News
N39tr flowed through ATMs in last 3 months of 2018
The Automated Teller Machine (ATM) from selected banks across the country recorded transactions valued at N39.15 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2018.
The National Bureau of Statistics stated this in its “Selected Banking Sector Data for Fourth Quarter, 2018”, posted on its website on Wednesday.
It said that the amount was derived from 616,528,697 transactions recorded as data on “Electronic Payment Channels in the Nigeria Banking Sector” during the period.
The bureau added that NIBSS Instant Payments (NIP) transactions dominated the volume of transactions recorded in the quarter.
According to the report, 228, 209, 423 NIP transactions valued at N23.57 trillion were recorded in the quarter under review.
In terms of credit to private sector by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) during the period, the report said the total value of credit allocated by the bank was N15.13 trillion.
It said Oil and Gas and Manufacturing sectors got credit allocation of N3.55 trillion and N2.23 trillion to record the highest allocation in the quarter.
The report also stated that the number of staff in the banking sector increased by 1.80 per cent quarter-on-quarter, from 102,821 in the third quarter to 104,669 in the period.
-
News5 days agoFRSC opens 2026 nationwide recruitment, online applications begin July 3
-
Entertainment7 days agoActress Cossy Ojiakor shares flooded home as heavy rainfall wreaks havoc in Lagos
-
Business5 days agoMRS slashes petrol price by N50/Litre as Dangote Refinery cuts fuel costs
-
Business3 days agoPressure mounts on marketers as Nigerians demand lower fuel prices amid falling global oil costs
-
Football6 days agoCAF rejects proposal to expand AFCON to 28 teams
-
Business5 days agoBREAKING: CBN revokes licences of 46 Microfinance Banks in major regulatory crackdown
-
Business3 days agoThe State House Statement: An Unquantifiable Reputational Damage to the Nigerian Financial Sector
-
Business5 days agoNigerian Stock Market suffers Historic N13.29trn loss in June selloff

