Reflecting on SEC’s recent market development Initiatives

One year after she assumed office, Securities and Exchange Commission’s  acting Director General, Ms. Mary uduk has made modest progress in the bid to implement the 10-year Capital Market Master Plan, BENJAMIN UMUTEME reports

Appraising the performance of the Nigerian investment space the past year, reflects a sector that continues to respond proactively to emerging global trends following innovative strategies being adopted by those saddled with the responsibility of guiding the investment market towards desirable direction for sustainable growth.

As it were, the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) serves as the hub for formal transactions in equities and other instruments like its counterparts in other climes. Beyond the official listing and trading of stocks and other securities in the bourse, however, lies the more fundamental ‘regulatory radar’ being provided by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

A cursory assessment of the commission’s transformational strides in the past year has reflected remarkable innovations and the attendant positive developments, especially when understood against the backdrop of the pervasive effects of the economic sluggishness on capital markets in emerging economies across geo-political zones globally in the past few years.

But then, like a clairvoyant Amazon endowed with requisite professional skills and cognate experience in investment management, the Acting Director General, Ms. Mary Uduk came with a mission of fulfilling the SEC’s statutory mandate through team work, collaborative engagements of stakeholders and a deep sense of purpose.

She knew then that her primary task was to restore investors’ confidence in the Nigerian capital market and by so doing, make the country’s investment space attractive to global and domestic investors, despite the nation’s inherent economic challenges.

What SEC is doing

A look at the Commission’s performance of the past year on showed that the management has done reasonably well in terms of sustaining investors’ confidence; instilling discipline in transactional processes in the bourse; and enlightenment and engagement of investors and their associations on emerging trends in global investment space.

Similarly, the SEC over the past year intensified sundry initiatives to protect the public from fraudulent or scam investment promoters, improve the contributions of the capital market to the economy; investment in human capital training and development; promotion of innovative technology and solutions in the SEC and capital market operations; and sustained the implementation of the 10-Year Capital Market Master Plan (CMMP) with remarkable achievements recorded so far, amongst others.

For instance, on the issue of sustaining investors’ confidence in the Nigerian capital market, the Uduk-led leadership of the SEC has continued to promote the E-Dividend Mandate Management System, the Direct Cash Settlement and the Multiple Subscription service option for investors.

Raising the bar for investors

In addition, the SEC has raised the bar of investors’ confidence through the National Investors Protection Fund (NIPF) Risk-Based supervision and the Complaints Management Framework that opens communication channels for investors to lodge complaints and get prompt responses.

The importance of the E-Dividend Mandate Management System is to eradicate or reduce to the barest minimum the incidence of unclaimed dividend. To boost the e-dividend mandate and Direct Cash Settlement initiatives, the commission has engaged the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS) on behalf of the capital market community to facilitate identity validation and account validation in an effort to enhance market processes.

Another area the SEC has made progress in the past year is in respect of its initiatives aimed at educating investors on capital market development. Apart from advising retail investors to invest in Collective Investment Schemes and Mutual Funds given the low or no risk level of such investments, the commission has also been carrying out regularly various investor education campaigns nationwide to inform investors of the benefits of investing in long term securities and avoiding investments in illegal schemes, among others.

Also, the capital market regulatory institution recently initiated a collaborative relationship with the Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC) on the development of a curriculum for basic and secondary schools on Capital Market studies as part of the Uduk-led management’s futuristic approach in Nigeria’s capital market development.

Tackling the ponzi scheme menace

Recently, in furtherance of its investor protection mandate, the commission, in line with the provisions of Section 13 (w) of ISA 2007 which empowers the commission to close any illegal investment companies, sealed off the premises of a Lagos-based firm, Growing Circle, for engaging in illegal fund management activities.

Also, the SEC early this year issued a cease-and-desist order to Kapa-Community Ministry International Inc. (KAPA), a religious corporation found to be soliciting investments from the public in a manner resembling a Ponzi scheme, following “substantial” evidence that the organization had been offering and selling securities in the form of investment contracts without the necessary license.

The Commission issued several warning notes to the investing public, urging them to refrain from investing their money in outfits not registered with the commission. The commission has also advised the public not to subscribe to any financial investment plan without first checking the registration status of the operating company on the commission’s website.

Specifically, the capital market regulator must register any investment scheme targeted at the investing public together with the managers of the scheme. This is the first step toward investors’ protection.

Therefore, any investment scheme that is not registered is automatically categorised as illegal and potentially fraudulent. The commission maintained that even if the company was registered with SEC, the potential investors should endeavor to find out from the commission whether the commission has approved the company’s activities.

Driving market growth through technology

In line with global trends, the SEC has also keyed into the idea of leveraging the performance of the nation’s capital market on technological products and solutions. Already a Division now exists in the SEC dedicated to Fintech which is helping the management to invest in and adopt all the technologies that relate to the capital market surrounding ICOs, among others.

As the Director General confirmed recently, the management believes that technology, when properly leveraged, will reduce the cost of doing business in the capital market.

To demonstrate the SEC leadership’s commitment to using technology as the driving hub for the nation’s capital market transactions, the Capital Market Committee set up a Road Map committee recently to develop a guide for the capital market with a view to tapping on the benefits of technology to do business and reduce cost.

Again, as a proof of the SEC management’s commitment to promoting professionalism and ensuring that capital market transactions are devoid of opacity in any form, the commission introduced the Fidelity bond as one of the requirements for all market operators to file.

The bond is a yearly regulatory mandate for operators to file and the commission, following its observation of some level of default, has started compiling the list of defaulters for the purposes of sanctioning them according to the provisions of the law.

Complementarily, the commission had last December also approved the amendments to its regulatory framework which prohibited stockbrokers from engaging in any form of guaranteed investments on behalf of shareholders.

The amended regulation also requires stockbrokers to categorically inform their clients, in writing, that they cannot engage in guaranteed investments on their behalf. Prior to the commission’s directive, there had been a significant increase in the abuse of guaranteed investments which, unfortunately, resulted in losses.

Mary Uduk has performed well – Prof.Uwaleke

Experts have hailed Ms. Uduk’s zest and the way she has approached her work at the Commission since she assumed office one year ago.

According to them, the regulatory measures are desirable to the current drives by Ms. Uduk and her team to make transactions in the capital market totally transparent for investments in line with global best practices.

Speaking with Blueprint, Nigeria’s first Capital Market Professor, Uche Uwaleke hailed the management of the Commission led by acting Director General, Mary Uduk for its effort in the development of the market.

Uwaleke added that SEC’s under the leadership of Ms. Uduk has undertaken several investor protection measures including the clamp down on ponzi schemes and illegal investment companies have strengthened investors’ confidence in the market.

“Worried by the volatility in the stock market, plans are afoot by the Commission to introduce equity derivatives going by information obtained from its website,” he said. 

According to the President of capital market academics the acting Director General has performed well in the capacity especially in terms of the implementation of the 10-year capital market master plan.

“Capital market literacy effort is gaining momentum following the development of capital market curriculum for secondary schools in Nigeria which the Commission is currently championing in conjunction with the Nigeria Education Research and Development Council.

“SEC is also partnering with Fintech companies with a view to enhancing market infrastructure and positioning our capital markets to be more competitive. I can also tell you that my interactions with staff of the Commission have shown that staff morale has greatly improved since her appointment as Ag DG.

“These achievements made by Ms Mary Uduk within a short period of time have not come as a surprise to me considering her long years of experience as a Staff of SEC. So, there is no doubt that she understands the market and is in a position to take it to the next level,” he added.

Capitalisation still modest

Even on the pesky issue of deepening the capitalization of the market, the SEC’s leadership in collaboration with the NSE, has not fared badly despite the increasingly worrisome under-performance of the nation’s economy over the past few years, including the associated investors’ sentiments about the 2019 general elections.

Yes, market capitalization remains modest, available statistics on the market fluctuations showed that the prospect is bright with the stock exchange index which stood at 100 in 1984 now peaking at over 30,000.

On the issue of contribution of the capital market to the nation’s economy, especially in terms of capitalization ratio as well as how many new issuances were made in the market, the Uduk-led management has in the past year, through a combination of innovative strategies, helped in boosting  the equities and bonds’ capitalization ratio by about 21 to 22 percent.

That positive ratio, to those who are familiar with global investment trends now, is no mean feat in an economy that was just pulled out of a recessionary abyss and now recording modest growth.

Far more fundamental to the current and future of the nation’s investment space is the sustained implementation of the CMMP, which in the past year, has been given more attention than in the past era.

Specifically, the director General of the SEC, hinted that the commission had commenced implementation of 66 out of the over 90 initiatives outlined in the CMMP with 13 of them completed so far.  She listed the de-materialisation of shares, re-capitalisation of capital market operators, setting up of a National Investment Protection Fund, and establishment the West African Securities Regulators Association, as some of the completed initiatives

Uduk expressed optimism that many of the yet-to-be completed 55 initiatives now at various stages of implementation would be concluded before the end of 2019.

When the progress made by the SEC in the implementation of the CMMP is analysed within the context of the fact that the document is a blueprint for the development of the Nigerian capital market in core areas of investor protection and education, professionalism, product innovation and expansion of the capital market’s role in Nigeria’s economy, then it can be safely concluded that the Uduk-led management’s performance in the past year has been commendable.

On the way forward for the capital market, it is strongly recommended that all stakeholders in the investment space, including the fiscal and monetary authorities as well as the National Assembly, should extend hands of support to the Uduk-led SEC management in the task of attracting long term investments into Nigeria and by so doing, close the funding gap that has remained the bane of the country’s sustainable development over the years

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