NDIC to Cover Non-Interest Banks’ Liabilities

Fri, Jan 15, 2016
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Business Briefs

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THE Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation, NDIC, is ready to encourage non interest banking in the country by developing a framework for insuring deposit liabilities of non-interest financial institutions in Nigeria. The NDIC, in a statement on its website said that Ja’iz Bank, Stanbic IBTC and Sterling Bank will are to ensure that non interest banking take off successfully in the country.

The corporation, however, said their deposit liabilities were hitherto not covered under its Deposit Insurance Scheme. The public policy objectives of the framework are based on public interest, which seeks to provide corresponding protection to holders of non-interest financial products similar to that of conventional banks.

The NDIC list the objectives of the framework as depositor protection against loss in the event of failure of any non-interest bank; engender public confidence and enhance resilience of non-interest financial institutions; encourage competitiveness of non-interest financial institutions; help to contain the cost of resolving failed non-interest banks and provide an orderly failure resolution mechanism; and promote and contribute to the stability of Nigeria’s financial system.

According to the NDIC, a non-interest bank is a banking model which offers banking products, engages in trading, investments and commercial services without conventional interest charges. It is rather restricted to a profit and loss sharing formula on its products. “The Maximum Deposit Insurance Coverage for the non-interest banking institutions would be the same as the conventional banks i.e. N500,000 and N200,000 per depositor per account in Deposit Money Banks and Microfinance Banks, respectively,” the NDIC said.

According to the statement, non-interest deposits that will be covered under the scheme are safe-keeping deposit (Wadi’ah); interest-free deposit for investment (Qard); profit sharing/loss bearing deposit (Mudarabah); profit and loss sharing deposit (Musharakah); and any other deposit type that is non-interest based and approved by the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN.

“The following financial products will, however, not be covered under the scheme: insider deposits – deposits of staff, including directors of non-interest banks or financial institutions; counter-claims from one person who maintains both a deposit account and a non-interest bearing loan account and or a loan based on Murabahah financing where the deposit account serves as a collateral for either or both of the Loan Accounts and inter-bank takings,” the NDIC said.

— Jan 25, 2016 @ 01:00 GMT

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