policy change aims to promote
transparency, liquidity, and price discovery in the FX market in order to
improve FX supply.
“Deposit money banks (DMBs) shall provide returns to the CBN
including the purpose for such transactions. Cash deposits into domiciliary
accounts will not be restricted, subject to DMBs conducting proper know your
customers due diligence, and adhering to the spirit and letter of extant
anti-money laundering/ combating the financing of terrorism laws and other
relevant rules and regulations,” the letter said.
“This will also increase the available dollars in the
financial system in the medium term and help support the naira,” said Ayodeji
Ebo, managing director/chief business officer of Optimus by Afrinvest.
According to Taiwo Oyedele, head of tax and corporate
advisory services at PwC Nigeria, an orderly relaxation of capital control and
other forex restriction rules is a positive development to restore confidence
and attract FX liquidity.
He said unfettered access to cash deposited in domiciliary
accounts including the use via telegraphic transfers will ease economic
activities involving foreign exchange. “Once naira exchange rate is stable, the
incentive for currency speculators will disappear,” he said.
“The CBN should however relax its documentation requirements
in the retail end of the forex market and reconsider its stance regarding the
43 restricted items otherwise there will be sustained excess demand in the
parallel market which could make the rate move further away from the I&E
window,” Oyedele said.
“I believe it will increase the FX liquidity in the market
for eligible transactions,” Ayodele Akinwunmi, relationship manager, corporate
banking at FSDH Merchant Bank Limited, said.
Uche Uwaleke, professor of Capital Market at the Nasarawa
State University Keffi, said the development would enhance liquidity in the FX
market as it “provides an incentive to operate domiciliary accounts”.
“With the restrictions lifted, there is likely to be an
increase in remittances through formal channels,” he added.
The CBN has said it would prioritise orderly settlement of
any committed FX forward transactions as they fall due in order to further
boost market confidence.
It said all Business Travel Allowances, Personal Travel
Allowances, international school fees, medical, airline remittances, and other
visible and invisible transactions are eligible for foreign exchange at the
Investor and Exporters (I&E) window.
The CBN directed all banks to ensure expeditious processing
of all eligible invisible transactions on behalf of their customers using the
applicable rates at the I&E window.
The banking sector regulator, last Wednesday, collapsed all
segments of foreign exchange markets into the I&E FX window.
Members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) had late last
year called on the central bank to carry out a bold reform of the FX market,
particularly, the operation of Foreign Currency Domiciliary Accounts (FCDA) by
Individuals.
Mike Obadan Mike, a member of the MPC, made the call in his
personal statement at the monetary policy committee meeting in November 2022.
He said these accounts have tended to be grossly abused in
recent years to the detriment of exchange rate stability, adding that exporting
firms that maintain FCDAs must be effectively monitored.