CBN Welcomes Nigeria’s Removal from FATF Grey List

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) welcomes the Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF) formal announcement of Nigeria’s removal from the list of jurisdictions under increased monitoring, known as the “grey list”, following a successful on-site evaluation of reforms implemented across the financial system.

The FATF decision recognises significant improvements in Nigeria’s regulatory, supervisory, and enforcement frameworks, particularly in combating money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing.

It marks an important milestone in the country’s continuing efforts to strengthen financial system integrity, transparency, and international confidence.

The FATF’s decision follows a two-year reform programme coordinated by the Federal Government of Nigeria, involving multiple agencies including the CBN, the Federal Ministry of Justice, the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

The CBN’s contribution centred on enhancing supervision, governance, and transparency across the financial system. Key reforms assessed by the FATF and the Inter-Governmental Action Group Against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA, FATF’s regional assessment body, included:

  • Strengthened oversight of financial institutions through updated AML/CFT regulations, risk-based supervision, and fit-and-proper assessments.
  • Expansion of compliance reporting and monitoring across remittance channels, bureaux de change, and fintech platforms to improve traceability and transparency.
  • Enhanced inter-agency data-sharing and enforcement coordination between the CBN, NFIU, EFCC, and law-enforcement bodies.
  • Implementation of market governance tools, including the Foreign Exchange Code (FX Code) and Electronic Foreign Exchange Matching System (EFEMS). Together, these measures have materially strengthened Nigeria’s compliance with global standards and reinforced confidence in the integrity of its financial system.

Nigeria’s removal from the grey list will yield tangible benefits for businesses and households alike including – lowering compliance costs, improving access to international finance, and making cross-border transactions faster and more affordable.

In time, these gains will translate into smoother trade settlements, quicker remittance inflows, and even more predictable access to foreign exchange – enhancing livelihoods, supporting enterprise growth, and deepening financial inclusion.

The FATF decision reinforces the broader restoration of global confidence in Nigeria’s economic management. Recent international assessments underscore this momentum, with Moody’s and Fitch upgrading Nigeria’s ratings outlook on the back of stronger external balances, credible policy execution, and renewed monetary-policy credibility.

Similarly, the IMF’s 2025 Article IV Consultation highlighted improved reserve adequacy, greater transparency, and a reform agenda increasingly aligned with global standards. Commenting on the announcement, Governor Olayemi Cardoso said: “The FATF’s decision to remove Nigeria from the grey list is a strong affirmation of our reform trajectory and the growing integrity of our financial system. It reflects a clear policy direction and the coordinated efforts of key national institutions working together to deliver sustainable, standards-based reforms. Our priority now is to consolidate these gains, ensuring that compliance, innovation, and trust continue to advance hand in hand to reinforce financial stability and strengthen Nigeria’s global credibility.”

Nigeria joins South Africa, Mozambique and Burkina Faso as the latest African countries to achieve this milestone, reflecting broader progress across the continent.

The CBN remains committed to strengthening collaboration with domestic and international partners to sustain a sound, transparent, and trusted financial system that safeguards financial stability and market integrity while advancing inclusive and sustainable economic growth.

 

Hot this week

AIICO Wins 2026 Insurance Company of the Year at Nairametrics Capital Market Awards

Left - right: Akin Morakinyo (Registrar, Chartered Institute of...

CREDIBILITY MARKETING: THE MOST EXPENSIVE CURRENCY IN THE AI DIGITAL AGE

  By Solomon Sanusi Strategist Connecting Ideas, Travel, Technology, and Markets...

PUBLIC POSITIONING: WHY GREAT BRANDS MUST BE SEEN IN THE RIGHT PLACES

   By Solomon Sanusi Strategist Connecting Ideas, Travel, Technology, and Markets...

VISIBLE PROXIMITY: WHY THE FUTURE BELONGS TO BRANDS PEOPLE CAN CONSTANTLY SEE

  By Solomon Sanusi Strategist Connecting Ideas, Travel, Technology, and Markets...

Media, Public Trust Key to Security Success – Dr. Chike Duru

Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Mass...

Topics

Investors in Data Centers in Africa Head to Monaco for 1st Summit

In the first event of its kind, an exciting...

NCC Decries Proliferation of Substandard Handsets in Nigeria

Worried by the continuous proliferation of substandard mobile phones...

GEM-TECH Award Winners to be Unveiled on Nov 15 in Bangkok

ITU and UN Women will jointly announce the three...

PwC: Africa Needs Innovation, Tech to Grow Oil Sector

The oil & gas industry in Africa continues to...

Linkage Assurance Names Joshua Fumudoh New Chairman

Linkage Assurance Plc has announced the appointment of Chief...

‘Digital Africa 100’ Awards Program to Debut in 2025

Dr. Evans Woherem, Chairman of Digital Africa Global Consult...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Records 20% Growth in GPW in 2022

  Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc, (the Company) recently released its...

Biodun Adedipe to Deliver Keynote Speech at SUPERNEWS Nigeria SMEs Confab June 13

Dr. Biodun Adedipe, Founder and Chief Consultant of B....