The
Central Bank of Nigeria has ordered Deposit Money Banks not to pay customers
making over-the-counter withdrawals of new naira notes again. Instead, the apex
bank directed the banks to load their Automated Teller Machines (ATM) with only
new notes to ensure that the currency circulates across the nation ahead of the
January 31, 2023 deadline when the old notes will no longer be legal tender.
It
was gathered that the apex bank issued the directive to the banks on Wednesday
and ordered that the implementation must begin immediately.
However,
as of Friday, the banks had not been able to comply with the directive as they
complained of an inadequate supply of the new notes, prompting them to load their
ATMs with the old notes.
A
source in a Tier-1 bank, who informed one of our correspondents of the CBN
directive on Thursday, said her lender on Thursday issued a memo in that
respect to all the branch managers to enforce the CBN order.
The memo, which was titled, ‘Urgent update on
currency redesign’ and signed by the Group Head, Retail Operation, stated, “The
CBN has mandated that we immediately stop the Over-the-Counter payment of the
new N200, N500 & N,1000 currency. Instead, all new notes should be loaded
into the ATMs for customer withdrawals.
“This is effective immediately please.”
The
source, who is a manager in one of the bank’s branches in Ikeja, Lagos,
however, complained that the new notes were in short supply, hence the branch
decided to load a mixture of the old and new N1,000 and N500 notes in the ATMs
for customers to withdraw.
The
source stated, “We got a memo from the head office this morning (Thursday) that
we should stop dispensing new notes to customers who come to withdraw over the
counter, but instead we should load the ATMs with the new notes. The
correspondence from the head office said the directive was from the CBN and
that we should implement it immediately.
“The
directive has, however, thrown us into a dilemma as we are in short supply of
the new notes and we can’t afford to load the ATMs as there has been a
surge in the number of customers coming to withdraw after the Yuletide
holidays.
“Loading
of ATMs is the responsibility of the banks. When our bank tested the ATMs, only
one denomination of the new notes passed the test of dispensing seamlessly
through our machines. The bank is working on reconfiguring the ATMs to be able
to issue the new notes. What we have done in my branch is to mix the few new
N1,000 and N500 notes available with old ones so that desperate customers can
make withdrawals and meet their immediate needs.
“If
you observed, a lot of ATMs were inactive during the Christmas and New Year
holidays. The idea was not to give out old notes, but unfortunately, the new
ones are not in circulation. The banks have a mandate to evacuate N1bn old
notes each to the CBN daily and our head office has set a strict
vault limit or cash holding limit for each branch, which on no condition we
must exceed.”
However,
a senior official of the CBN, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he
was not authorized to comment on the issue, confirmed that
the apex bank indeed issued the directive to the banks.
He
explained, “From this weekend, new notes will be available for disbursement to
bank customers. We are pushing the N1,000 and N500 notes through the ATMs for
now. The N200 will be available later.
“The
aim is to check inflation and currency abuse. The research was conducted and it
showed that the demand for the N1,000 and N500 is higher, hence the decision to
start with them.”
When
asked when the agent banking representatives, who dispense cash to customers
through Point of Sale terminals, would have the new notes, he said the
objective of setting them up was not to handle large volume transactions,
adding that the operators were abusing the guideline.
A
source in the corporate affairs department of a new generation bank said “Even
before the CBN directive, our bank had been loading the ATMs with new notes.
However, I must admit that new notes are in short supply. What we do is mix them up with old notes. For example, if you want to withdraw N10,000, you
may get only two pieces of new N1,000.
“The
configuration of the ATMs is ongoing; yes, all the ATMs have not been
fully configured. There are gaps from the regulator, the CBN, but we
will obey the directive within the limit of what we have. Customers are
depositing old notes in huge volumes. The CBN has stopped the supply of the
notes that will soon cease to be legal tenders to the banks.
“I
am sure that before January 31, the new notes would have spread to different
parts of the country. Though I work in a bank, I have not seen the new N200; I
have only seen N500 at a party in Abeokuta and it was being sold as your paper
rightly reported a few weeks back.”

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