Nume Ekeghe
The Central Bank of Nigeria has released
an exposure draft guideline for the...
regulation and supervision of the
microfinance banks (MFBs).
The document was posted on the central bank’s website Wednesday.
The Bank had set April 1, 2020, as
deadline for MFBs to meet the first stage of the new minimum capital
base. CBN Director, Financial Policy and Regulation, Kevin Amugo, in the
circular, stressed that the need to reposition and strengthen MFBs
towards improved performance had become apparent as revealed from the
report of a recent review of the subsector.
The circular stated: “The 2012
Guidelines have been reviewed to strengthen and complement other
on-going reform in the MFB subsector.”
The guideline for regulation and supervision of MFBs was last reviewed in 2013.
Under the new capital base structure,
the CBN categorised MFBs into four, as against the three – Unit, State
and National contained in the 2012 Guideline.
But with the new capital base which
takes effect next month, MFBs would be categorised into Tier-1 Unit,
Tier-2 Unit, State and National.
The CBN had in 2018 reviewed the capital
base of MFBs raising that of Unit MFBs from N20 million to N50 million
for Tier 2 and N200 million for Tier 1 MFBs. The two categories were
expected to meet N35 million and N100 million capital base by the first
day of next month.
Also, the capital base of state MFBs had
been raised from N100 million to N1 billion by 2021 and they are
expected to have N500 million capital base by April 1, 2020 while the
National MFBs are expected to have N3.5 billion by next month and shore
it up to N5 billion by April 2021 from a previous requirement of N2
billion.
According to the draft guideline, Tier 1
Unit MFBs, “shall operate in the banked and high-density areas, and is
allowed to open not more than four branches outside the head office
within five contiguous local governments areas, subject to the approval
of the CBN.”
Also, Tier-2 Unit MFB with rural
authorisation shall operate only in the rural, unbanked or underbanked
areas, and are allowed to open one branch outside the head office within
the same local government area, subject to the approval of the CBN.
“State Microfinance Bank is authorized
to operate in one State or the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). It is
allowed to open branches within the same State or the FCT, subject to
prior written approval of the CBN for each new branch or cash centre.
No comments:
Post a Comment