LAGOS – Dr Titus Okunrounmu, a former Director, Research Department of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has advised the Federal Government to make emphatic efforts to build new refineries .
Okunrounmu gave the advice in an interview with newsmen on Sunday in Ota.He said that the intervention would avail the federal government the opportunity to tackle any international crisis and turmoil that may arise in the sector, as currently being witnessed in the Middle East.The former CBN director commended Aliko Dangote for building a standard refinery that has helped the nation stabilise petrol prices and ensure a steady supply for the people.“The petrol prices would have skyrocketed beyond a reasonable price if not for Dangote refinery, which is in place.“The federal government needs to build new refineries that would complement Dangote refinery in order to absorb any international shock or crisis.“Also, there is an urgent need to repair some of the country’s refineries, and ensure transparency and accountability in the petroleum industry to boost revenue generation,” he said.Okunrounmu noted that some of the funds generated from the petroleum sector could be used to develop other sectors of the economy.This, he said, would translate to creation of job opportunities and stimulate more economic growth.He also appealed to the federal government to provide constant crude supply to Dangote refinery so that it can produce optimally to reduce petroleum products importation.(NAN)
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CBN
ABUJA- As the March 31 deadline for the bank recapitalisation exercise of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) draws near, the apex bank says 30 banks have met the new capital requirements.
CBN Acting Director, Corporate Communications Development, Mrs Hakama Sidi-Ali, said this in a statement on Friday in Abuja.
According to Sidi-Ali, as of March 6, the banks have met the new minimum capital requirements applicable to their respective licence authorisations.
“In total, 33 banks have raised additional capital through rights issues, initial public offerings (IPOs) and private placements as part of the programme.
“The capital positions of the remaining banks are currently undergoing the CBN’s routine verification process ahead of final confirmation of compliance within the recapitalisation timeline.
“The CBN reiterates that the Nigerian banking system remains stable and sound.
“The recapitalisation programme remains firmly on track and will further strengthen the capacity of the banking sector to support households, businesses, and sustainable economic growth,” she said.
She said that the CBN will continue to maintain close supervisory engagement with regulated institutions to ensure full compliance with prudential and capital requirements.
Meanwhile, the Governor of CBN, Mr Olayemi Cardoso, had earlier said that the banking sector recapitalisation programme was progressing in accordance with the approved regulatory timetable.
Speaking at the close of the 304th Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) media briefing, on Feb. 24, Cardoso said that 20 banks had fully met the new minimum capital requirements.
He said that a further 13 banks were at advanced stages of their capital-raising processes and were expected to conclude within the stipulated timeframe.
He said that institutions still finalising their plans were assessing a variety of strategic options, including consolidation where suitable, as part of efforts to meet compliance within the remaining timeframe.
Cardoso also said that, as of February 19, the total verified and approved capital raised under the programme was N4.05 trillion.
He provided a breakdown showing that N2.90 trillion (71.67 per cent) was mobilised domestically, while 706.84 million dollars, estimated at N1.15 trillion (28.33 per cent), reflected foreign participation.
According to the CBN governor, this balanced mix signals broad investor engagement and growing confidence in the sector.
He also discussed the status of institutions currently under regulatory intervention, noting that specific legal and structural factors influence the order of recapitalisation measures for these banks.
He said the CBN remained actively engaged with relevant stakeholders to ensure orderly and credible outcomes while maintaining financial stability.
Cardoso reassured stakeholders that depositor funds in those institutions remained secure and that operations continued under strict regulatory oversight.
He expressed optimism that the market would see substantial alignment with the new capital requirements by the cut-off date.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the CBN introduced a recapitalisation programme for the
banking sector in 2024.
This is to strengthen the resilience, stability and long-term capacity of the financial system to support Nigeria’s economic development.
Since the introduction of the policy, banks across the industry have taken steps to strengthen
their capital base in line with the revised regulatory requirements.
Under the CBN framework, minimum capital thresholds include: N500 billion for commercial banks with international authorisation, N200 billion for national authorisation, N50 billion for regional commercial banks, N50 billion for merchant banks.
It also include N20 billion and N10 billion for national and regional non-interest banks respectively. (NAN)
OGUN – Dr Titus Okunrounmu, former Director, Research Department, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has lauded the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) for cutting interest rate by 50 basis points.
Okunrounmu gave the commendation in an interview with newsmen on Wednesday in Ota.
He said that the MPC’s decision to lower the rates was good and in the right direction to help the economy recover fully.
“I think the policy is in the right direction aimed at stabilising the inflation rate.” the ex-director said.Okurounmu, however, advised the MPC to implement more policies to further bring down the prices of goods and services in order to stimulate economic growth.
Reports that the MPC at its 304th meeting held from Feb. 23 to Feb. 24 in Abuja, cut the MPR by 50 basis points representing 26.50 per cent.
The committee also adjusted the asymmetric corridor to +50/-450 basis points around the MPR, retained the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) for Deposit Money Banks at 45 per cent and 16 per cent for Merchant Banks, and maintained the Liquidity Ratio at 30 per cent.(NAN)
Cross-border payments backbone of international monetary, financial systems – Cardoso
written by Administrator
ABUJA – Mr Yemi Cardoso, the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), says cross‑border payments are becoming the backbone of the international monetary and financial system globally.
Cardoso, in his plenary speech, said this in Abuja on Thursday at the G‑24 Technical Group Meetings (TGM) themed “Mobilising Finance for Sustainable, Inclusive, and Job‑rich Transformation’’.
The title of his speech was, “Digital Cross-Border Payments, Global Finance, and Economic Transformation – Opportunities and Risks”
Cardoso said, “for G‑24 economies, inefficiencies in these systems translate directly into higher remittance costs, costly FX transactions, fragmented settlement processes, and barriers to MSME participation in global trade.”
He said that improving cross‑border payments was, therefore, not simply a technical reform, but a macroeconomic and development priority.
“The channels through which capital, remittances and trade flows move, now form a critical part of global financial stability architecture.
“Today, cross‑border payments remain too slow, too costly, and too fragmented, especially for developing economies.
“With global remittance corridors costing over 6.0 per cent, settlement lags of several days, and compliance burdens that exclude MSMEs, millions remain disconnected from global opportunity,” he said.
The CBN governor said that digital innovation now presented a historic opportunity to correct these frictions.
He said that modern payments infrastructure, instant payment systems, interoperable digital platforms, distributed ledger technology, and robust digital identity frameworks, could reduce transaction costs for remittances and trade.
He said that such assets could also shorten settlement times, improve transparency, compliance, and auditability and expand access for households and MSMEs traditionally excluded from the formal financial system.
”Interoperable digital systems also strengthen the transmission of monetary policy, expand financial inclusion, and reduce informality, if designed with resilience and strong governance.
“These opportunities are not theoretical. They are happening around the world,” he said.
Cardoso said India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI) now linked with Singapore and the UAE, had slashed remittance costs and enabled ubiquitous real‑time settlement.
He said that Brazil’s PIX, adopted by over 70 per cent of adults within two years, was being integrated into cross‑border pilots across Latin America.
“These examples demonstrate what is achievable for G‑24 members, including lower costs, better liquidity, stronger SMEs, job creation, and deeper regional integration,” he said.
According to him, Nigeria’s experience demonstrates that this potential can be realised through deliberate and sustained policy action.
“At the CBN, we have systematically modernised our regulatory and supervisory frameworks to keep pace with the rapidly evolving digital financial landscape.
“We strengthened operational oversight of switching and payment infrastructure providers, enhanced agent banking regulations to better address Anti-Money Laundering/Anti-Money Laundering Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) risks.
“We also significantly improved interoperability across payment channels to support efficiency and scale, ” he said.
Cardoso said that building on these reforms, CBN was concluding work on the new Payment System Vision 2028, developed in close collaboration with industry stakeholders.
“It was built around five strategic priorities aimed at boosting innovation, strengthening system resilience, and advancing financial inclusion, ” he said.
He added that a central part of the agenda was improving the cross‑border payments environment, where Nigeria had made concrete, measurable progress.
Also speaking, Mr Wale Edun, the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, said that there was a need for unity among countries of the Global South to check the rising fragility in global growth.
Edun said that the current global economic environment was marked by profound uncertainties, systemic vulnerabilities and a contest between fragmentation and integration, which also hampered trade and debt sustainability.
The minister said that the recurring theme of fragility, whether in growth, trade flows, debt sustainability or institutional capacity reflected the precarious state of the global economy.
He said that the TGM was not merely a routine technical engagement.
According to him, it is also an opportunity to reshape development trajectories for countries of the Global South at a time when global risks were converging faster than institutions could respond.
He said that the 2026 Global Risk Report identified economic confrontation in the form of tariffs, sanctions, investment restrictions and strategic decoupling as the most likely trigger of global crises.
“Deepening fragmentation can reduce global output by up to two percentage points and shrink global trade by more than two per cent, with developing and emerging markets bearing the brunt.
“Africa, despite accounting for 17 per cent of the world’s population, contributes only about three per cent of global trade and roughly 2.5 per cent of global output.
”Further fragmentation can only worsen this imbalance,” he said.
Earlier, Dr Iyabo Masha, the Director and Head of Secretariat of the Intergovernmental Group of the G-24, said that the global economy was witnessing measured resilience but constrained ambition.
Masha said that Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs) faced tightening policy space amid rising uncertainty.
According to her, while supply-side disruptions have eased and inflation has moderated in many economies, resilience should not be mistaken for robustness.
“We meet at a moment of measured resilience but constrained ambition in the global economy.
“For many EMDEs, the challenge is no longer simply to recover, but to restore development trajectories, protect macroeconomic stability, and finance transformation in a world of higher volatility,” she said.
She identified five broad themes shaping the current outlook.
She listed the themes to include a stable but divergent global economy, tightening policy space for EMDEs, emerging near-term risks, the need for medium-term transformation policies, and urgent reforms of the Bretton Woods institutions.
On the global outlook, Masha said that although disinflation had progressed in several advanced economies, inflation dynamics remained vulnerable to supply shocks, climate events and geopolitical tensions.
She said that while global financial conditions had eased compared to periods of intense tightening, the cost of capital remained elevated for many developing countries, with spreads and debt-service burdens still above pre-pandemic levels. (NAN)
ABUJA – The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), National Council for Arts and Culture (NCAC) and other stakeholders have pledged support for the 2026 African Continental Free Trade Area Festival (ACFTA Fest).
They made the commitments at the official launch of the ACFTA Fest on Friday in Abuja.
Dr Ifeoma Ezike, Assistant Director, Monetary Policy Department, CBN, expressed optimism about Nigeria’s growth potential and development, adding that Nigeria has the potential to be a great nation.
“On behalf of the CBN, I congratulate the organisers and I want to reiterate the unwavering support of the bank in collaborating with stakeholders to ensure that the protocol, agenda, dream and objective of the actors are realised,” she said.
Ezike said the CBN would support the initiative to realise its objectives and maximise opportunities that had not been fully utilised in the past.
President of the Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI), Mr Emeka Obegolu (SAN), said the chamber was pleased to associate with the launch of ACFTA Fest 2026.
Obegolu, represented by ACCI Vice-President (Legal), Aisha Abdullahi, described the festival as a pan-African platform designed to promote trade, innovation, culture and continental collaboration.
According to him, the initiative resonates strongly with the ACCI’s mandate as the leading voice of the private sector in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and Nigeria.
“This festival reflects the spirit of the African Continental Free Trade Area by bringing together entrepreneurs, creatives and institutions on one platform to drive intra-African trade and collaboration.
“Platforms like this are important because they move conversations from policy to action.
“We applaud your commitment to positioning Nigeria as a hub for Pan-African trade engagement and creative exchange.
“We assure you of ACCI’s continued support for initiatives that foster private sector-led growth, regional integration and sustainable development,” he said.
Similarly, the Director-General of NCAC, Mr Obi Asika, represented by Dr Bashir Hamisu, said the council had much to contribute to the festival’s success.
He added that evolving cultural opportunities would enable participants to generate income from their talents and skills.
Project Team Lead, Ahmed Usman, said Nigeria would benefit significantly from hosting the festival scheduled for March 26 to March 28.
Usman said the event would position Nigeria as a hub for investors, traders and creative industries across Africa.
“We are going to showcase legacy projects, young youth who have training centres, start-up hubs, sports facilities, host events, interviews. All these are the benefits that come to the host country.
“Entrepreneurs will have access to funding, mentorship and partnership. There’s going to be continental exposure to all these startups.
“We’re going to bring opportunity, informal strategy and joint venture partnership across borders. Legends will be connected to the upcoming players, both male and female.
“We want to support diplomacy, promote peace and unity through sports, and then able to create an area for long-term support for footballers by creating infrastructure for development,” he said.
He said events would hold at the Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa, Arts and Craft Village and Moshood Abiola International Stadium.
Usman listed activities to include exhibitions, masterclasses, fashion runway, youth clinics, tournaments, performances and the African Legends United Match.
Cameroonian football legend Eyond Enoh, Dr Dion Amby, Itodo Thomas of the Nigerian Society of Engineers and others also pledged support for the project.<span;> (NAN)
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has announced plans to introduce a new regulatory framework aimed at easing debit card issuance and Automated Teller Machine operations across the country’s banking sector.
CBN Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, through his Special Adviser, Fatai Karim, made this announcement at an event at the weekend.
He said the move was part of efforts to tackle persistent cash access challenges and restore public confidence in electronic payment systems.
According to the apex bank, the proposed policy will align the number of debit cards issued by banks with their deployed ATM infrastructure, a measure expected to reduce congestion, frequent downtime, and uneven cash availability across the country.
He said the recurring ATM failures and cash shortages continue to weaken trust in digital payment channels, despite the rapid growth of electronic transactions within the banking system.
“Very soon, the Central Bank will be coming up with another policy to sanitise and improve the situation, particularly around how many cards banks issue relative to the number of ATMs they support,” he said.
LAGOS – An economist, Prof. Ken Ife says Nigeria’s growing external reserves are boosting the economy by strengthening the Naira, calming the foreign exchange market and creating new opportunities for investment-led growth.
Ife, President of the Institute of Professional Economists and Policy Management made this known in an interview with newsmen in Lagos on Thursday, following the rise in the country’s external reserves to $45.24 billion.
Ife said the stronger reserve position was boosting confidence in the foreign exchange market and positioning the Naira for improved stability.
The analyst noted that the outlook remained positive as reforms and investments gained momentum across key sectors.
He pointed to rising output from the Dangote Petroleum Refinery as a major source of future foreign exchange inflows, particularly from fertiliser, polypropylene, aviation fuel and gas.
“Dangote Petroleum Refinery alone is increasing output from fertiliser, polypropylene, as well as aviation fuel and gas.
“This could enable the company to earn about $20 billion from exports to the global market,” he said.
Ife added that the expected listing of the refinery on the capital market would unlock significant domestic and diaspora investments.
“This means Nigerians at home and in the diaspora could buy shares in the quoted company, and hundreds of billions of dollars could be mobilised locally.
“It will also reduce government foreign borrowing and further stabilise the foreign exchange market,” the professor said.
He urged the Federal Government to sustain the reserve build-up while channeling investments into critical sectors to raise productivity and living standards.
Ife also said the improving reserve position should create room for lower lending rates to stimulate growth in the productive sectors of the economy.
Similarly, Dr Muda Yusuf, Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), commended the government for strengthening the country’s external reserves.
He said the development was already supporting exchange rate stability and easing inflationary pressures.
“This is one of the reasons the exchange rate is getting stronger, and it is also helping to slow inflation,” Yusuf said.
He urged the government to sustain the momentum by boosting oil production and strengthening non-oil foreign exchange inflows, particularly diaspora remittances.
Reports that Nigeria’s external reserves rose to $45.24 billion on Dec. 23, 2025, from $42.17 billion recorded a month earlier, according to data released by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
The data showed a 7.28 per cent month-on-month increase, representing a gain of about $3.1 billion.(NAN)
NDIC declares N24.3bn second liquidation dividend for Heritage Bank depositors
written by Administrator
LAGOS – The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) has declared a second liquidation dividend of N24.3 billion for depositors of the defunct Heritage Bank Ltd., following continued recovery of the bank’s assets.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) had revoked the banking licence of Heritage Bank on June 3, 2024, after which the NDIC was appointed liquidator in line with Section 12(2) of the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA) 2020 and Sections 55(1 and 2) of the NDIC Act 2023.
Upon its appointment, the corporation began payment of insured deposits of up to N5 million per depositor from the Deposit Insurance Fund, while also initiating the disposal of physical assets, recovery of debts and realisation of investments of the failed bank.
As a result, the NDIC declared a first liquidation dividend of N46.6 billion in April 2025, paid at a rate of 9.2 kobo per N1 to depositors whose balances exceeded the insured limit of N5 million, on a pro-rata basis.
The corporation said the newly declared second liquidation dividend of N24.3 billion was generated from further debt recovery, sale of assets and investment realisation, and would be applied to uninsured deposits above the N5 million threshold.
According to the NDIC, the second dividend is payable at a rate of 5.2 kobo per N1 on outstanding balances, in line with Section 72 of the NDIC Act 2023, bringing the cumulative liquidation dividend paid so far to 14.4 kobo per N1.
Payments, the corporation said, would be made using depositors’ details already in its records, with eligible depositors automatically credited through their alternative bank accounts using their Bank Verification Numbers (BVN).
The NDIC advised depositors without alternative bank accounts or BVNs, as well as those who are yet to claim their insured deposits or the first liquidation dividend, to visit the nearest NDIC office for assistance. (NAN)
ABUJA- The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) have drawn up a framework to address consumer complaints arising from unsuccessful airtime and data transactions.
The NCC’s Head of Public Affairs, Nnenna Ukoha said this in a statement on Thursday in Abuja.
Ukoha said that said that these failed transactions happen during network downtimes, system glitches, or human input errors.
Ukoha said that the framework was the outcome of several months of engagements involving the NCC, the CBN, Mobile Network Operators (MNOs), Value Added Service (VAS) providers, Deposit Money Banks (DMBs), and other relevant stakeholders.
“These engagements were prompted by a rising incidence of failed airtime and data purchases, where subscribers were debited without receiving value and experienced delays in resolution.
“The framework represents a unified position by both the telecommunications and financial sectors on addressing such complaints.
“It identifies and tackles the root causes of failed airtime and data transactions, including instances where bank accounts are debited without successful delivery of services,” she said
She said that it also prescribed an enforceable Service Level Agreement (SLA) for MNOs and DMBs, clearly outlining the roles and responsibilities of each stakeholder in the transaction and resolution process.
She said that going by the new framework, whether failure occurs at the bank level or with an NCC licensee, the purchaser is entitled to a refund within 30 seconds.
“Except in circumstances where the transaction remains pending, of which the refund can take up to 24 hours,” she said
.
Ukohae said that the framework further mandated operators to notify consumers via SMS of the success or failure of every transaction.
“It also addresses erroneous recharges to ported lines, incorrect airtime or data purchases, and instances where transactions are made to the wrong phone number,” she said
Speaking on the development, the Director of Consumer Affairs at the NCC, Mrs Freda Bruce-Bennett, said that the framework also establishes a Central Monitoring Dashboard to be jointly hosted by the NCC and the CBN.
According to her, the dashboard will enable both regulators to monitor failures, the responsible party, refunds, and track SLA breaches in real time.
Bruce-Bennett said that failed top-ups ranked among the top three consumer complaintt
She said that in line with the commitment to addressing these priority issues, there were determination to resolve it within the shortest possible time.
“We are grateful to all stakeholders, particularly the CBN and its leadership for their tireless commitment to resolving this issue and arriving at this framework.
She also said thanked them for ensuring that consumers of telecommunications services receive full value for their purchases.
“So far, pending the approval of management of both regulators on the framework, MNOs and banks have collectively made refunds of over N10 billion to customers for failed transactions.”
She said that implementation of the framework is expected to commence on March 1, once the two regulators make final approvals, and technical integration by all MNOs, VAS providers and DMBs is concluded. (NAN)
With about 100 days left until the March 31, 2026 deadline for Nigeria’s banking sector recapitalisation, banks are working against time to meet the CBN’s minimum requirements.
There are suggestions that several banks could be forced to close if they are unable to meet the deadline.
No bank is closing, ACAMB tells Nigerians amid recapitalisation rumours.
Olayemo Cardoso-led CBN says banking system remains strong as recapitalisation gathers pace.
However, the Association of Corporate Communication and Marketing Professionals in Banks (ACAMB) has dismissed the rumours, stating that as many as 12 banks face imminent closure, describing such claims as false and dangerous.
In a statement signed by its president, Rasheed Bolarinwa, ACAMB warned that such alarmist narratives are misleading and harmful.
The association stressed that all banks submitted vetted recapitalisation plans to the CBN in 2024, and the regulator has repeatedly expressed satisfaction with the implementation progress.
ACAMB said Nigerian banks remain safe, sound and adequately capitalised, adding that misinformation around the recapitalisation exercise is baseless and could have serious economic consequences.
Also, Ayokunle Olubunmi, Head of Financial Institutions Ratings at Agusto & Co., said only a few institutions remain under real pressure.
He said
“Nothing dramatic has happened yet on the mergers front, but by January or February, we could see clearer outcomes.”
Olubunmi said, noting that capital raising through private placements and rights issues could dilute shareholders who fail to participate.
CBN: Banks’ recapitalisation drive
The recapitalisation drive has also triggered strategic realignments. Nova Bank opted to downgrade its licence to regional status, reducing its capital requirement to N50 billion, Leadership reports.
Meanwhile, consolidation is gathering pace, with Union Bank merging with Titan Trust Bank, while Providus Bank is set to merge with Unity Bank, a deal expected to create Nigeria’s ninth-largest lender by assets size.
According to disclosures by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), 16 banks have already met the minimum capital requirements for their respective licence categories, reflecting steady progress across the sector as the deadline approaches.
CBN Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, recently confirmed that several lenders have either met or exceeded the new capital thresholds, while others are advancing steadily and remain well positioned to comply with the requirements.
The banks said:
“Several banks have already met the new capital thresholds, while others are advancing steadily and are well positioned to meet the March 31, 2026 deadline comfortably.”
He disclosed that 27 banks have accessed the capital market through public offers and rights issues, adding that stress tests conducted in 2025 showed the banking system remained fundamentally robust, with key financial soundness indicators meeting prudential standards across the board.
Nigeria’s banks under Olayemi Cardoso-led CBN shift from survival mode to strategic growth ahead of the 2026 recapitalisation deadline.
Sixteen banks hit capital targets as the banking sector braces for the March 2026 deadline amid reforms by Olayemi Cardoso-led CBN.
Banks that have met the recapitalisation requirements include:
Access Holdings
Zenith Bank
GTBank
Ecobank
Stanbic IBTC
Wema Bank
Jaiz Bank
Lotus Bank
Providus Bank
Greenwich Merchant Bank
PremiumTrust Bank
Globus Bank
Citibank Nigeria
United Bank for Africa
Nova Bank
Sterling Bank
Fidelity Bank and FCMB Group are among those in advanced stages of capital raising and regulatory verification.
CBN’s foreign reserves record first gain in 5 months
Earlier, Reported that Nigeria’s foreign exchange (forex) reserves have recorded the first increase in five months, significantly boosting the CBN’s fight to help naira recover its lost value.
In a statement published on its website, CBN reinstated its commitment to intervene in the foreign exchange markets to increase liquidity and ease demand pressure on naira.
Forex reserves recorded a modest increase of $1.72 million over the weekend to close at $33.22 billion.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has increased the weekly cash withdrawal limit from N100,000 to N500,000 across all banks and other financial institutions.
This was announced in a statement issued on Tuesday by the apex bank’s Director of Financial Policy and Regulation Department, Rita Sike.
According to the statement, the directive which is part of other revised cash-related policies is to become effective from the 1st of January 2026.
The new directives are reportedly borne out of the effort to moderate the rising cost of cash management; address security concerns; and reduce potential for money laundering.
As explained by Sike, the cumulative weekly withdrawal limit across all channels will now be N500,000 for individuals and N5 million for corporations.
Any withdrawal above the said limit is reportedly bound to attract excess withdrawal fee with 40 percent of it forwarded to the CBN while the financial institutions retain 60 percent.
Also, part of the reviewed cash withdrawal policy was the removal of the cumulative deposit limit with fees for excess deposit no longer applicable.
Meanwhile the limit on over-the-counter encashment of 3rd party cheques retains the limit of N100,000.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced on Tuesday that it will revise its cash withdrawal rules, effective January 2026.
Reports that the new rule issued by the apex bank ends a previous special authorisation that permitted individuals to withdraw ₦5 million and corporates to withdraw ₦10 million monthly.
According to CBN, the previous cash policies were introduced over the years in response to evolving circumstances; however, with time, the need has arisen to streamline these provisions to reflect present-day realities.
The Director of the Financial Policy & Regulation Department, Dr Rita I. Sike, in a circular released on Tuesday, December 2, 2025, stated that the policy is designed to reduce the cost of cash management, strengthen security, and curb money laundering risks associated with the economy’s heavy reliance on physical currency.
CBN stated, “These policies, issued over the years in response to evolving circumstances in cash management, sought to reduce cash usage and encourage accelerated adoption of other payment options, particularly electronic payment channels. With the effluxion of time, the need has arisen to streamline the provisions of these policies to reflect present-day realities.”
Starting January 1, 2026, individuals will be allowed to withdraw up to ₦500,000 per week across all channels, while corporate entities will be limited to ₦5 million.
Withdrawals above these thresholds will attract excess withdrawal fees of three per cent for individuals and five per cent for corporates, with the charges shared between the CBN and the financial institutions.
Daily withdrawals from Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) will be capped at ₦100,000 per customer, with a maximum of ₦500,000 per week. These transactions will count toward the cumulative weekly withdrawal limit.
The CBN also confirmed that all currency denominations may now be loaded in ATMs, while the over-the-counter encashment limit for third-party cheques remains at ₦100,000. Such withdrawals will also count toward the weekly withdrawal limit.
Deposit Money Banks are required to submit monthly reports on cash withdrawals above the specified limits, as well as on cash deposits, to the relevant supervisory departments.
They must also create separate accounts to warehouse processing charges collected on excess withdrawals.
Revenue-generating accounts of federal, state, and local governments, as well as accounts of microfinance banks and primary mortgage banks, are exempt from the new withdrawal limits and excess withdrawal fees.
However, exemptions previously granted to embassies, diplomatic missions, and aid-donor agencies have been withdrawn.
The CBN clarified that the circular is without prejudice to the provisions of specific earlier directives but supersedes others, as detailed in its appendices.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has removed all limits on cash deposits, marking a significant reversal of earlier cash-tightening measures introduced under the previous administration.
The apex bank also announced an upward review of the weekly cash withdrawal limit for individuals and businesses, a move designed to ease financial transactions and restore liquidity across the economy.
Details soon…
ABUJA- The National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN), on Thursday, awarded a fine against the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for stalling the hearing of the suits filed by 62 disengaged staff members.
Justice Osatohanmwen Obaseki-Osaghae, in a short ruling on the oral application of the counsel to the ex-workers, Ola Olanipekun, SAN, ordered the CBN to pay an aggregate sum of N620, 000.
The 62 ex-staff, who are claimants, had filed separate suits against the nation’s apex bank as the sole defendant.
In one of the originating summons marked NICN/ABJ/26x/2024, dated Aug. 21, 2024 but filed on Aug. 22, 2024, by a team of lawyers led by Ola Olanipekun on behalf of one of the staff, the claimants urged the court to nullify the termination letters issued to them.
They sought a declaration that the letter, titled ‘Re-ORGANISATION’ dated May 23, 2024, but with effect from May 24, 2024, issued by the CBN’s director of the Human Resources Department, and addressed to the claimants, was in contravention of the provisions of the CBN Act 2007.
They said the action contravened the bank’s human resource policies and procedure manual and, therefore, was arbitrary, unlawful, null and void.
They sought a declaration that the claimants’ contract of employment with the CBN subsisted and remained valid and of full effect to date.
They, therefore, sought an order setting aside the purported termination of the claimant’s employment vide letter titled ‘REORGANISATION’, dated May 23, 2024, for being arbitrary, unlawful, null and void.
They also asked the court for an order directing the CBN to reinstate them to the positions they were at the time of the termination letters or other higher positions as they would ordinarily have attained or been promoted in the course of their employment if the same were not unlawfully terminated.
They equally sought an order directing the bank to pay them all their monthly salaries, allowances and other emoluments/entitlements which they would have earned if their employment had not been unlawfully terminated, among other reliefs.
Besides, the claimants’ counsel had also filed a motion to consolidate the cases.
Upon resumed hearing in one of the suits, Olanipekun informed the court that the matter was scheduled for hearing of the substantive originating summons as well as the preliminary objection of the CBN.
The senior lawyer said they were ready to proceed.
Responding, CBN’s lawyer, Wilson Inam, SAN, told the court that he filed an application, dated Nov. 26, seeking an order of the court to convert the claimants’ originating summons to writ of summons because the facts are in dispute.
“I apologise for filing it just yesterday and for serving my learner brother this morning in court,” he said.
Olanipekun, who argued that the matter came up last on Oct. 2, said there was sufficient time to have filed the motion for them to respond appropriately.
“It is important to say that we were served with this application this morning,” he said.
He argued that contrary to Inam’s submission in his motion, the facts in the instant case are perfectly within the rules of hearing it via the originating summons.
He prayed the court to disregard the CBN’s application so that the case could proceed accordingly.
Olanipekun stated that the apex bank’s motion was a setback to the quick determination of the case and that the bank had indirectly forced an adjournment on the matter.
The lawyer, who said the case involved 62 claimants, who were all in court, prayed the court for a cost.
“We ask for a conservative cost of N10, 000 per person and a total of N620, 000.
“This is because this matter was slated for hearing and the claimants and their counsel are diligently ready to proceed so that we can address the injustice done on the claimants,” he said.
According to him, we will urge my lord for a very short date for next week to come and hear this application.
The CBN’s lawyer, in his response, prayed the court to discountenance Olanipekun’s application for a cost.
In her ruling, Justice Obaseki-Osaghae aligned with Olanipekun’s argument.
The judge held that the motion filed by the defendant had affected the hearing of the case.
According to her, cost follows event.
“Cost is hereby awarded in the sum of N620, 000 and this should be paid before the next adjourned date,” the judge ruled.
Justice Obaseki-Osaghae adjourned the matter until Jan. 12, 2026 for hearing of the pending motions.
It would be recalled that Justice Benedict Kanyip, in 2024, recused himself from the suits following the announcement of a lawyer’s name in CBN’s team of counsel, who happens to be an in-law to the judge.
Obafemi Agaba of Jackson, Etti, and Edu & Co, had, while announcing their appearance for CBN, said there was a consortium of law firms that would be representing the bank in the case, including D.D. Dodo, SAN & Co law firm.
Then Justice Kanyip, who is also the President of NICN, disclosed that Damian Dodo is his in-law.
The judge, therefore, said he was uncomfortable continuing with the matter.
The disengaged workers were said to be instrumental to the establishment of the defunct Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU) of the CBN in 2018.
The EIU was created as a special-purpose vehicle for fostering a safe and sound financial system in Nigeria and to enhance banks’ healthy competitiveness and resilience to shocks.
The unit, in one of its achievements, was its investigation of the Process and Industrial Development (P&ID) in conjunction with the EFCC in 2020, leading to the granting of the right of appeal and eventual acquittal of Nigeria from the P&ID humongous US$11 billion arbitral award.
The unit was said to have established the case of fraud and bribery against P&ID through hectic financial analyses of fund flows.
The claimants said other milestone investigations handled by the EIU included the recovery of N3.18 billion stealthily concealed by one of the bank’s agents; the identification and penalising of betting and gaming companies engaged in massive repatriation of FX without the requisite approval and documentation by the relevant authorities, among others.
The ex-workers, however, alleged that despite the unit’s achievements, staff members of the EIU were all maliciously targeted.(NAN)
ABUJA – Justice Hamza Muazu of the FCT High Court, Maitama, on Thursday stopped the prosecution from calling three subpoenaed witnesses to testify in the ongoing trial of Godwin Emefiele.
Emefiele, a former governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), is being prosecuted by the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation (OAGF) for alleged abuse of office, corruption and fraud.
At the resumed hearing of the case, the judge ruled on the oral application made by the prosecuting counsel, Mr Rotimi Oyedepo, SAN, on the subpoenaed witnesses.
Muazu held that the name of the two witnesses, Tommy Odama and Ifeanyi Omeke, were earlier struck out.
He said that the names of the witnesses were contained in his ruling of March 20 which struck out the prosecution’s additional proof of evidence in the case.
The judge held that the ruling was now a subject of appeal filed by the prosecution and pending before the Court of Appeal.
He said that the court could not change its own ruling by allowing the subpoenaed witnesses to testify in the case.
The judge held that the prosecution should wait for the decision of the appellate court with regards to the witnesses.
Muazu also ruled on the objection of the eligibility of the 11th prosecution witness (3rd witness), Alvan Grumman, raised by the counsel for Emefiele, Mr Matthew Burkaa, SAN, at the Oct. 22 sitting.
The judge held that having struck out the prosecution’s additional proof of evidence in the March 20 ruling, it was only right to wait for the outcome of the appeal.
” The court cannot allow the witness to testify though his name was not specifically mentioned in the said additional proof of evidence.
” The prosecution should rather wait for the decision of the appellate court to know if the witness is eligible to testify,” he held.
He subsequently adjourned the case until Jan. 29, 2026 for continuation of hearing.
Reports that in the amended 20-count charge marked FCT/HC/CR/577/2023, the former CBN governor is accused of criminal breach of trust.
He is also charged with conferring corrupt advantage, forgery, conspiracy to obtain by false pretence and obtaining money by false pretence.
Emefiele was alleged to have, among others, used his position as CBN governor to award six different contracts for the supply of different vehicles.
He, however, pleaded not guilty to all counts when the charge was read to him. (NAN)
LAGOS – Mrs Kemi Awodein, President, Association of Issuing Houses of Nigeria (AIHN), says the Central Bank of Nigeria’s aggressive interest rate hikes helped stabilise investor confidence and channel more funds into fixed-income instruments in 2024, boosting market participation and liquidity.
Awodein stated this in a statement issued on Thursday night after the association’s Annual General Meeting and presentation of the 2024 financials in Lagos.
She said the apex bank relied on steep rate adjustments to contain inflation and restore balance to the financial markets.
The AIHN financials showed total funds and liabilities rose from N452.6 million in 2023 to N518.2 million in 2024.
Total income grew from N86.56 million to N123.6 million within the same period, while expenditure increased from N50.08 million to N60.75 million, resulting in surpluses of N36.4 million in 2023 and N62.9 million in 2024.
Highlighting the dynamics of the fixed-income market, she said: “Key drivers for fixed income instruments in 2024 included CBN’s aggressive interest rate hikes to combat inflation.
“There were significant interest rate hikes in February and March 2024, a total of 600 basis points.
“In 2024, CBN hiked the benchmark interest rate eight times and by 875 basis points to 27.5 per cent from 18.75 per cent at the beginning of the year.”
Awodein noted that while the high-interest environment crowded out private-sector issuances, it also strengthened investor inflows and improved liquidity.
She added that government borrowing surged, with Open Market Operations (OMO) bills and Treasury bills sales rising sharply to N12.83 trillion in 2024, compared with N716.7 billion in 2023.
“Despite these challenges, as the year progressed, there was renewed investor confidence, driven by government policies and the anticipation of interest rate cuts in other markets.
“Significant in the year was the successful issuance of the first domestic dollar bond by the Debt Management Office,” she said.
The AIHN boss said equity capital raises gained momentum following the March 2024 recapitalisation directive by the CBN, with several banks concluding transactions by year-end.
“Activity in the sector will continue in earnest in 2025 as the March 2026 deadline approaches,” she said.
Awodein also cited Aradel Holdings Plc’s transition from NASD to the Nigerian Exchange as a major milestone that expanded investment opportunities and deepened liquidity.
She added that long-term debt capital raising remained subdued due to the high-rate environment, with most activities concentrated in Commercial Paper issuances.
Notable transactions included Seplat Energy’s 650 million dollar bond for expansion and Airtel Africa’s 500 million dollar capital raise to strengthen telecoms infrastructure.
According to her, by the end of 2024, banks such as Fidelity Bank, GTBank, Access Bank, FCMB and Zenith Bank had initiated issuances toward meeting new capital requirements.
“Access Bank completed its recapitalisation in 2024, while other banks are expected to conclude their transactions before Q1 2026,” she said. (NAN)