The Central Bank of Nigeria has established a Compliance Department to curb non-prudential risks across the country’s financial system.
This move reflects CBN’s commitment to strengthening regulatory frameworks in response to evolving threats and compliance challenges.
According to Punch, CBN in a circular issued to regulated financial institutions on Thursday, stated that the department was established early quarter of 2025 and was fully operational in the second quarter.
The move is part of broader structural reforms designed to improve regulatory efficiency, define institutional roles more clearly, and ensure focused supervision of emerging and non-traditional risks.
In recent years, the Nigerian financial sector has faced increasing pressure from global regulatory standards, technological threats, and evolving financial crimes.
Non-prudential risks, such as money laundering, cyberattacks, poor market conduct, and weak corporate governance pose significant threats to financial stability and investor confidence.
“This structural reform forms part of the Bank’s broader efforts to consolidate and embed regulatory effectiveness within existing supervisory frameworks, clarify institutional responsibilities, and maintain focused oversight of non-prudential and emerging risks,” CBN said.
With its creation, the apex bank said the compliance department has taken over responsibilities in four key areas.
“Financial crime supervision, covering anti-money laundering, counter-terrorism financing, counter-proliferation financing, and sanctions compliance,” CBN said.
“Market conduct supervision, including disclosure practices, complaints management, and advertising standards;
“Enterprise security supervision covering cybersecurity, data protection, and third-party risk management; and corporate governance and ESG supervision focusing on board effectiveness and oversight of environmental, social, and governance oversight,” it added.
The financial regulator further said all regulatory reports, correspondence, and related inquiries concerning the matters should be directed to the director of, compliance department, through the established communication channels.
The apex bank added that institutions will receive direct guidance on specific points of contact and submission procedures.
CBN said it looks forward to continued cooperation from all institutions to ensure a smooth transition and to uphold the highest standards of compliance with applicable regulatory requirements.