Thursday, December 18, 2025
25.6 C
Lagos

Business

NIPR Postpones Annual PRICE Awards to Jan 25, 2026

The Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) has deferred...

Wines of Canada Debuts in the Nigerian Market

Carl DIB Merchandising Limited, a leading company in the...

P+ Measurement Services Sparks Global Dialogue on Outcome-Based Measurement at 2025 AMEC Measurement Month

P+ Measurement Services, Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence and...

NIPR Institutes Annual PRICE Awards, Fixes 7th Dec for Ceremony

The Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) has once...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

FG, SEC, NGX Group Forge Unified Direction on Capital Gains Tax Reform

The Federal Government has inaugurated the National Tax Policy...

NGX Expands Market Offerings with Introduction of Commercial Paper Listings

Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) has introduced Commercial Paper (CP)...

NGX Chair: Media Coverage of Capital Market Key to Sustainable Growth

OPENING REMARKS BY THE CHAIRMAN, NIGERIAN EXCHANGE GROUP (NGX)...

Stanbic IBTC Capital Clinches 4 Top Honours at AIHN Investment Banking Awards 2025

Stanbic IBTC Capital, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings,...

NGX T+2 Settlement Cycle ‘Goes Live’ Event

L – R: Chinwendu Ekeh, Head, Operations & IT,...

Insurance

Lagos State Applauds Leadway, Ouida for Inspiring Festember Read along with Onakoya, Shoneyin

Leadway Group, one of Nigeria’s foremost non-banking financial services...

Leadway Launches First Ever Lifestyle Fair to Empower, Spotlight Young Entrepreneurs

Leadway, one of Nigeria’s top non-banking financial services and...

AIICO Unveils New Identity, Reimagining the Future of Protection

Left - right: Mrs. Bisola Elias (CFO, AIICO Insurance),...

Leadway Launches First Ever Lifestyle Fair to Empower, Spotlight Young Entrepreneurs

Leadway, one of Nigeria’s top non-banking financial services and...

Heirs Insurance Travel Festival Draws Thousands, Signals a New Era for Inclusive Travel Ecosystem for Africans

L-R: Ifesinachi Okpagu, Chief Marketing Officer, Heirs Insurance Group;...

Business

NIPR Postpones Annual PRICE Awards to Jan 25, 2026

The Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) has deferred...

Wines of Canada Debuts in the Nigerian Market

Carl DIB Merchandising Limited, a leading company in the...

P+ Measurement Services Sparks Global Dialogue on Outcome-Based Measurement at 2025 AMEC Measurement Month

P+ Measurement Services, Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence and...

NIPR Institutes Annual PRICE Awards, Fixes 7th Dec for Ceremony

The Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR) has once...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

FG, SEC, NGX Group Forge Unified Direction on Capital Gains Tax Reform

The Federal Government has inaugurated the National Tax Policy...

NGX Expands Market Offerings with Introduction of Commercial Paper Listings

Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) has introduced Commercial Paper (CP)...

NGX Chair: Media Coverage of Capital Market Key to Sustainable Growth

OPENING REMARKS BY THE CHAIRMAN, NIGERIAN EXCHANGE GROUP (NGX)...

Stanbic IBTC Capital Clinches 4 Top Honours at AIHN Investment Banking Awards 2025

Stanbic IBTC Capital, a subsidiary of Stanbic IBTC Holdings,...

NGX T+2 Settlement Cycle ‘Goes Live’ Event

L – R: Chinwendu Ekeh, Head, Operations & IT,...

Insurance

Lagos State Applauds Leadway, Ouida for Inspiring Festember Read along with Onakoya, Shoneyin

Leadway Group, one of Nigeria’s foremost non-banking financial services...

Leadway Launches First Ever Lifestyle Fair to Empower, Spotlight Young Entrepreneurs

Leadway, one of Nigeria’s top non-banking financial services and...

AIICO Unveils New Identity, Reimagining the Future of Protection

Left - right: Mrs. Bisola Elias (CFO, AIICO Insurance),...

Leadway Launches First Ever Lifestyle Fair to Empower, Spotlight Young Entrepreneurs

Leadway, one of Nigeria’s top non-banking financial services and...

Heirs Insurance Travel Festival Draws Thousands, Signals a New Era for Inclusive Travel Ecosystem for Africans

L-R: Ifesinachi Okpagu, Chief Marketing Officer, Heirs Insurance Group;...

‘Enabling Digitally-led Trade Growth is a Key Opportunity’—Standard Bank

 

Vinod Madhavan

Head of Trade

Standard Bank

The Covid-19 outbreak is set to significantly impact trade growth for the year as countries limit physical movement to curb the virus spread. While the health crisis undoubtedly has vast negative implications for global trade processes, it is one that could be turned into an opportunity as it provides the political and social impetus to accelerate trade digitization on a larger scale.

Trade services have traditionally centred around physically intensive processes involving the likes of paperwork, signatures and frequent manual data entries. Infact, it has been estimated that up to 15 per cent of the cost of shipment is paperwork in global trade. In the current environment of Covid-19 related lockdowns, many of these processes that work to facilitate cross-border and international trade have been impacted and may temporarily have been rendered obsolete to a certain degree.

Existing technological solutions are available for logistics and trade.

Rapidly implementing them out of necessity from the current environment will be an excellent step in the right direction for trade digitization. This however requires collaborative approach between governments and industries to remove barriers by amending and aligning regulatory frameworks.

In many of the 20 countries in which Standard Bank operates, there are stringent and specific requirements around the roll-out of digital solutions.

Some of the countries have taken market-appropriate approaches towards moving to digitizing trade. In certain places on the continent, if one wants to issue a guarantee, for example, the standard is to issue on a physical piece of paper.

While the core nature of trade is unlikely to fundamentally change in the near to medium term, future-financial institutions are on a journey to streamline these processes, very often through leveraging the ABCD (artificial intelligence, block-chain, cloud computing and data analytics) of disruptive technologies.

From the point of view of adoption of robotics/intelligent automation and Artificial Intelligence (AI) in trade business processing, Standard Bank has had good success in South Africa and Uganda. Ghana is not far behind in adoption. Purely by leveraging this technology, one could materially quicken up the issuance of a local guarantee, reducing the time taken to issue a guarantee, for example, by 80 per cent.

If we take it a step further and combine AI with Optical Character Recognition (OCR),we can bring increased operational efficiencies to the areas of manual document sorting and data entry, starting the journey of reducing the manual nature of trade processes.

Such technologies allow for banks to take documentation needed to validate a transaction (sometimes 50-100 pieces of paper) and evaluate or validate that documentation against the letter of credit instrument in a much shorter time period.

Standard Bank partnered with Traydstream – a fintech that leverages OCR and machine learning – in 2019 to digitize the current manual process of checking the document against the Letters of Credit for Discrepancies.

The OCR tech allows for us to get a response to a document within less than an hour in some of Standard Bank’s markets. The typical validation process could take anywhere between three to five days, in fact the international banking norms, allows for five working days for this activity to take place.

Importantly, the machine learning system will continue to learn and evolve over time improving on its benefits. It also offers value-added services such as shipping vessels tracking, which is particularly useful for our clients who are importing from around the world.

A theme that is evident currently is a desire for quantum change. Trade has traditionally been paper based; with the document of title, such as Bill of Lading (BL) being the cornerstone of trade. Even there, those who were previously hesitant to accept an electronic bill of lading, for example, are now ready to embrace and adopt the technology for its benefits. The impetus that the virus has brought to trade digitization should therefore not be underestimated.

While initiatives focusing on adoption of electronic bill of lading (or e-bills) have been around for about 10 years and adopted reasonably successfully in some developed markets, the adoption of the same in markets in Africa has been intermittent. Without the legal and regulatory framework required to support the technology, the adoption cannot be on a mass scale.  The impact of courier company’s inability to deliver trade documents to banks timeously -would have been mitigated, if e-bills had been adopted in our markets.

Another area that requires focus from regulators in our markets, is to create an atmosphere allowing industry to embrace cloud computing.

Standard Bank is currently in conversations with multiple regulators, exploring how we could go about amending regulations, even though it may be a temporary dispensation for the duration of Covid-19, to facilitate digital trade. These engagements are happening in multiple markets across our network. With the challenges brought about by the virus outbreak, there is now an exciting dialogue in markets that will help to influence some of the necessary changes.

It is hoped that by leveraging basics such as digitized signatures and documents and technological innovations such as data analytics, AI and automation to change and improve the way local and international trade is done today, we can reduce friction in the trade process, boost activity and through doing so, help to reduce the impact from reduced global trade, brought about by the global health pandemic.

 

.

 

 

Hot this week

CBN Liquidates Aso Savings and Loans, Union Homes Savings and Loans 

As part of its efforts to re-position the mortgage...

NCC: Regulatory Intervention Attracts $1bn Investment from Telecom Operators  

Mrs. Tolulase Omodele-Rufai Deputy Director Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) Lagos Zonal Office The...

NDIC, NIBSS Plan MoU to Fast-track Reimbursement of Depositors

The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) and the Nigeria...

Renowned Economist, Tony Epelle, Advocates $2tn Economy by 2030

L-R: Garba Kurfi, Managing Director/CEO, APT Securities and Funds...

Topics

ITU Telecom World 2016 to Explore Collaboration in Digital Economy

5G, collaborative regulation, the connected car, smart sustainable cities,...

Bargain Hunting in Bellwethers Buck Market Bearish Run… NSE ASI up 93bps

Bargain hunting in some bellwether stocks – DANGCEM (+2.7%), NIGERIAN BREWERIES (+2.3%), NESTLE (+1.7%) and UNILEVER(+4.9%)...

UBA Pays Total Dividend of N95.8bn, Translating to N2.80 Per Share in 2023

L-R: Group Chairman, Mr. Tony O. Elumelu and Group...

ITU: Summit to Focus on Opportunities to Apply Artificial Intelligence for ‘Good’

The world’s leading minds in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and...

Sanlam, Allianz Partners to Create African Insurance Giant

Sanlam, the largest non-banking financial services company in Africa,...

Continental Re Group ED, Emeka Akwiwu, Others at IFRS 17 Roundtable in Lagos

L-R: Oracle MEA Official; Mr. Emeka Akwiwu, Group Executive...

Digital Encode Targets Unicorn Status, Showcases Cutting-edge Cybersecurity Solutions @ AfriTECH 4.0

Digital Encode Limited, a leading Cybersecurity and Governance, Risk...

Access Bank Donates N10m to UNICEF on Charity Shield Polo

The Access Bank UNICEF Charity Shield International Polo tournament came to a flourishing climax recently with the presentation of N10 million donation by the sole sponsor, Access Bank Plc to UNICEF. The donation was presented at the Fifth Chukker Polo & Country Club in Kaduna by the Executive Director, Personal Banking, Access Bank, Victor Etuokwu to support the UNICEF campaign against HIV/AIDS pandemic among Nigerian children. Etuokwu who led other top officials of Access Bank to the grand finale, expressed delight that the Access Bank UNICEF Charity Shield is achieving its main objective of reaching out to the less privileged children in the society.
Exit mobile version