Central Bank Orders Separate Commission Fees

Aug 4 , 2024


Banks are required to cease the collection of fees, commissions, or other charges when selling foreign exchange to their clients, and include the percentage of the transaction value in the spread between their buying and selling rates. The requirement imposed late last week by the National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE) sets exceptions for charges set in nominal terms for a few services related to Letters of Credit. Signed by Yenehasab Tadesse, director of foreign exchange & reserve management, the central bank stressed that this must not be equated with imposing any specific spread between banks' buying and selling rates or setting ceilings on the gap between these rates. Instead, NBE expects a competitive environment to prevail, ensuring fair practices without collusion in the setting of foreign exchange rates. Additionally, the existing exchange commission charged by the NBE will remain in place and continue to be collected by banks according to current practices and guidelines.


Radar

Abyssinia Bank Strategic Moves Pay Off, Driving Profit Growth

The Bank of Abyssinia (BoA) enjoyed another profitable year, amassing 4.23 billion Br net profits, an increase of 10.5pc from last year. The Bank announced total assets of 222.3 billion Br, surging by 17.3pc. Total deposits mobilised through the year climbed by 33.97 billion Br to 192.51 billion Br, while loans and advances reached 167.7 billion Br. However, the bank exhibited a nominal decline in its foreign currency earnings totalling 424 million dollars. Earnings per share also showed a ma...


Radar

$100m Project Mulls Public Transportation Make-Over

A 100-million-dollar project aims to manufacture over 5,000 diesel-powered and electric public transport vehicles for the capital. The proposed project was launched hoping to replace the ageing vehicles and improve safety, efficiency and quality across the city's urban transport system. Last week saw an MoU inked between executives of Multiverse Enterprise Plc and Addis Abeba Minibus Associations and was held at Vamdas Entertainment near Megenagna. The agreement includes plans to replace 15,000...


Radar

Safaricom Soars with 6.1 million Customers

Safaricom Ethiopia reported significant commercial growth in the first six months of the 2025 fiscal year (April to September 2024), with notable increases in both mobile (GSM) and M-PESA services. The company's network and services reached a population coverage of 46pc, growing from 30pc in the previous year. This expansion was supported by the addition of over 1,000 network sites, bringing the total to more than 3,000 across the country. Safaricom Ethiopia saw a surge in its customer base,...


Back
WhatsApp
Telegram
Email