
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The “Computer Village” is pictured within the Ikeja district in Nigeria’s industrial capital Lagos, Nigeria August 31, 2020. Picture taken August 31, 2020. REUTERS/Temilade Adelaja/File Photo
LAGOS (Reuters) – Nigeria’s central financial institution has lifted a ban on transacting in cryptocurrencies, whereas saying international tendencies had proven a necessity to control such actions, the financial institution stated in its newest round.
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in Feb. 2021 barred banks and monetary establishments from dealing in or facilitating transactions in crypto belongings, citing cash laundering and terrorism financing dangers.
Subsequently Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in May final yr revealed rules for digital belongings that signalled Africa’s most populous nation was looking for a center floor between an outright ban on crypto belongings and their unregulated use.
In a round dated Dec. 22, the CBN stated present tendencies globally have proven there’s a want to control the actions of digital asset service suppliers (VASPs), which embody cryptocurrencies and crypto belongings.
The newest pointers spell out how banks and monetary establishments (FI) ought to open accounts, present designated settlement accounts and settlement providers and act as channels for foreign exchange inflows and commerce for corporations transacting in crypto belongings.
VASPs would should be licensed by the Nigerian SEC to interact within the crypto enterprise.
“From the commencement of these Regulations, Fl shall not open or permit the operation of any account by any person or entity to conduct the business of virtual/digital assets unless that account is designated for that purpose and opened in line with the requirement of these Guidelines,” the CBN stated
But banks had been nonetheless barred from buying and selling, holding or transacting cryptocurrencies, the CBN stated.
Nigeria’s younger, tech-savvy inhabitants has eagerly adopted cryptocurrencies, for instance utilizing peer-to-peer buying and selling provided by crypto exchanges to keep away from the monetary sector.
New York-based blockchain analysis agency Chainalysis stated in a September report that the amount of crypto transactions in Nigeria grew 9% year-over-year to $56.7 billion between July 2022 and June 2023.