The NCC said, as of Tuesday, only nine out of 18 financial institutions failed to comply with the directives in the second joint circular of the Central Bank of Nigeria.
Also sealed off were Chicken Republic, Forte Oil, New Nigeria Development Company, GT Bank parking lot and A.G. Leventis building.
The prosecutor, Insp John Iberedem, told the court that the defendant and his cohorts, at large, allegedly committed the offences on different occasions.
“This direct engagement helps us understand and address customer concerns,” Mrs Edun said.
FCMB said the Flexxtern Programme “directly addresses the challenges faced by fresh graduates.”
Other banks whose records are to be scrutinised by the committee include Keystone, Zenith Bank, Sterling Bank, Polaris Bank, FCMB, Ecobank and Wema.
The loans, which can be repaid over three months, aim to make education more affordable and accessible.
Specifically, the market capitalisation, which opened at N56.158 trillion, rose by N14 billion or 0.02 per cent to settle at N56.172 trillion.
The CBN-MPC on Tuesday increased the benchmark interest rate by 150 basis points to 26.25 per cent from 24.75 per cent set in March.
The market capitalisation gained N1.82 trillion or 93 per cent to close at N48.139 trillion, as against N46.316 trillion posted on Monday.
