Deposit money banks (DMBs) debts to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) through its overnight lending window has recorded N4.4 trillion from June to August 2022.

According to data sourced from the regulator Banks regularly access the CBN’s Standard Lending Facility (SLF) to borrow funds, subject to some eligibility requirements, to address their short-term liquidity gap.

On the other hand, lenders also leverage the Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) window to deposit excess cash. Commercial banks access SLF at 100 basis points above the monetary policy rate (MPR). In the case of SDF, lenders get the prevailing benchmark interest rate minus 700 basis points (seven per cent). From June to August, the total SLF stood at N4.44 trillion with June accounting for over 43.3 per cent of the amount accessed in the period. The amount scaled down from N1.93 trillion in June to N1.46 trillion in July.

It dropped further to 1.06 trillion last month. In May, the SLF stood at N953.6 billion, only the figure to have doubled in June.

The reflection seen in the last three months may have suggested a steady moderation in short-term liquidity challenges by the banks.

It could also suggest an aggressive repricing of risks by the banks.