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Central Bank of Nigeria Moves to Ring-Fence Diaspora Dollars, Orders IMTO Operators to Settle FX Remittances in Naira

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The Central Bank of Nigeria has unveiled a stricter operating framework for international money transfers, ordering all operators to route transactions through designated naira settlement accounts in a move aimed at tightening control over diaspora inflows and reinforcing transparency in the foreign exchange market.

The directive, contained in a March 24 circular signed by the Director of the Trade and Exchange Department, Dr. Musa Nakorji, requires all International Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) to open and maintain naira settlement accounts with authorized dealer banks. The circular, published on the bank’s website, takes effect from May 1, 2026.

According to the apex bank, the measure is part of a broader effort to “enhance diaspora remittances, strengthen transparency, traceability, and effective monitoring of all transactions.”

Under the new rules, “all IMTOs are hereby directed to open naira settlement accounts and ensure that all transactions are routed strictly through their designated settlement accounts, maintained with Authorized Dealer Banks (ADBs) in Nigeria.” The instruction effectively centralizes the processing of remittance inflows, beneficiary payouts, and related settlements within the formal banking system.

The framework introduces tighter controls on how these accounts are funded. The CBN stated that settlement accounts “shall only be credited with remittance flows and proceeds of foreign exchange conversions by licensed IMTOs (or their agents)” operating within the Nigerian foreign exchange market. IMTOs are permitted to operate multiple accounts across different banks, but must formally designate them and submit details to the regulator, with updates provided periodically.

In a further attempt to standardize the market, the central bank directed operators to anchor pricing to live market data. IMTOs “shall observe real-time market prices from the Bloomberg BMATCH and utilize this as guidance for pricing transactions with their customers and Authorized Dealers,” the circular said. The bank added that the requirement is intended to “improve price discovery, reduce information asymmetry between IMTOs and banks, and encourage increased participation in the official FX market.”

The policy also broadens the role of authorized dealer banks, allowing them to process foreign currency transfers from IMTO settlement accounts to other banks and approved participants, including licensed Bureau De Change operators. This provision is expected to improve liquidity circulation within the official market, which has struggled with fragmented supply and persistent reliance on parallel channels.

The directive pinpoints the regulator’s determination to bring a larger share of Nigeria’s diaspora remittances, one of the country’s most stable sources of foreign exchange, into the formal system. For years, a significant portion of these inflows has bypassed official channels, driven by exchange rate differentials and operational inefficiencies.

The CBN is attempting to close that gap, improve visibility over cross-border flows, and strengthen its ability to manage the naira by enforcing stricter routing and pricing rules. The emphasis on compliance is explicit. Operators are required to maintain detailed transaction records and adhere fully to anti-money laundering, counter-terrorism financing, and counter-proliferation financing standards.

“This directive takes effect from May 1, 2026. Please note and ensure compliance,” the circular stated.

Analysts say the success of the policy will depend much on whether the official market can offer competitive pricing and seamless execution. While tighter oversight may reduce leakages, sustained inflows will depend on user confidence, particularly among diaspora senders who often prioritize speed and exchange rates.

The move comes amid broader external pressures. Global disruptions linked to tensions involving the United States, Israel, and Iran have begun to filter into commodity markets, affecting everything from energy prices to agricultural inputs. Dangote Industries Limited said demand for its fertilizer products has surged amid supply constraints, highlighting how geopolitical shocks are reshaping trade flows and intensifying the need for stable foreign exchange buffers.

Thus, the CBN’s latest directive is part of a continuing effort to assert greater control over currency flows and maintain the relative stability that the naira has recently recorded.

U.S. Judge Says Pentagon May Be Retaliating Against Anthropic Over AI Safety Concerns

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A federal judge in California suggested on Tuesday that the Pentagon’s unprecedented blacklisting of artificial intelligence firm Anthropic may have been motivated by the company’s public stance on AI safety rather than genuine national security concerns.

The case stems from Anthropic’s lawsuit challenging the Department of Defense’s designation of the company as a “national security supply-chain risk,” a label that effectively blocks it from certain military contracts. The company contends the move violates its constitutional rights, including free speech and due process, after refusing to let its Claude AI software be used for domestic surveillance or autonomous weapons, citing reliability and ethical concerns.

U.S. District Judge Rita Lin, a Biden appointee, said during the hearing in San Francisco that the designation “looks like an attempt to cripple Anthropic” and suggested it may be punitive.

“It looks like DOW is punishing Anthropic for trying to bring public scrutiny to this contract dispute,” she said, referring to the Department of War, President Donald Trump’s rebranding of the Defense Department.

The Anthropic lawsuit, filed on March 9, argues that the Pentagon overstepped its authority by imposing the supply-chain risk label without giving the company an opportunity to respond, in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Anthropic also claims that the move constitutes retaliation for speaking out on AI safety, implicating First Amendment protections.

During the hearing, the company’s attorney, Michael Mongan, described the designation as a distorted use of federal procurement law.

“The logical implication of their position here is they can point to their frustrations in a contract negotiation, the stubbornness of the vendor, and say, ‘because you’re working in an area that touches national security, we’re going to tell the world that we think you might come around in the future and sabotage our systems,’” Mongan said.

The Department of Justice, defending the Pentagon, argued that the designation was a precautionary measure. DOJ attorney Eric Hamilton said the company’s reluctance to allow military use of Claude created an unacceptable operational risk.

“What happens if Anthropic, through an update, installs a kill switch or installs functionality that allows it to change how the software is functioning when our warfighters need it most? That is an unacceptable risk,” he said.

Anthropic has warned that the designation could cost the company billions of dollars in lost contracts and reputational damage. The label is notable as the first public use of this obscure procurement statute against a U.S.-based company. A separate lawsuit in Washington, D.C., challenges another Pentagon supply-chain designation that could exclude Anthropic from civilian government contracts.

Judge Lin said she would issue a written ruling on the request for a temporary block of the designation in the coming days. The case is just one among others, and highlights growing tensions between AI developers seeking to assert ethical boundaries and the military’s insistence on secure, controllable systems, with potential implications for AI companies nationwide.

Anthropic executives maintain that AI models remain insufficiently reliable for deployment in weapons systems and domestic surveillance. Their stance has sparked a wider debate over the ethical and strategic use of AI in national defense, and whether government agencies can wield procurement law to enforce compliance.

The lack of established AI regulation has made the case attractive as it is expected to set a precedent for how AI firms interact with the U.S. military.

German President Frank-Walter Describes Ongoing Middle East Conflict As a Breach of International Law 

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German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier delivered unusually sharp criticism of the ongoing US-Israeli military campaign against Iran during a speech to German diplomats in Berlin. He described the conflict as a “breach of international law”, a “politically disastrous mistake”, and an “avoidable, unnecessary war” whose stated goal of preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons could have been pursued differently.

Steinmeier specifically challenged the Trump administration’s justification, stating there is “little doubt” that claims of an imminent Iranian attack on the US “do not hold water.” He added: “We have no reason whatsoever to align ourselves with this world view” and argued there is “no reason” for Germany (or Europe) to follow Trump’s lead on this issue.

He equated the damage to transatlantic relations from Trump’s second term to the rupture caused by Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022 — saying there would be “no going back” to pre-2025 ties with the US.

He criticized the US withdrawal from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal (JCPOA), in which he had been involved as foreign minister, and argued the war was not the inevitable outcome. He urged Germany to pursue greater strategic autonomy: strengthening its military as the “backbone of conventional defense in Europe” and reducing technological dependence on the US to avoid external interference in domestic affairs.

Steinmeier’s role as president is largely ceremonial, so his comments do not represent official German government policy. Chancellor Friedrich Merz has taken a more cautious line, avoiding direct condemnation of the war’s legality while emphasizing that Iran should not be shielded by international law. German media noted Steinmeier’s remarks as among the strongest public rebukes from a major European figure.

This comes amid reports of a US-Israeli offensive involving strikes on Iranian nuclear and military targets, now in its third week as of late March 2026. The Trump administration has framed the action as necessary to neutralize an existential threat, while critics including some US intelligence voices referenced by Steinmeier question the “imminent threat” narrative.

Iran has vowed not to surrender, and the conflict has driven up oil prices and heightened global tensions. Steinmeier’s intervention highlights deep European unease with unilateral US action under Trump, echoing longstanding transatlantic frictions over Iran policy, defense spending, and alliance reliability. It also fuels debates in Germany about “strategic sovereignty” — reducing over-reliance on Washington.

Whether this rhetorical split translates into concrete policy shifts in NATO, sanctions, or European defense initiatives remains to be seen. For now, it underscores how quickly Trump’s return has strained relations with traditional allies, even as the military campaign continues.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) has adopted a cautious, pragmatic stance on the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, distinguishing his position from the sharper condemnation by President Frank-Walter Steinmeier. While Merz shares the goal of neutralizing Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs and ending the “terror” of the regime, he has increasingly distanced himself from the execution of the war, emphasizing non-participation and the lack of a viable strategy.

Merz has repeatedly stated that “this is not our war” and Germany will not participate. He stressed that the US and Israel did not consult Berlin beforehand, adding that Germany “would have advised against” the current course of action. The conflict is explicitly “not a matter for NATO.”

Shared objectives but criticism of approach: He agrees with Washington and Jerusalem that Iran must no longer pose a threat and has condemned the Iranian regime harshly. However, he has voiced growing concerns about risks, escalation, and the absence of a “convincing plan” or “joint exit strategy” for ending the conflict swiftly.

“Merz has called for developing a post-war agenda focused on regional stability, preserving Iran’s territorial integrity and state functionality to avoid chaos that could harm Europe, and allowing the Iranian people to determine their future. He warned against an “endless war” or the collapse of the Iranian state.

He has spoken directly with President Trump including raising concerns about potential strikes on Iranian power plants and supports efforts toward a ceasefire, while noting the economic fallout for Germany.

Early in the conflict, Merz was relatively supportive, describing the strikes as aimed at ending Iran’s “destructive game” and avoiding lectures on international law. As the war has dragged into its third week with wider regional effects, his criticism has sharpened: highlighting lack of consultation, risks of escalation, and the need for a clear endgame.

This contrasts with Steinmeier’s March 24 speech, which labeled the war a “breach of international law” and a “politically disastrous mistake” with no reason for Europe to align with Trump’s worldview. Merz has deliberately avoided such legal judgments, focusing instead on practical and strategic concerns.

With oil prices elevated and global tensions high, Merz continues to push for a rapid political resolution while ruling out direct German entanglement. Whether this balance holds as the conflict evolves — particularly around issues like the Strait of Hormuz — will be a key test for his government and EU cohesion.

Polymarket and Kalshi New Rules Aim to Crack Down on Insider Trading and Market Manipulation 

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Polymarket and Kalshi, the two largest prediction market platforms, announced new rules, to crack down on insider trading and market manipulation.

This move came on the same day that bipartisan senators Adam Schiff (D-CA) and John Curtis (R-UT) introduced legislation to ban sports betting and casino-style games on CFTC-regulated prediction markets like these platforms.

The timing suggests the companies are proactively strengthening self-regulation to address growing scrutiny, maintain market trust, and potentially head off stricter federal oversight. Polymarket updated its market integrity rules for both its DeFi platform and its CFTC-regulated U.S. exchange.

It explicitly defined three core categories of prohibited insider trading: Trading on stolen confidential information: You can’t trade if you have non-public info about an event’s outcome where using it would violate a duty of trust or confidence to someone else.

Trading on illegal tips: You can’t trade on confidential info passed to you by someone who owed a duty of trust to another party (if you knew or should have known they couldn’t trade on it themselves).

Trading by those who can influence the outcome: You’re barred if you hold a position of authority or influence sufficient to affect the event you’re betting on; this could include athletes, company execs, policymakers, etc.

The rules also ban broader manipulation tactics like spoofing, wash trading, fictitious transactions, self-dealing, front-running, and other disruptive practices. Polymarket added dedicated “Market Integrity” pages with examples and a way for users to report suspicious activity.

Chief Legal Officer Neal Kumar said: “Markets thrive on clarity. These rule enhancements make our expectations abundantly clear for every participant across both platforms.”

Kalshi took a more proactive, tech-driven approach with “new technological guardrails” that preemptively block certain high-risk trades before they happen rather than just investigating afterward. Political candidates are blocked from trading on their own campaigns. Elected officials are also restricted.

Sports screening: Athletes, coaches, referees, and other personnel in college or professional leagues are blocked from trading contracts tied to the sports/leagues they’re involved in. Kalshi built screening lists in partnership with IC360 to identify and block these individuals automatically.

Enhanced detection tools for insider trading and manipulation overall. A new whistleblower feature on market pages so users can easily flag suspicious activity based on public data. Kalshi emphasized that “ensuring market integrity is not just a goal – it is a cornerstone of our business model” and said it is “committed to banning people who try to cheat.”

The company also referenced new CFTC guidance on these issues. Prediction markets have faced increasing criticism over potential insider trading—examples include unusually accurate bets on geopolitical events like U.S./Israeli actions in the Middle East or political outcomes where traders appeared to have non-public information.

The new Senate bill specifically targets sports-related contracts on platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket, arguing they resemble illegal gambling in some states. By moving quickly on self-imposed bans, the companies are signaling they’re serious about cleaning up their markets while the industry remains largely unregulated compared to traditional betting or securities markets.

In short, Polymarket and Kalshi are drawing a clear line: insider trading and manipulation won’t be tolerated. Whether these steps satisfy regulators and lawmakers remains to be seen, but they represent the biggest coordinated push yet by the industry to police itself.

New York Stock Exchange Announces Partnership with Securitize 

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The New York Stock Exchange part of Intercontinental Exchange has announced a partnership with Securitize, a BlackRock- and Ark Invest-backed digital asset platform, via a memorandum of understanding. The goal is to develop a 24/7 tokenized securities platform—specifically, a blockchain-based Digital Trading Platform for trading tokenized versions of U.S. equities and ETFs.

Securitize’s Role

It becomes the NYSE’s first digital transfer agent registered with the SEC. This allows Securitize to issue/mint shares and ETFs as blockchain-native digital tokens on behalf of issuers (corporate or ETF sponsors). They will also collaborate as a design partner to create standards for other digital transfer agents, covering regulatory compliance, operations, and technology.

24/7 trading: Continuous, round-the-clock access (no more limited to traditional market hours). Instant (or near-instant) settlement on blockchain rails. Support for stablecoin-based funding and fractional share ownership. Tokenized assets can be managed alongside crypto holdings in unified systems for institutional clients.

This is not just a pilot—it’s foundational infrastructure for tokenized securities markets. Traditional stock trading involves T+1 or longer settlement cycles, intermediaries, and restricted hours. Tokenization turns shares into programmable digital tokens on a blockchain, enabling: Faster, cheaper, and more transparent transfers.

Global, always-on liquidity. Easier collateral management and composability with other digital assets. This move positions the NYSE in direct competition with rivals like Nasdaq, which recently received SEC approval for certain tokenized stock trading and settlement. It’s part of a broader Wall Street push into real-world assets (RWAs) onchain.

Securitize already has experience tokenizing funds and assets, and this partnership helps establish compliant “rails” for the industry. Regulatory hurdles remain, but the announcement signals serious institutional momentum.

Wall Street is actively rebuilding equity markets on blockchain. This isn’t hype—it’s NYSE-level infrastructure development happening right now. Expect more details as the platform evolves, including how issuers and investors will onboard.

Nasdaq has been aggressively advancing tokenized securities initiatives, positioning itself as a leader in integrating blockchain into traditional equity markets. Its approach is more incremental and hybrid compared to the NYSE’s standalone 24/7 platform with Securitize.

The SEC approved Nasdaq’s proposed rule change, allowing trading of certain securities in tokenized form on its main exchange. Initially limited to Russell 1000 Index stocks and major index ETFs. Tokenized versions are fungible with traditional shares—they share the same CUSIP, ticker symbol, and shareholder rights/privileges.

Trades can occur on the same order book, with participants choosing tokenized settlement via the Depository Trust Company (DTC) pilot. Settlement: Tied to the existing DTC/NSCC infrastructure; still T+1 initially, with tokenization as a post-trade step. This provides a regulated, low-risk entry point rather than a fully separate blockchain system.

This builds on a DTC no-action letter from December 2025 that enables tokenization pilots. Nasdaq unveiled a new framework for issuer-sponsored tokenized equities. Public companies (issuers) stay at the center, retaining control over ownership rights, governance, transparency, and investor experience.

Designed to integrate with existing regulatory frameworks while enabling benefits like programmability and global accessibility. This complements the trading rule change and supports broader tokenization of equities without disrupting core market structure. Nasdaq partnered with the crypto exchange Kraken to help distribute and facilitate access to tokenized stock versions globally, expanding reach beyond traditional brokers.

Nasdaq is actively engaging issuers, transfer agents, and market participants to evolve the framework toward more advanced features. Nasdaq: Hybrid model—tokenized and traditional shares trade together on the same exchange, with settlement routed through DTC for regulatory familiarity and safety.

Focuses on piloting within existing rails; faster regulatory approval, lower immediate disruption. NYSE/Securitize: Aims for a dedicated Digital Trading Platform with true 24/7 trading, near-instant settlement potentially using stablecoins, fractional ownership, and native blockchain issuance and settlement outside traditional DTC rails.

Securitize acts as the first digital transfer agent for minting tokens. This is more ambitious but requires additional regulatory steps. Both exchanges signal strong institutional momentum for real-world assets (RWAs) on blockchain. Nasdaq currently has the regulatory “first-mover” edge with live pilot approval, while NYSE targets deeper transformation.

Nasdaq’s pilot could see first tokenized trades later in 2026, starting with high-volume names. Full 24/7 or instant settlement would require further evolution. This is part of Wall Street’s broader shift: tokenization isn’t replacing traditional markets yet—it’s layering blockchain efficiencies on top.