Namibia Minute.
Monday, 8 June 2026
Namibia’s news, on the hour · Est. 2026
Monday, 8 June 2026
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Namibian press · Organization

Bank of Namibia

Also known as: BoN · The Bank of Namibia

Namibia's central bank, responsible for monetary policy, foreign exchange reserves, and banking regulation including fee oversight.

2018-05-182026-06-08

What’s been said

Key points drawn from coverage. Tap a point to see the original sentence.

  1. April 2026
  2. The Namibian

    Bank of Namibia reported in 2025 annual report state-owned enterprises owe N$9.3 billion in external debt

    Source

    According to the Bank of Namibia (BoN) 2025 annual report, about N$905 million of that loan is considered short-term (due within one year).

    Public enterprises owe N$9.3 billion in external debt
  3. The Namibian

    Bank of Namibia appointed Nicholas Mukasa as second deputy governor effective May

    Source

    The Bank of Namibia has appointed Nicholas Mukasa as the second deputy governor of the bank with effect from the start of May.

    Bank of Namibia appoints Mukasa as deputy governor
  4. The Namibian

    Bank of Namibia says higher LDR indicates increased reliance on deposits to fund lending activities.

    Source

    "The higher LDR indicates an increased reliance on deposits to fund lending activities, signalling strong loan demand amid tightening deposit inflows," says the Bank of Namibia (BoN).

    Commercial banks liquidity tighten as deposits decline
  5. The Namibian

    Bank of Namibia says ratio remains within prudent levels, reinforces need for careful liquidity management.

    Source

    "Although the ratio remained within prudent levels, it reinforces the need for careful liquidity management to ensure adequate funding buffers as lending continues to grow," says BoN.

    Commercial banks liquidity tighten as deposits decline
  6. The Namibian

    The Bank of Namibia has signed an agreement with Navachab Gold Mine to buy its gold for the country's reserves

    Source

    The central bank has signed an agreement with Navachab Gold Mine to buy its gold for the country's reserves.

    BoN to refine Navachab gold abroad, considers London storage
  7. The Namibian

    Bank of Namibia has completed disbursement of N$500 million through SMEs recovery loan scheme

    Source

    BANK of Namibia (BoN), through the small and medium enterprises (SMEs) recovery loan scheme, has completed the disbursement of N$500 million.

    Bank of Namibia loans N$500 million to SMEs
  8. The Namibian

    Bank of Namibia reported in 2025 annual report fraudsters stole N$73.9 million in 2025

    Source

    The Bank of Namibia 2025 annual report shows that for the year ended 2025, scammers got away with N$73.9 million.

    Namibians lose N$6 million every month to fraudsters
  9. The Namibian

    central bank says escalation was primarily attributable to vishing and phishing schemes

    Source

    "This escalation was primarily attributable to vishing and phishing schemes, in which fraudsters impersonate legitimate institutions to deceive individuals into disclosing sensitive information such as usernames and passwords," the central bank says.

    Namibians lose N$6 million every month to fraudsters
  10. New Era

    Bank of Namibia said Namibia's economy lost momentum in 2025 as global risks weighed on growth

    Source

    Namibia's economy lost momentum in 2025 as global risks continued to weigh on growth, the Bank of Namibia (BoN) has said.

    Growth slows as global risks rise – BoN
  11. The Namibian

    Bank of Namibia reported N$892 million loss for 2025, highest ever in central bank history

    Source

    The Bank of Namibia has reported an N$892 million loss for the year 2025, the highest ever loss in the central bank's history, and has declared a mere N$200 million.

    Bank of Namibia reports record N$892m loss

Thursday 4 June

  1. Bank of Namibia to acquire 600 kg gold from local mines

    The Bank of Namibia plans to acquire 600 kilograms of gold from local mines by the end of the fourth quarter of 2026 as part of a strategy to strengthen the country's foreign exchange reserves.

    4 June 2026 · Namibian Sun

Wednesday 3 June

  1. Bank of Namibia vows gradual banking fee reduction over three years

    The central bank governor told parliament that reducing high banking fees will take time as new regulations are implemented, though he expects significant progress within three years. Banks earned N$5.0 billion from fee income last year, representing 31.3% of their total income.

    3 June 2026 · The Namibian

  2. Inflation accelerates to 3.1% on fuel costs, straining households

    Namibia's headline inflation rose to 3.1% year-on-year in April from 2.1% in March, driven by higher transport costs following fuel price increases linked to Middle East tensions. FNB Namibia warns inflationary pressures are likely to persist, with further strain dependent on geopolitical developments that could push transport and food prices higher.

    3 June 2026 · Windhoek Observer

  3. Namibia's inflation surges to 3.1%, reshaping real interest rates

    Headline inflation jumped to 3.1% in April from 2.1% in March, primarily driven by transport costs reflecting currency depreciation and higher global fuel prices. With the repo rate held at 6.50%, real interest rates have fallen, supporting credit demand but eroding household purchasing power.

    3 June 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Tuesday 2 June

  1. Namibia's 2025 GDP growth fell short at 1.7%

    Namibia closed 2025 with GDP growth of 1.7%, below government and IMF forecasts, weighed down by depressed diamond revenues and livestock sector recovery from drought; uranium and gold mining, wholesale trade, transport, and services supported growth. The Bank of Namibia has revised its 2026 forecast down to 2.6%, citing elevated fuel costs and softer global demand, while inflation rebounded to 3.1% in April after reaching a cycle low of 2.1% in March, driven by rising transport, utility, and food prices.

    2 June 2026 · Informanté

Monday 1 June

  1. Bank of Namibia reserves reach N$58.8 billion in April

    The Bank of Namibia's international reserves increased 13.6% in April to N$58.8 billion, supported by SACU inflows and foreign currency placements, providing an estimated import cover of 3.7 months. Private sector credit extension also accelerated, with loans to the domestic private sector reaching N$124.1 billion and growing at 4.8% annually.

    1 June 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Saturday 30 May

  1. Bank of Namibia holds repo rate at 6.50% until mid-June

    The Bank of Namibia announced its repo rate will remain at 6.50% until mid-June, keeping commercial bank prime lending rates at 10%. The central bank cited weak domestic economic activity, higher inflation forecasts for 2026, and the need to maintain the Namibia dollar's peg to the South African rand in its decision.

    30 May 2026 · The Namibian

Thursday 28 May

  1. 70% of Namibians unable to afford formal housing

    Less than 10% of the working population hold home loans; 70% of the population cannot afford formal housing due to low incomes and limited mortgage access, according to central bank data. Average house prices have risen from N$200,000 in 2000 to between N$1.3 million and N$1.4 million today, while the average working Namibian earns N$5,000 or less per month.

    28 May 2026 · The Namibian

Wednesday 27 May

  1. Housing seminar confirms most Namibians cannot afford formal homes

    A housing research seminar at the Bank of Namibia found that 70% of Namibians are priced out of formal housing. According to the article, this is not a market failure but a structural outcome of colonial land policies, bank financialisation, low wages, and treating housing as a commodity rather than a social right.

    27 May 2026 · The Namibian

Tuesday 26 May

  1. Parliamentary committee chair calls for greater Namibian participation in mining, energy

    Dr Tobie Ocean Aupindi, Chairperson of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Natural Resources, has advocated for greater Namibian representation in management structures and increased participation by local entrepreneurs and professionals in the mining, oil, gas and energy industries. He also proposed that Namibia receive dividends in physical commodities such as gold, uranium, or lithium to build strategic national reserves.

    26 May 2026 · Informanté

Friday 22 May

  1. Housing backlog surges as 70% of Namibians priced out

    About 70% of Namibians can no longer afford formal housing as property prices have soared while incomes stagnate and mortgage access remains limited. Namibia's housing backlog has grown from around 80,000 households in 2007 to approximately 300,000 housing units by 2025, particularly affecting low and middle-income earners.

    22 May 2026 · The Namibian

Thursday 21 May

  1. BoN governor warns of economic headwinds despite medium-term recovery prospects

    Bank of Namibia governor Ebson Uanguta said Namibia's economy faces headwinds from weaker diamond prices, drought and constrained fiscal space, though it is projected to gradually strengthen over the medium term supported by increased uranium production, tourism recovery, and mining and energy investment. He noted that Namibia's strategic importance presents opportunities in oil and gas, renewable energy, and mining, but cautioned that global growth is expected to remain subdued through 2026 and 2027 amid geopolitical tensions and technological shifts.

    21 May 2026 · The Namibian

  2. Fitch expects Namibia's debt at 66% of GDP by 2026

    Fitch Ratings forecasts Namibia's government debt will rise to 66% of GDP in 2026, with interest payments consuming 18% of government revenue, while affirming the country's BB- sovereign rating with a stable outlook despite high fiscal deficits and weak economic growth.

    21 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

  3. Namibia ranks second in Southern Africa startup ecosystems

    Namibia maintains second place in Southern Africa's startup ecosystem rankings after South Africa, ranking 94th globally and 10th in Africa according to the 2026 StartupBlink Global Startup Ecosystem Index, though it dropped nine places globally from 2025 despite recording 8.2% ecosystem growth.

    21 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

  4. Bank of Namibia discusses economic outlook with diplomats

    The Bank of Namibia hosted diplomats, development agencies and international stakeholders to discuss global economic developments and Namibia's economic outlook. BoN governor Ebson Uanguta said the global economy faces structural changes from geopolitical tensions, technology shifts, climate risks and supply-chain disruptions, and that central banks must strengthen areas beyond traditional mandates including digital finance and cyber resilience.

    21 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Wednesday 20 May

  1. Government directs investors to treasury bill auctions, not direct proposals

    The finance ministry's executive director clarified that the government does not accept unsolicited funding bids from private entities or agents for infrastructure projects. Instead, all government funding and development projects must follow established procedures under the National Planning Commission Act and State Finance Act.

    20 May 2026 · The Namibian

  2. Government rejects unsolicited private borrowing and financing proposals

    The Ministry of Finance says infrastructure funding must comply with existing procurement and borrowing laws and cannot be sourced through unsolicited proposals from private entities or their agents, despite acknowledging that such proposals could support national infrastructure development.

    20 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

  3. Bank of Namibia governor visits East African central banks

    Bank of Namibia governor Ebson Uanguta visited Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda to strengthen cooperation and learn from other African central banks, focusing on financial systems, digital transformation, banking supervision, oil sector management and economic policy. The Bank of Namibia signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Rwanda's central bank on economic research, financial inclusion, digital transformation, sustainable finance, innovation and staff training.

    20 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Tuesday 19 May

  1. Vehicle sales drop 20.6% in April after March surge

    Namibia's vehicle market slowed in April with total sales falling to 1,320 units from 1,662 units in March, though April sales remained 5.7% higher than April 2025. Analysts at Simonis Storm Securities attributed the decline to a natural unwinding of March's record-breaking performance, which was driven by fleet deliveries and rental sector demand, while noting the year-to-date performance remains strong at 10.6% growth.

    19 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Sunday 17 May

  1. Cabinet approves Green Industries Council for sector development

    Cabinet has officially approved the establishment of the Green Industries Council to guide development of the green industries sector, with a focus on industrialisation, economic diversification and job creation. The Council will be chaired by the Director-General of the National Planning Commission and include ministers from finance, industries, agriculture, environment, trade, urban development, the Attorney-General, and the Bank of Namibia Governor.

    17 May 2026 · Informanté

Tuesday 12 May

  1. Namfisa appoints three senior officials to strengthen operations

    The Namibia Financial Institutions Supervisory Authority (Namfisa) has announced appointments of Diana Katjiuongua as head of strategy and projects (effective 1 April), Matheus Iiyambula as FinTech specialist (effective 1 March), and one other senior official to strengthen its strategy, technology and financial innovation functions.

    12 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Saturday 9 May

  1. Private sector borrowing rises to N$123.34 billion in March

    Private sector credit rose marginally in March 2024 by N$158.4 million or 0.1% month-on-month and 4.3% year-on-year, with individuals borrowing N$2.85 billion and corporate entities N$2.18 billion over the past 12 months. The growth was driven by robust mortgage lending and a rebound in overdraft facilities, though corporate borrowing growth slowed to its weakest expansion since November 2024.

    9 May 2026 · The Namibian

Friday 8 May

  1. Standard Bank appoints Deloitte & Touche as external auditor

    Standard Bank Namibia has appointed Deloitte & Touche Namibia as its independent external auditor, replacing PricewaterhouseCoopers Namibia with effect from 29 April 2026, in compliance with Bank of Namibia's BID-10 regulation requiring external auditor rotation every 10 years.

    8 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

  2. FNB expects Bank of Namibia to keep repo rate unchanged

    FNB Namibia expects the central bank to keep the repo rate mostly unchanged in 2026 as inflation risks, weak economic growth, and exchange rate volatility pressure the economy, with the need to protect the currency peg and maintain import cover limiting scope for interest rate cuts despite mining inflows.

    8 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Thursday 7 May

  1. Private sector credit growth slows to 4.3%, household lending strengthens

    Namibia's private sector credit growth eased to 4.3% in March 2026 from 4.7% in February, with total credit at N$123.3 billion. Household borrowing gained momentum to 4.1% year-on-year—its highest in the current cycle—driven by stronger mortgage lending, instalment credit, and overdrafts, while corporate lending showed seasonal fluctuations.

    7 May 2026 · Informanté

  2. Bank of Namibia keeps repo rate at 6.50%

    The Bank of Namibia held its repo rate unchanged at 6.50% on 29 April, citing weak economic activity, slow private sector credit growth, inflation risks and rand strengthening. An FNB economist said easing credit conditions will likely be tempered by elevated borrowing costs, keeping private sector credit growth subdued.

    7 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Wednesday 6 May

  1. Government cash position hits largest deficit in recorded history

    The Bank of Namibia's March 2026 financial statement shows the government's cash position at the central bank reached -N$3.2 billion, the largest deficit in recorded history. The deficit reflects a combination of year-end spending pressures, Eurobond redemption, local bond redemptions, and lower-than-expected domestic revenue growth during the 2025/26 financial year.

    6 May 2026 · The Namibian

  2. Namibian banks serve wealthy, not working poor—by design

    An opinion piece argues that Namibia's banks function as capitalist institutions designed to allocate credit upward to the middle class and elites while excluding young people, informal workers, and the poor through credit criteria that reproduce social inequality.

    6 May 2026 · The Namibian

  3. Namibians borrow far less than CMA region peers

    Household debt in Namibia stood at 30.7% of GDP in 2024, the second-lowest in the Common Monetary Area after Lesotho's 17.2%, according to the Bank of Namibia's financial stability report. Despite N$130 billion owed overall, the central bank notes the low ratio suggests contained indebtedness, though continued monitoring is important given subdued income growth.

    6 May 2026 · The Namibian

  4. New rules require interest on late pension benefit transfers

    Pension and retirement funds must now pay interest to members if benefits are not transferred within 60 days of request, under regulations from the Financial Institutions and Markets Act 2021 that came into effect on 1 May. Employers must also pay retirement contributions on time or face interest charges, with both employers and their directors liable for unpaid contributions.

    6 May 2026 · Windhoek Observer

Bank of Namibia — Namibian press coverage · Namibia Minute