Analysts take swipe on CBN’s clampdown on fintech firms
…say clampdown may hinder investments
Investment analysts at the weekend took a swipe on the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s decision to freeze the bank accounts of some fintech companies as a desperate move that could hamper the long-term development of the economy.
This came as the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited underscored the importance of fintechs in achieving an inclusive digital economy.
Market analysts at Cordros Securities said the freezing of the fintech accounts was “a desperate move to preserve the value of the naira” but it could further worsen the country\s economic perception.
“For us, this development could further worsen foreign investors’ perception of the country’s investment climate and may constrain private investment in the fintech space,” Cordros Securities stated.
The CBN had obtained a court order to freeze the account of five fintech companies on the basis of allegations that they were operating without asset management licenses and utilising foreign exchange (forex) sourced from the Nigerian forex market for purchasing foreign bonds and shares in contravention of the CBN circular referenced TED/FEM/FPC/GEN/01/012, dated July 1, 2015.
The affected companies included Rise Vest Technologies Limited, Bamboo Systems Technology Limited, Chaka Technologies Limited, CTL/Business Expenses and Trove Technologies Limited. Their accounts were last week frozen for 180 days pending the outcome of the apex bank’s investigation.
Speaking on the theme: “Roadmap to a Digital Nigeria: Harnessing Fintech, Cryptocurrencies and Artificial Intelligence to Create Stronger Financial Markets”, at the 2021 national workshop of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS), the NGX said the collaboration between fintech and the capital market would effectively create a digital economy as well as increase financial inclusion and cashless payments.
Divisional Head, Trading Business, Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Limited, Jude Chiemeka, explained that fintechs have a huge potential to transform the capital markets and effectively build a digital economy.
He added that rather than seeing fintechs as competitors, they are potential partners to incumbent capital market infrastructure providers like NGX.
Citing the Pulse of FinTech H2 2020 report, Chiemeka said that the global investments by fintechs were $105 billion despite a significant drop compared to $165 billion recorded in 2019 while adding that Nigerian fintechs raised about $439 million in 2020.
According to him, fintechs are transforming the financial services industry by focusing on targeted products and services, automating and commoditising high margin process, strategic use of data and collaborating with incumbents.
Chiemeka, who represented the Chief Executive Officer of NGX, Mr Temi Popoola, noted that the NGX provides access to capital, trade execution, post trade services, data analytics and information services, operations and technology and added that NGX is not left out of the fintech adoption as it continues to adopt technology to improve market accessibility and transparency.
“As Africa’s largest economy and with a population of 200 million-40 per cent of which is financially excluded, Nigeria is classified as a developing fintech economy compared to its more mature global peers such as the UK, Singapore, Australia, Sweden and India.
“EY estimates that Nigerian fintech revenues will reach $543 million by 2022, driven by increasing smartphone penetration, unbanked populations and a focused regulatory drive to increase financial inclusion and cashless payments.
“In line with the evolution of fintech in other markets, fintech activity in Nigeria started in payments and moved into other areas. consumer lending-and, increasingly, asset management-are focal points for fintech activity,” Chiemeka said.
He reiterated that NGX will continue to set up its solutions and innovation hub to explore projects that leverage distributed ledgers, cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence to improve financial inclusion and market accessibility.
The Nation