Berliner Boersenzeitung - Nigeria moves gingerly to tame Africa's biggest crypto market

EUR -
AED 3.988197
AFN 77.218543
ALL 99.144277
AMD 425.922532
ANG 1.95663
AOA 991.8978
ARS 1160.467523
AUD 1.722204
AWG 1.954472
AZN 1.84652
BAM 1.957066
BBD 2.191998
BDT 131.905351
BGN 1.955954
BHD 0.409278
BIF 3177.102279
BMD 1.085818
BND 1.449511
BOB 7.501681
BRL 6.162669
BSD 1.085592
BTN 93.681755
BWP 14.811311
BYN 3.552833
BYR 21282.024833
BZD 2.180661
CAD 1.555163
CDF 3117.382643
CHF 0.957175
CLF 0.026231
CLP 1006.607514
CNY 7.870222
CNH 7.87506
COP 4538.880413
CRC 542.040751
CUC 1.085818
CUP 28.774166
CVE 110.916056
CZK 25.011264
DJF 192.971599
DKK 7.458959
DOP 68.519341
DZD 145.458279
EGP 54.909901
ERN 16.287264
ETB 140.830072
FJD 2.520563
FKP 0.837456
GBP 0.837187
GEL 3.007704
GGP 0.837456
GHS 16.841426
GIP 0.837456
GMD 77.09316
GNF 9397.751725
GTQ 8.365259
GYD 227.791102
HKD 8.43968
HNL 27.960152
HRK 7.534268
HTG 142.394761
HUF 398.733499
IDR 17923.048107
ILS 3.993096
IMP 0.837456
INR 93.744768
IQD 1422.421047
IRR 45712.920899
ISK 144.30075
JEP 0.837456
JMD 170.130085
JOD 0.76982
JPY 161.399149
KES 140.61232
KGS 93.277271
KHR 4360.096139
KMF 493.505443
KPW 977.233884
KRW 1591.54768
KWD 0.334465
KYD 0.904669
KZT 545.888197
LAK 23494.375608
LBP 97234.965369
LKR 321.832318
LRD 216.213454
LSL 19.696515
LTL 3.206137
LVL 0.6568
LYD 5.233427
MAD 10.466743
MDL 19.541285
MGA 5065.339313
MKD 61.549885
MMK 2279.55128
MNT 3774.940067
MOP 8.690263
MRU 43.21701
MUR 48.861462
MVR 16.733141
MWK 1883.893424
MXN 21.866629
MYR 4.808546
MZN 69.394433
NAD 19.696738
NGN 1684.103133
NIO 39.903756
NOK 11.453568
NPR 149.889227
NZD 1.884138
OMR 0.417962
PAB 1.085577
PEN 3.934731
PGK 4.400548
PHP 62.119713
PKR 304.191978
PLN 4.194475
PYG 8668.609145
QAR 3.952919
RON 4.976412
RSD 117.195568
RUB 92.212622
RWF 1532.088624
SAR 4.073085
SBD 9.137044
SCR 15.553762
SDG 652.576208
SEK 10.997975
SGD 1.449027
SHP 0.853282
SLE 24.767334
SLL 22769.053202
SOS 620.542734
SRD 39.360581
STD 22474.231928
SVC 9.499147
SYP 14117.558798
SZL 19.696908
THB 36.624291
TJS 11.844137
TMT 3.81122
TND 3.351896
TOP 2.543095
TRY 41.24815
TTD 7.377638
TWD 35.83057
TZS 2871.987333
UAH 45.06546
UGX 3978.592725
USD 1.085818
UYU 45.889694
UZS 14055.908583
VES 73.588519
VND 27753.49769
VUV 132.973044
WST 3.043594
XAF 656.369623
XAG 0.032376
XAU 0.000356
XCD 2.934477
XDR 0.812234
XOF 654.209718
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.220608
ZAR 19.704435
ZMK 9773.659155
ZMW 31.276518
ZWL 349.632822
  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    66.7

    +0.4%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.05

    +0.31%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    10.99

    -0.64%

  • BCC

    0.0700

    100.43

    +0.07%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3100

    10.35

    -3%

  • CMSD

    -0.2300

    23.16

    -0.99%

  • BCE

    -0.3500

    23.02

    -1.52%

  • RIO

    -0.9400

    62.92

    -1.49%

  • RELX

    0.5400

    49.89

    +1.08%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.12

    -0.52%

  • NGG

    1.2700

    65.08

    +1.95%

  • GSK

    -0.1400

    39.41

    -0.36%

  • VOD

    -0.0800

    9.7

    -0.82%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    41.07

    -0.29%

  • AZN

    0.2000

    76.52

    +0.26%

  • BP

    0.1400

    34.75

    +0.4%

Nigeria moves gingerly to tame Africa's biggest crypto market
Nigeria moves gingerly to tame Africa's biggest crypto market / Photo: OLYMPIA DE MAISMONT - AFP

Nigeria moves gingerly to tame Africa's biggest crypto market

Nigerian authorities are warily moving to regulate Africa's largest cryptocurrency market in long-delayed efforts to create legal certainty in a field still fraught with fraud and volatility.

Text size:

For years, regulators and government officials have viewed cryptocurrencies and other digital assets with suspicion despite their popularity in the country.

Nigeria ranked second globally after India in 2023 and 2024 on a crypto adoption index compiled by Chainalysis, a global crypto research firm.

Over the past year, a more regulated sector has slowly started to take shape, even as fraud remains a concern for police.

The director-general of the country's Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Emomotimi Agama, confirmed to AFP in August that the regulator was pushing ahead with efforts to create clarity around the use of digital assets.

That month, the SEC announced that it had granted "Approval-in-Principle" to two exchanges to begin operations. The first licensed companies -- Busha Digital Limited and Quidax Technologies Limited -- have since launched.

"We believe this regulatory move is a positive start that will benefit the market in the long run by building trust and stability," Buchi Okoro, co-founder and chief executive of Quidax, told AFP.

"The SEC approval sent a clear signal to potential crypto investors, emphasising their focus on customer protection."

However, the government's regulatory push is being bogged down by scepticism and widespread fraud and investment scams, with many grifters in play.

In December, Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said it arrested 792 suspects -- including scores of foreigners -- in a single operation in the affluent Victoria Island area of Lagos "for their alleged involvement in cryptocurrency investment fraud and romance scams."

A romance scam is when a fraudster pretends to be in love with a target in order to fleece them.

The previous month, the SEC issued an advisory against Marino FX Limited, which it said had falsely claimed to be registered by the commission as a cryptocurrency exchange. It was not the first time the SEC had published such a notice.

- Cautious steps -

Beyond approving the exchanges, Nigeria's parliament is considering an investment and securities bill that, if passed into law, would establish a regulatory framework for digital currencies.

In the run-up to the general election in February 2023, President Bola Tinubu, then as the candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress, promised a regulatory environment that would encourage the healthy adoption of digital assets.

Many in the industry saw his breakaway from his predecessor's hardline stance against cryptocurrencies as a welcome development.

However, months after taking office, Africa's economic powerhouse imposed a new set of restrictions on crypto exchanges in an attempt to halt the sliding value of the local naira currency.

In February 2024, central bank governor Olayemi Cardoso singled out Binance for blame.

Binance, the world's biggest digital asset exchange, was forced to shut down operations involving the naira. Many customers quickly offloaded their wallets, fearing their funds might be trapped.

Authorities arrested, sued and later released one of two Binance executives who had flown into the country for talks with the government. The other fled government custody.

Nigeria's Inland Revenue Service still has an ongoing $81.5 billion lawsuit against the exchange, which had not been registered to operate in the country.

- Money laundering concerns -

Laolu Biyi Samuel, co-founder of Busha Digital Limited, said the overall regulatory environment was moving positively.

"Despite the strong headwinds we have faced over the years, we have truly seen a turnaround in the government's approach to innovation in the sector," he said.

With the United States recently launching a "strategic bitcoin reserve", experts believe Nigeria's appetite for digital assets could help the West African nation reap the benefits of a potential windfall.

Still, there are concerns that cryptocurrencies remain a conduit for money laundering and terrorism financing, and that the high volatility could wipe out investments in a country with a weak social safety net.

"Regulatory clarity and policies should be prioritised now," Obinna Iwuno, president of Stakeholders in Blockchain Association of Nigeria (SiBAN), told AFP. "It is not too late to start discussing a national Bitcoin strategy and action plans."

(H.Schneide--BBZ)