CBN books reveal $7.5 bn debt owed to JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) owes JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs a combined sum of $7.5 billion as of the financial year ended December 2022.
This is contained in the audited financial statement of the apex bank, published on its website.
According to the CBN: “The Group entered into a securities lending agreement with Goldman Sachs and J.P. Morgan.
As part of the agreement, the group received cash in exchange for its securities to be held as collateral for the loan.
“J.P. Morgan being the global custodian of the securities of the Group holds an equivalent in securities, of value of loan given in cash. The cash received from Goldman Sachs is N0.23 trillion ($500 million), 2021: N0.22 trillion ($500 million) and JP Morgan N3.23 trillion ($7 billion), 2021: N3.05 trillion ($7 billion) is recognised in other foreign securities.”
The securities lending forms part of the CBN’s total external reserves of about N14.3 trillion or $29 billion using the official exchange rate of N494/$1 as of 2022.
Implications
Reacting to the revelation, Economist and professor of Capital Market, Uche Uwalake said: “Let me start by commending the present management of the CBN for publishing the financial reports of the Bank after so many years. This act will go a long way in boosting the confidence of investors in the Nigerian economy.
“It has brought to the fore the true picture of the country’s external reserves being managed by the CBN. It is now beyond speculation that much of the reserves are encumbered by Securities lending and derivatives contracts entered into by the CBN.
“Much as these contracts are legitimate, the resulting obligations from them put to question the justification for entering into these contracts in the first place and whether adequate safeguards were put in place at the time of entering into these contracts.
Securities lending is the process of loaning securities to another party which effectively transfers ownership to the other party expected to provide collateral for them. In this instance both JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs were said to have provided cash in return.
Professor Uwalake said: ‘By implication, the current liquid external reserves of about 33 billion dollars does not reflect the true liquidity position of reserves as a significant proportion has been tied down by these contracts. Little wonder the CBN’s ability to intervene in the forex market has been hampered.
Following this disclosure, the current volatility in the forex market may linger for quite some time, except the reserves witness substantial accretion from crude oil sales proceeds.
Reserves Declined by US$167m to US$34bn in July
According to CBN data, Nigeria’s gross official reserves fell more slowly by -USD167m m/m to around USD34.0bn at the end of July 2023, compared to a fall of -USD975m in June 2023.
The drop in the official reserves in July is consistent with the steady attrition observed since August 2022. Year-to-date, the reserves have fallen by roughly -USD447m each month on average, and by nearly -USD440m since August 2022.
The decreasing official reserves have placed limitations on the Central Bank’s capacity to engage in foreign exchange market interventions.
The total reserves as at end-Jul ’23 covered 7.0 months of merchandise imports on the basis of the balance of payments for the 12 months to Dec ‘22 and 5.3 months when we add service.