On Thursday, CBN stated in a document released on the Revised Customer Protection Regulations that regulated entities must provide customers with notices of Outstanding obligations before beginning debt collection.
The Central Bank of Nigeria has instructed regulated entities to provide customers with notices of outstanding obligations before beginning debt collection. It was stated that the essence of the document is to ensure financial institutions follow consumer protection principles.
The regulations outline consumer rights and aim for better outcomes and access to financial services. The document states that foreclosures should only be initiated as a last resort after other recovery options have failed. Foreclosure is the legal process in which the ownership shifts to the bank or lender if the debtor fails to pay the loan.
It was also stated in the document that “Customers should be given the option of a private sale before foreclosure, which must be exercised within 30 days unless the customer has waived this right.”
CBN further mandated that financial service providers must apply the net proceeds from foreclosures to the loan account and inform customers of the remaining balance.
The CBN added that banks must give customers a report on the collateral sale, stating process, expenses, and net proceeds noting that banks are responsible for the actions of debt collection agents.
The document outlines restrictions for loan providers in terms of contacting individuals related to a customer.
It stated, “Providers are not allowed to contact friends, employers, relatives, or neighbors for any information other than employment status, telephone numbers, or address. The only exception is if the person has guaranteed the loan or has given consent to be contacted.”
Additionally, banks must safeguard customers’ assets and are responsible for losses due to control breaches; test products with consumers and modify to reduce fraud/errors and implement measures and authentication for transactions.
FSPs are also mandated to install automated transaction monitoring, alert functions, and behavioural monitoring to detect and prevent fraud; customers must also be educated on fraud threats or scams.
The document added that the providers must communicate procedures for reporting suspicious, unauthorised, fraudulent, lost, or stolen payment instruments and/or authentication information to consumers periodically.