CBN disclosed this in a circular signed by Haruna Mustafa, the Financial Policy and Regulation Department Director, and issued to all commercial, merchant and non-interest banks.
The banker’s bank pegged the minimum capital base for commercial banks with international authorisation at N500 billion from N50 billion in 2005.
Also, CBN benchmarked the minimum capital requirement for banks with National Spread (N200 billion), Regional (N50 billion), Merchant Banks( N50 billion), National Non-Interest Banks (N20 billion) and Regional Non-interest (N10 billion).
All banks are required to meet the minimum capital requirement within 24 months commencing from April 1, 2024, and terminating on March 31, 2026.
“The prevailing macroeconomic challenges and headwinds occasioned by external and domestic shocks have underscored the need for banks to raise and maintain adequate capital to enhance their resilience, solvency and capacity to continue to support the growth of the Nigerian economy.
“Consequently, in furtherance of its statutory responsibility to promote a safe, sound and stable banking system and in line with Section 9 of the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA) 2020, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) at this moment announces an upward review of the minimum capital requirements for commercial, merchant and non-interest banks in Nigeria”, the circular partly reads.
In 2005, the capital requirement for an international banking license stood at N50 billion. Then, the minimum capital requirement for national banks was N25 billion.
Also, CBN benchmarked the minimum capital requirement for banks with National Spread (N200 billion), Regional (N50 billion), Merchant Banks( N50 billion), National Non-Interest Banks (N20 billion) and Regional Non-interest (N10 billion).
All banks are required to meet the minimum capital requirement within 24 months commencing from April 1, 2024, and terminating on March 31, 2026.
“The prevailing macroeconomic challenges and headwinds occasioned by external and domestic shocks have underscored the need for banks to raise and maintain adequate capital to enhance their resilience, solvency and capacity to continue to support the growth of the Nigerian economy.
“Consequently, in furtherance of its statutory responsibility to promote a safe, sound and stable banking system and in line with Section 9 of the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA) 2020, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) at this moment announces an upward review of the minimum capital requirements for commercial, merchant and non-interest banks in Nigeria”, the circular partly reads.
In 2005, the capital requirement for an international banking license stood at N50 billion. Then, the minimum capital requirement for national banks was N25 billion.
from dailypost
Won't this policy have effect on the citizens!!??,meaning more and increased bank charges 🤷
ReplyDeleteWould you prefer collapsed banks where ask your money disappears?
DeleteWith banks scrambling for funds and customers, does that not create competition that checks hikes and induces innovation?
Hmmmmm
ReplyDeleteBank shareholders and directors will start running kabakaba around looking for funds to keep their banks afloat, time for EDs to work for all that massive salaries they get.
ReplyDeleteI see a lot of merger taking place soon.
ReplyDelete