Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,206,482 members, 7,995,886 topics. Date: Wednesday, 06 November 2024 at 05:25 PM

CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts - Business (5) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Business / CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts (37836 Views)

BDCs Back CBN’s Directive Stopping Use Of Domiciliary Accounts As Collateral / CBN Lifts Restriction On Domiciliary Accounts, Allows $10k Withdrawals / FOREX: No Plan To Convert Domiciliary Accounts Into Naira - CBN (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (Reply) (Go Down)

Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by teewaik: 6:57pm On Dec 01, 2020
By bank having enough forex. What the person meant is that will bank have enough dollars to meet up with the exceeding demand that the pressure from the payout will necessitate...Remember, there are backlogs of request and banks only pay based on the dollar they will get on a weekly basis from CBN...
Studymore123:


The policy by CBN has nothing to do with banks but IMTOs. Banks are not licensed to be IMTOs but can be agents of IMTOs. It's not the bank that's generating the Fx. They are only agents to disburse the funds. Before everyone can collect USD from western union, the policy is only saying if someone sends you money via western union or other various channels, you can collect the cash in USD or have it sent to you dom account.
I only hope the IMTOs implement it soon
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Aflix(m): 6:57pm On Dec 01, 2020
thebosstrevor1:


Nonsense analysis.

We dont use dollars in Nigeria

And most people dont care about dollar rate.

Inflation rate is what matters the most in a local economy
But we use American products, don't we
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by teewaik: 7:03pm On Dec 01, 2020
You are on point with your analysis...I was raising this point in nos 5 with a finance friend of mine today...Though there may be changes in the short run, maybe dollar falling by #10 or at most back to #470 from #500...The major factor determining our forex reserve is proceeds from sales of oil...With no significant change in that part(which am not seeing till next year)...I dont really see any significant adjustment occuring in the forex market, most especially the parallel market...
bigtt76:
While the move seem the sensible thing to do, here are my takes

1. Do the banks have enough FX cash to handle payouts in the same FX? People would experience delays in cashing out due to scarcity and or the banks waiting for CBN to sell to them or the IMTOs repatriating the FX back

2. Aren't the banks FX position funded by the CBN? If you allow FX cash withdrawals through the banks, you are depleting the FX reserve to fulfill the payouts which is more or less recycling your foreign reserve at a cost

3. While it seem laudable, the best benefit would've been achieved if the IMTOs are allowed to connect directly with the BDCs and also smaller agents, that way it would help attract hoarders into releasing their stash instead of hoarding.

4. Hoping this won't dollarize the economy because everyone who withdraws from their account are bound to look for mallam instead of selling to BDCs or Banks ....why the need to withdraw sef if you're not traveling?

5. I'm also hoping its not a trap by CBN to lure the funds in and trap them by telling the banks to frustrate withdrawals. When the customers can't get the cash, they'll be forced to accept cash equivalent in Naira. Government can at the end of the day force a conversion of all fx in domiciliary accounts.

1 Like

Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by teewaik: 7:12pm On Dec 01, 2020
Lol...Did you panicked sell?..Forex market dealing is not an easy thing...The person has to get the timing right...Some people now will be trying to panic sell cos of the new policy...not knowing in the long run, can it be sustained?... In September 7 when CBN resumed sales of forex to bdcs naira gained from 475 - 465...It was stable all though october...Do u now know that all those gains were wiped out in November when it rose to as high #500...Some people who were bullish held on to it that same September even despite the crash and gained in November.... However, naira stabilizing is what we all pray for...
Neoteny:
After they made me lose over 700k in September
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by teewaik: 7:22pm On Dec 01, 2020
Hope you know CBN gives dollars to Bank on a Weekly basis and also to BDCs...But those guys in Banks are crooks too. Asides the backlogs they have nd have to pay.They do sell to those guys at parallel market rate, leaving customers request hanging.... I just hope CBN really enforces this
PHIPEX:
It's not available because people moved their dollars to black market and Aboki kiosks. Where will the banks get it from?
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Nobody: 7:24pm On Dec 01, 2020
Exactly what I’ve been saying .
This is actually a trick to increase dollar inflow. There’s panic in the market now. People are rushing to sell because exchange is falling rapidly. Currently supply is higher.

It’s an intentional move.
Exactly what happened in September. It will still rise again. Today even the BDC guys in the market were not selling. They were all saying money no dey. But they’re happy to buy it at nothing from the desperate ones that don’t understand the market lol. These are just temporary vices.
Cost of Dollar cannot remain reasonable until the economy starts to get better. Dollar rate suddenly dropping in recession is suspicious

teewaik:
Lol...Did you panicked sell?..Forex market dealing is not an easy thing...The person has to get the timing right...Some people now will be trying to panic sell cos of the new policy...not knowing in the long run, can it be sustained?... In September 7 when CBN resumed sales of forex to bdcs naira gained from 475 - 465...It was stable all though october...Do u now know that all those gains were wiped out in November when it rose to as high #500...Some people who were bullish held on to it that same September even despite the crash and gained in November.... However, naira stabilizing is what we all pray for...

2 Likes

Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Bluntemperor: 7:52pm On Dec 01, 2020
Johnrake69:
Well, let's see how the bank complies with this.

This should have been done since. Some people in America now take advantage of this in pushing the rate so high. They buy up dollars from people that want to remit funds back to Nigeria. And push the rate up for people trying to send money to Asia.


Let the banks remove their hands from foreign exchange and focus on providing core banking services. They have created more problems by their profiteering drive on FX

I hear you!
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by vivaciousvivi(f): 7:57pm On Dec 01, 2020
ILoveDemMANNA:
When you have more inflows into the country at dollar value it will help bring down the BDC rates,
it will also help solidify or unify the rates in the market so we don’t have multiple currency rates.


This new directive means when Nigerians living in diaspora transfer money to loved ones in the country, they can in turn withdraw the money in dollar cash and sell wherever they want to.

Now, Nigerians who recieve foreign transfers such as Western Union or Moneygram can withdraw it in dollars and then sell at the black market rate or wherever they want to.
We can read. We don't require your copy and paste lecture Mr Manna BBQ

1 Like

Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Nobody: 7:59pm On Dec 01, 2020
ILoveDemMANNA:
When you have more inflows into the country at dollar value it will help bring down the BDC rates,
it will also help solidify or unify the rates in the market so we don’t have multiple currency rates.


This new directive means when Nigerians living in diaspora transfer money to loved ones in the country, they can in turn withdraw the money in dollar cash and sell wherever they want to.

Now, Nigerians who recieve foreign transfers such as Western Union or Moneygram can withdraw it in dollars and then sell at the black market rate or wherever they want to.
Good, that means dollars would likely depreciate against the Naira.
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by BigBashiru: 8:02pm On Dec 01, 2020
SenecaTheYonger:
TIme for Naira to free fall to 1000 grin

If you had 360k in savings, which was $1000, now your money is only worth $700.

And it keeps falling until your money is worth less than $500.

Just in case you don’t understand how this is affecting you

While price of dollar denominated imports has gone up at the same time that your savings has gone down....
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by SenecaTheYonger: 8:02pm On Dec 01, 2020
BigBashiru:


While price of dollar denominated imports has gone up at the same time that your savings has gone down....

Yep. Double suffering
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by erico2k2(m): 8:08pm On Dec 01, 2020
ILoveDemMANNA:
When you have more inflows into the country at dollar value it will help bring down the BDC rates,
it will also help solidify or unify the rates in the market so we don’t have multiple currency rates.


This new directive means when Nigerians living in diaspora transfer money to loved ones in the country, they can in turn withdraw the money in dollar cash and sell wherever they want to.

Now, Nigerians who recieve foreign transfers such as Western Union or Moneygram can withdraw it in dollars and then sell at the black market rate or wherever they want to.
And if the banks do not have enough dollars at the requested time? or you forget this money is wired electronically??

1 Like

Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by bigtt76(f): 9:57pm On Dec 01, 2020
Exactly ...we all keep fingers crossed and watch what comes next kiss


teewaik:
You are on point with your analysis...I was raising this point in nos 5 with a finance friend of mine today...Though there may be changes in the short run, maybe dollar falling by #10 or at most back to #470 from #500...The major factor determining our forex reserve is proceeds from sales of oil...With no significant change in that part(which am not seeing till next year)...I dont really see any significant adjustment occuring in the forex market, most especially the parallel market...
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Excellent7(m): 1:29am On Dec 02, 2020
This policy should have been in place long before now!

The dollars will eventually end up in the parallel market thus improving the supply. I think it came quite late to be very effective in an easily visible manner. If not for Coronavirus travel restrictions on travel into Nigeria, it could have been more effective.

However, I foresee some reduction in the rate of Naira fall against the dollar at least in the next 8-12 weeks. My prediction for USD: NGN is 500 plus or minus 50 NGN to USD. I am of the opinion that it could have surpassed 600 NGN per USD in this timeframe without this policy.

Sometimes I wonder how our policy makers come to the decisions they announce. It seems to me that these guys are either ignorant or know the right thing to do but do not due to pecuniary or conflicting interests.
Having said this, I will try to briefly highlight in a simple way the sources and evolution of this FOREX wahala specifically in the very recent past.

The Naira is and will continue to be under pressure as long as we continue to import much more goods and services than we export. However, this can be mitigated in the short term by policies that encourage citizens and corporates to lodge and/or invest foreign currencies in the country (non-oil-based FOREX inflows). A long-term strategy would be to increase local production of goods and services and aggressive export drive. Imagine the FOREX savings that will accrue if every litre of fuel consumed locally is produced locally!
In spite of these fundamental problems, ill-thought policies and policy summersaults have continually exacerbated the situation.

Firstly, around 2015 (I stand to be corrected), under the guise of fighting corruption the government started making issues about foreign currencies in domiciliary accounts. The impression was that government might move to confiscate foreign currencies in these accounts and/or force them to be converted to Naira at fiat rates. At a point the banks even stopped receiving foreign currency deposits! Fortunately, the “madness” did not materialize but a lot of people had become cautious. Consequently, many Nigerians in Diaspora who often keep part of their income in the country as FOREX in domiciliary accounts became wary and so did other players.

Secondly, the ban on beneficiaries of FOREX transfers receiving their payments in foreign currency but only in Naira together with the wide disparity in the exchange rates used by the banks in paying beneficiaries and parallel market rates (often in the range of 20-25% difference) ensured that in real terms the sender loses value (in the range of 20-25%) by making a transfer home as opposed to exchanging the funds at the parallel market. This and the continuous slide in Naira ensured that mostly “hot money” came from diaspora. By “hot money” I mean money for immediate and dire needs for family and dependents at home.

The government is already banking on increased remittances from the diaspora during the festive period to help with the recession but I have had my doubts. The significant difference in rates is a dis-incentive. In my opinion the difference if any, between the bank rates and parallel market rates should not be more than 5%.

1 Like

Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by visiontee(m): 3:31am On Dec 02, 2020
cry
lowkeybahdguy:
Time to watch and see how this one plays out. This move appears to have been borne out of desperation by CBN. The same cbn that flayed receiving foreign currency deposits in February this year, has now made a full u-turn.

https://nairametrics.com/2020/02/14/cbn-condemns-receiving-foreign-currency-in-transfers/

Interesting times ahead..
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by PropertyBuying(f): 3:45am On Dec 02, 2020
BabaOwen:
Nah wah o... Emefiele is one of the most terrible CBN governor
This is a good development.
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by teewaik: 4:06am On Dec 02, 2020
What some folks on this page failed to realize is that we are not a dollar nation, we dont print dollar..There is a limited stock of dollars, which CBN manages by allocating to the various sectors BDC & Banks on a weekly basis....The thing now is fine you will have dollar funds in your account or whatever IMTOs(Banks are the medium of withdrawal), and based on this new policy you are supposed to withdraw out cash...Then, what happens if the stock with banks cant meetup to the demand for dollar cash by individuals(There is no major change in forex reserve)...There dollar money get stucked and will be frustrated to collect in Naira or is it not when one is able to withdraw that you will then try to sell in the parallel market...Same emefiele was saying lastweek that Parallel market is an illegal market bla bla and people shouldn't patronise, yet a week after he is issuing policies which indirectly states that fine you can now withdraw and exchange your dollar at that same parallel market...I hope there isnt any sinister move behind this policy or just being desperate...
bigtt76:
Exactly ...we all keep fingers crossed and watch what comes next kiss


Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Neoteny(m): 4:23am On Dec 02, 2020
teewaik:
Lol...Did you panicked sell?..Forex market dealing is not an easy thing...The person has to get the timing right...Some people now will be trying to panic sell cos of the new policy...not knowing in the long run, can it be sustained?... In September 7 when CBN resumed sales of forex to bdcs naira gained from 475 - 465...It was stable all though october...Do u now know that all those gains were wiped out in November when it rose to as high #500...Some people who were bullish held on to it that same September even despite the crash and gained in November.... However, naira stabilizing is what we all pray for...

Wasn't selling or trading. Bought another car, the money was wired to me, and when we went to GTB to withdraw dollars and pay the dealer i was told since it was an inflow i couldn't withdraw, and had to sell it to the bank at official exchange rates, which we know they'll turn around and sell to their BDC cohorts at black market rates.

I didn't even know about that stupid policy.

So in order to pay for the car I'd to take a hit as I didn't have enough money in my other accounts.

Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by fid3fid: 6:02am On Dec 02, 2020
NwaAmaikpe:
shocked



The Central Bank Of Nigeria was designed to be independent of the Executive.
This independence of thoughts, strategies and policies was promoted by Clement Isong who avoided running up unsupportable debts and further heightened by Lamido Sanusi who questioned the fuel subsidy funding, challenged the budgetary spending of 25% of all government revenue by the legislative and also rejected the International Monetary Fund's insistence that the Naira be devalued.

Both CBN governors had disagreements on policies with the Heads of State they served under.
Isong with Gowon and Sanusi with Jonathan.

But what we have today is a yessir dummy; one who goes to Economic Summit Forums only to receive orders and ask where to sign from people who don't know their North pole from their South pole in Finance, Macroeconomics or Business.

CBN's recent unstable policies on FX usage and allocation are obviously rushed and ill-thought out...more like permutations from illiterate financial pundits whose major aims are to frustrate perceived political enemies and to perpetually keep a certain group at financial business disadvantage.

Just when you are just about to get used to one nonsense rule they reverse it and later reimpose it.
What has mandating that offshore and FX transfers are to be made from your Telegraphic Transfer Balance (TTB) and not cash deposits got to do with the exchange rate or availability of FX?

To me it is simply to ensure some people's money rots with them. That is vendetta and not strategic thinking.

Godwin Emefiele is less than a rubber stamp.
He is a stamp carved out of decayed cocoyam. If he had any decency in him, he would have resigned 3years ago.
But keeping his job by licking ass is more important than leaving a name in Sterling.

The economy is on a free fall.
Interest rates on deposits are almost non-existent, stamp duty is charged on Savings accounts, accounts of perceived "enemies" of the government are flagged and frozen. Unsustainable loans are requested every now and then to sustain our outrageously exorbitant cost of governance.

If not for the abundance of Ponzi Schemes masquerading as FX investors, Nigerians would have been eating stone now.

I miss Charles Soludo.
I miss Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
The CBN is just like the NLC; a total write-off.

Some banks do accept cash dollar deposit for FCY transfers to oversea banks.

While the notorious ones like UBA stopped FCY transfers.

I wonder why CBN is strangling small businesses with this restriction on FCY transfer?

If not for the Chinese remitters who have been helping exchange naira to RMB, many small businesses would have closed.

CBN fails to understand these restrictions are hindering clearance of shipments at Port. For those not shipping from China, it is difficult to transfer payment to Shipper for BL.

The governor has made things so bad in the sector.
The banks are confused.
Aboki on the street are confused. Importers are confused.
Exporters are confused.
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Munzy14(m): 6:03am On Dec 02, 2020
BabaOwen:
Nah wah o... Emefiele is one of the most terrible CBN governor
I swear, thats when a stooge is appointed to a sensitive position.

The hoarding of dollar makes it appreciate over naira..Very simple logic.

Dollar is scarce so those who have, decided to sell at an alarming rate of 500
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by fid3fid: 6:17am On Dec 02, 2020
thebosstrevor1:


Nonsense analysis.

We dont use dollars in Nigeria

And most people dont care about dollar rate.

Inflation rate is what matters the most in a local economy

Brother, try relate with what the guy said. High dollar exchange will significantly aid inflation because we are import dependent.

Many of our stuff are imported, and the exchange rate will affect their prices.

Higher exchange ---> increase in inflation -- thus affecting the pushing power of the Naira you have in saving
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by fid3fid: 6:25am On Dec 02, 2020
27Pushing30:

I’m in banking so nah the guy you quoted is not being kiddish .

The tight squeeze on USD access by CBN even at a time when global economies are contracting due to COVID and Naija being an import dependent economy was always laughable.


Most times the constant policy summersaults make me wonder if these guys just read an economics textbook and immediately apply it without asking themselves why they (economists) actually advocate local solutions to local problems.

Additionally, l I’m an APC supporter but still CANNOT understand why they (govt ) are still keeping our borders shut shut


Hello, are you currently working in the banking sector?

If yes, could you help explain why some bank branches have different policy on FCY remittance?
Some branches of the same bank will accept cash deposit for FCY transfer to oversea banks; and some will only TTB can be remitted outward.

Some banks have completely closed FCY transfers.

Why the messy policy?
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Nobody: 6:34am On Dec 02, 2020
Lagosianswag:
Dollar, Pounds Sterling FX Is Currently The Love Of My Life, It literally Pays To Be Rich grin grin grin


#MoB
Rallo
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by bigtt76(f): 7:49am On Dec 02, 2020
Osheeeey! You just hit the nail ...well on target.

A time will also come when even the parallel market would start rejecting the dollar cos they lack enough naira to buy it or it becomes too cumbersome to handle the naira. Hope we won't end up like Liberia whose main currency has been overshadowed by the US dollar cheesy


teewaik:
What some folks on this page failed to realize is that we are not a dollar nation, we dont print dollar..There is a limited stock of dollars, which CBN manages by allocating to the various sectors BDC & Banks on a weekly basis....The thing now is fine you will have dollar funds in your account or whatever IMTOs(Banks are the medium of withdrawal), and based on this new policy you are supposed to withdraw out cash...Then, what happens if the stock with banks cant meetup to the demand for dollar cash by individuals(There is no major change in forex reserve)...There dollar money get stucked and will be frustrated to collect in Naira or is it not when one is able to withdraw that you will then try to sell in the parallel market...Same emefiele was saying lastweek that Parallel market is an illegal market bla bla and people shouldn't patronise, yet a week after he is issuing policies which indirectly states that fine you can now withdraw and exchange your dollar at that same parallel market...I hope there isnt any sinister move behind this policy or just being desperate...
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by bigtt76(f): 7:55am On Dec 02, 2020
You see now? Exactly what I'm saying ....the banks will frustrate you withdrawing your FX. You will go to a bank branch in Lekki and they will direct you to their branch at Ikorodu just to cash $100. Some may tell you to come back in x number of days when they hope to get replenished by the IMTO. Only a child born yesterday would not understand these tactics and what to expect with the new regulation.



Neoteny:


Wasn't selling or trading. Bought another car, the money was wired to me, and when we went to GTB to withdraw dollars and pay the dealer i was told since it was an inflow i couldn't withdraw, and had to sell it to the bank at official exchange rates, which we know they'll turn around and sell to their BDC cohorts at black market rates.

I didn't even know about that stupid policy.

So in order to pay for the car I'd to take a hit as I didn't have enough money in my other accounts.
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by bigtt76(f): 7:59am On Dec 02, 2020
But the parallel market is illegal, so why create and sustain a channel for it to thrive?

One would've expected CBN to make it mandatory that after withdrawing the FX from the bank, you must sell to the BDC who will help them track the customer through BVN to tie the withdrawal to the exchange but no .....what would one want to withdraw FX from dom account if not to sell to get more Naira and inadvertently improve supply to the black market?

Yes price may drop to kill them off but time would come when the economy itself would become dollarized ....why change to Naira and pay when you can as well pay in FX.


Excellent7:
This policy should have been in place long before now!

The dollars will eventually end up in the parallel market thus improving the supply. I think it came quite late to be very effective in an easily visible manner. If not for Coronavirus travel restrictions on travel into Nigeria, it could have been more effective.

However, I foresee some reduction in the rate of Naira fall against the dollar at least in the next 8-12 weeks. My prediction for USD: NGN is 500 plus or minus 50 NGN to USD. I am of the opinion that it could have surpassed 600 NGN per USD in this timeframe without this policy.

Sometimes I wonder how our policy makers come to the decisions they announce. It seems to me that these guys are either ignorant or know the right thing to do but do not due to pecuniary or conflicting interests.
Having said this, I will try to briefly highlight in a simple way the sources and evolution of this FOREX wahala specifically in the very recent past.

The Naira is and will continue to be under pressure as long as we continue to import much more goods and services than we export. However, this can be mitigated in the short term by policies that encourage citizens and corporates to lodge and/or invest foreign currencies in the country (non-oil-based FOREX inflows). A long-term strategy would be to increase local production of goods and services and aggressive export drive. Imagine the FOREX savings that will accrue if every litre of fuel consumed locally is produced locally!
In spite of these fundamental problems, ill-thought policies and policy summersaults have continually exacerbated the situation.

Firstly, around 2015 (I stand to be corrected), under the guise of fighting corruption the government started making issues about foreign currencies in domiciliary accounts. The impression was that government might move to confiscate foreign currencies in these accounts and/or force them to be converted to Naira at fiat rates. At a point the banks even stopped receiving foreign currency deposits! Fortunately, the “madness” did not materialize but a lot of people had become cautious. Consequently, many Nigerians in Diaspora who often keep part of their income in the country as FOREX in domiciliary accounts became wary and so did other players.

Secondly, the ban on beneficiaries of FOREX transfers receiving their payments in foreign currency but only in Naira together with the wide disparity in the exchange rates used by the banks in paying beneficiaries and parallel market rates (often in the range of 20-25% difference) ensured that in real terms the sender loses value (in the range of 20-25%) by making a transfer home as opposed to exchanging the funds at the parallel market. This and the continuous slide in Naira ensured that mostly “hot money” came from diaspora. By “hot money” I mean money for immediate and dire needs for family and dependents at home.

The government is already banking on increased remittances from the diaspora during the festive period to help with the recession but I have had my doubts. The significant difference in rates is a dis-incentive. In my opinion the difference if any, between the bank rates and parallel market rates should not be more than 5%.
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by bigtt76(f): 8:05am On Dec 02, 2020
Funny thing is most banks don't do over the counter FX payouts It must be to your dom account or naira account grin


Penboy:


You be clown.. The dollars is coming from overseas. What concerns bank and having dollars for payout?

Abroad bank send you dollars... The bank serving as a receiving end.. And you go collect your thing.

If that particular bank doesn't have, go island.
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by bigtt76(f): 8:08am On Dec 02, 2020
cheesy cheesy ....they don't know that remittance is recycling the foreign reserve and not a way of increasing it cheesy


Fibonacci88:

Oga shut up. How does remittances to individual account boost foreign reserve. Do u even know what makes up foreign reserve. Export from crude oil is what makes up majorly foreign reserve for Nigeria. Try schooling urself a bit instead of jumping from thread to thread praising an incompetent presidency.

1 Like

Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by IkUKU01(m): 9:08am On Dec 02, 2020
ILoveDemMANNA:

What do kids know

If we have more funds come in as remittances, our foreign reserves go up, and when that happens, the confidence in the Nigerian economy will go up
Why didn't they implement this policy all these while
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by 27Pushing30: 9:19am On Dec 02, 2020
fid3fid:


Hello, are you currently working in the banking sector?

If yes, could you help explain why some bank branches have different policy on FCY remittance?
Some branches of the same bank will accept cash deposit for FCY transfer to oversea banks; and some will only TTB can be remitted outward.

Some banks have completely closed FCY transfers.

Why the messy policy?

Risk appetite. plain and simple.

BUT per the bolded "Some branches of the same bank will accept cash deposit for FCY transfer to oversea banks" - in my Bank like most banks branches are merely collection centers (for FCY transfer) the main transfer is done at a specialized unit and they usually check the source of the deposit before effecting transfer. ours is a limit of $10,000 per day (if it's a cash deposit).

"Some banks have completely closed FCY transfers" - On online banking channels ... maybe but physical in branch transfers i seriously doubt that
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by Neoteny(m): 9:59am On Dec 02, 2020
bigtt76:
You see now? Exactly what I'm saying ....the banks will frustrate you withdrawing your FX. You will go to a bank branch in Lekki and they will direct you to their branch at Ikorodu just to cash $100. Some may tell you to come back in x number of days when they hope to get replenished by the IMTO. Only a child born yesterday would not understand these tactics and what to expect with the new regulation.




They didn't send me anywhere.

They only said the regulation prohibits withdrawal of dollar inflows, which describes my case, and thus the only way i could access my money is to sell off to them at official rates.

I still have some cash trapped there so I'm glad the embargo is lifted, not that i need to withdraw since I'm not in the country and my dollar Mastercard is with me.

Hope that clears up your misconceptions.
Re: CBN Okays Withdrawals Of Dollars From Domiciliary Accounts by bigtt76(f): 10:05am On Dec 02, 2020
I get you clear ...my point is that some other customer suffer similar fate. They end up being frustrated. Thanks for sharing though.


Neoteny:


They didn't send me anywhere.

They only said the regulation prohibits withdrawal of dollar inflows, which describes my case, and thus the only way i could access my money is to sell off to them at official rates.

I still have some cash trapped there so I'm glad the embargo is lifted, not that i need to withdraw since I'm not in the country and my dollar Mastercard is with me.

Hope that clears up your misconceptions.

1 Like

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (Reply)

Nana Otedola Stunning In A Throwback Photo / Coronavirus Is Already Hurting The World Economy. (Analysis) / Mike Adenuga Loses $300 Million

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 95
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.