Banks Suspend ATM Card Usage Abroad Over Dollar Scarcity.
The foreign exchange
crisis hitting the economy has assumed a new dimension with Deposit
Money Banks announcing the suspension of overseas Automated Teller
Machine card services and online transactions denominated in foreign
currencies.
Deposit
Money Banks have begun suspending their Automated Teller Machine cards
(debit and credit) from working overseas as dollar scarcity continues to
hit the economy badly.
Stanbic
IBTC Bank, Standard Chartered Bank Nigeria and Guaranty Trust Bank on
Friday announced the suspension of their overseas ATM card services.
Also
suspended by the banks are online transactions priced in foreign
currencies. This means that customers of the banks will no longer be
able to use their debit or credit cards to make online transactions that
are denominated in dollars, euros, pounds sterling and other foreign
currencies.
In a
note to its customers on Friday entitled: ‘Suspension of international
transactions on naira debit cards’, Standard Chartered Bank Nigeria
said, “Please be informed that effective immediately, your naira
denominated debit cards will no longer be functional for international
transactions.
“This
is due to the current volatility in the foreign exchange market. Your
naira-denominated debit cards can only be used for local transactions at
Point of Sale terminals, Automated Teller Machines and online for
Nigerian retailers.”
In a
text message to its customers on Friday, Stanbic IBTC Bank similarly
said, “Dear customer, kindly note that effective October 18, 2016, your
ability to carry out transactions priced in foreign currency using our
naira debit and credit cards will be suspended. We apologise for any
inconvenience in this regard.”
Both
Stanbic IBTC Bank and Standard Chartered Bank Nigeria advised customers
seeking to carry out transactions denominated in foreign exchange to
apply for dollar or pounds sterling debit credit cards. According to
them, the dollar or pounds sterling debit or credit cards will be linked
to the customers’ domiciliary accounts.
GTBank
also announced the suspension of the ATM cash withdrawal service abroad.
The lender also slashed its monthly ATM forex transactions to $100.
In a
notice to customers on Friday entitled: ‘Review of the international
spending limit on your naira Master Card’, the bank stated, “We write to
inform you of the monthly spending limits currently applicable when
using your GTBank naira Master Card for international payments via PoS
and online. Previous monthly limit via PoS and online was $250; the new
monthly limit via PoS and online is now $100. Kindly note that ATM cash
withdrawal on your naira MasterCard is now only available in Nigeria.”
The
development will make students studying in the United Kingdom, United
States, Canada, Ukraine and other parts of the world to face more
challenges getting their monthly stipends from their parents.
Most of the students had relied on the ATM card withdrawal to get their monthly stipends from their parents before now.
This
means customers seeking to do foreign transactions will have to open
domiciliary accounts and fund same with dollars, pounds or euros
purchased from the parallel market at the prevailing exchange rates.
Although
other banks have yet to announce the suspension of ATM card services
abroad, findings by our correspondent showed that many lenders had
reduced drastically the amount that customers could withdraw via ATMs
abroad.
This is
despite the fact that the banks have in the past few months reduced the
monthly total amount of forex-denominated transactions that customers
can do, using their naira debit or credit cards via ATMs and PoS
terminals abroad as well as online payments or transactions.
As of
last week, findings showed that some banks had slashed their daily ATM
withdrawal limit abroad from the $300 advised by the Central Bank of
Nigeria’s Bankers Committee to $100 due to their inability to source for
dollars to fund the transactions.
Unconfirmed sources said some banks had reduced their monthly ATM withdrawal limit abroad to $100.
Top
banking officials close to the development told our correspondent under
the condition of anonymity that banks were increasingly finding it
difficult to fund their foreign-currency denominated services,
especially online forex transactions and overseas ATM withdrawals, as
well as PoS usage overseas by customers.
A top
official of Deposit Money Bank, who spoke on the condition of anonymity,
told our correspondent on Sunday, “We have to stop the services.
Formerly, we were sourcing forex at high prices and we were selling same
to customers at similarly high prices. But the situation is now tense;
the dollar scarcity has assumed a new dimension.
“This
is coupled with the fact that some bank customers are using the
platforms to do round-tripping. It is high time we stopped it.”
The
decision by some banks to suspend overseas ATM card services and online
forex transactions came barely one week after the CBN, through the
Bankers’ Committee, raised concerns about what it called the
indiscriminate and suspicious manner in which some bank customers were
spending dollars and other foreign currencies abroad through their naira
debit cards.
Consequently,
the regulator said it had concluded that bank customers who spent above
the $50,000 annual forex limit it imposed would be barred from the
nation’s forex market.
The
Director, Banking Supervision, CBN, Mrs. Tokunbo Martins, stated this
after the 329th Bankers’ Committee meeting held at the apex bank’s
office in Lagos on Wednesday.
She
said, “In the CBN’s move to manage the demand for forex, there was a
rule that was put in place that people were not allowed to withdraw more
than $50,000 annually on their naira debit cards.
“For a
while, the policy has been abused by bank customers, and the CBN has not
taken any step to that effect. We have decided to take the step now to
enforce the rule. So, we want members of the public to remember that
that rule is in place.
“All
your accounts are linked to a particular Bank Verification Number. Now,
that the BVN only allows you to withdraw only $50,000 per annum, if
people continue to breach that rule, they will lose access to forex
market.”
Dollar scarcity has been ravaging the economy after the price of crude oil, Nigeria’s main forex earner.
It crashed from $110 per barrel to around $44 per barrel from June 2014.
The nation’s foreign exchange reserves have been depleting since then.
On Wednesday, the country’s external reserves hit an 11-year low of $24.21bn, the latest data posted on the CBN website showed.
This
means a limited amount of dollars will be available at the official
interbank spot market, fuelling concerns over another round of
depreciation of the naira.
The foreign exchange reserves fell by $600m in two weeks before shedding $1bn in four weeks, the CBN statistics showed.
An expert at Ernst and Young, Mr. Bisi Sanda, lamented on the dollar pressure on the economy.
He said the Federal Government needed political will to address the issues fuelling dollar scarcity on the economy.
He
said, “The issue of dollar is very important to the economy. It is
predicated on the fact that we are a dollar-denominated economy. It
appears the government is still begging issues as far as the
import-dependent state of our economy is concerned.
“We
need to fix issues, we need to go back to the drawing board. The CBN
said between 2010 and 2016, a total of $11bn was sold to the Bureaux De
Change annually. We need to plug leakages in this area.”
Punch reportage
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