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Nigeria Urges Banks to Lend or Lose Access to Yields of 14%

Nigeria Urges Banks to Lend or Lose Access to Government Bonds

(Bloomberg) -- Nigerian policy makers urged banks to turn on the taps and increase lending to stimulate the economy, or have access to a near-risk free way of making money choked off.

The West African nation’s Monetary Policy Committee is using persuasion to get banks away from parking their cash in high-yielding government securities to divert these funds to the private sector. Lenders in the continent’s top oil producer were burnt after sliding crude prices three years ago triggered a surge in bad debts, making the allure of state debt that pays average yields of 14.4% more appealing.

“For us to achieve growth those whose responsibility it is to provide credit must be seen to perform that responsibility,’’ Governor Godwin Emefiele told reporters after a meeting of the MPC in the nation’s capital, Abuja. The MPC wants the central bank “to provide a mechanism” for limiting the ability of banks to put customer deposits into government securities, he said.

Emefiele’s comments came after the committee held its key interest rate at 13.5%, the lowest level since May 2016, in a bid to contain inflation, while still retaining some room to support the economy. Net domestic credit to the government surged 64% in the first four months of this year on an annualized basis, versus 9.6% for the private sector, central bank data show.

Nigeria Urges Banks to Lend or Lose Access to Yields of 14%

With non-performing loans down to below 10% compared with 17% “a year or two ago,” banks have space to extend more credit for consumer and property loans, Emefiele said.

Nigeria’s economic growth slowed in the first quarter after the oil sector, its biggest foreign-exchange earner, contracted. That level of expansion means banks can help “stimulate demand without stoking more inflation,’’ the Governor said.

--With assistance from Tope Alake.

To contact the reporter on this story: Emele Onu in Lagos at eonu1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Stefania Bianchi at sbianchi10@bloomberg.net, Vernon Wessels, Alastair Reed

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