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Afribank: Heading for the top of the ladder

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By Omoh Gabriel, Business Editor
Afribank is one of the survivors of the con-solidation exercise in the banking industry. The bank having merged its operation with its affiliate bank, Afribank International Merchant Bankers is forging ahead with great strides. The bank as a result of the consolidation exercise formally took over assets of the former Lead Bank and Assurance Bank. The take-over followed the announcement of the Bank as the winner of the bid for the assets of the two former banks by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) under a Purchase & Assumption transaction (P & A). The acquisition of the former banks was one of the key initiatives to competitively position Afribank in the industry. Accounts of the former depositors of the banks are being integrated into the operations of Afribank.
The financial Accounts released by the bank for the year ended March 2006 have proven beyond doubt that the 46 year-old bank is on the right track to the top. The fundamentals of the Accounts showed that the business strategies and market re-engineering initiatives of the Bank deployed as part of its consolidation plan delivered on its promises.
Despite the challenges that faced the banking industry, Afribank not only grew its fundamental indices, it also showed robust prospects to deliver superior returns and retain its legacy as an enduring financial institution. The Bank reaped from its strategic re-positioning and succeeded in growing vital performance indices.
The Bank’s Balance Sheet recorded a significant improvement in the year as it rose to N131.27billion from N95.75 billion in the corresponding period in the previous year, representing an increase of 37 per cent. Deposits and other Accounts grew by 53.93 per cent from N61.60 billion in the previous year to N94.82 billion in 2006.
EARNINGS AND PROFITABILITY
The Gross Earnings of the bank rose from N12.49 billion to N14.65. The Bank posted N3.70 billion Profit Before Exceptional Item and Taxation as against N530.50 million in the previous year, representing a huge 596.4 per cent increase. The sharp rise in PBT was largely made possible by efficient use of assets and cost effectiveness in the operations of the bank. Net interest earning ratio grew to 75 per cent from 72 per cent. This shows that the bank’s risk asset managers were relatively more efficient in 2006. Non-performing loans was 24 per cent declining from 32 per cent. Interest earnings accounted for about 71 per cent. This strategy impacted positively on the bank’s bottom line because of the efficiency in the Bank’s management of its risk assets. Earnings per share increased substantially from 5 Kobo in 2005 to 52 Kobo in 2006, the best in the last 4 years. This underlies the quantum leap in performance.
LIQUIDITY
With adjusted cash ratio of 48 per cent in 2006 against 37 per cent in 2005, the bank’s liquidity ratio is impressive. The adjusted liquidity ratio increased marginally from 22 per cent to 23 per cent. The implication of the adjusted liquidity ratio is that the bank’s specified liquid assets cover almost 73 per cent of volatile deposit liabilities. Those specified liquid assets are cash and related items, deposits with banks, operating balances with CBN, treasury bills, etc. At this level, it is adequate and over and above the specified liquidity ratio of 40 per cent. With this high level of liquidity, the Bank’s dependency on inter-bank dropped from 4 per cent in 2005 to 3 per cent in 2006.
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
The bank maintained a very good safety margin in its capital adequacy measures in 2006. Risk weighted assets ratio in 2006 was 39 per cent. The implication is that the bank can prudently expand its risk asset base by more than 3 ½ times without compromising the safety of counter parties. However, the level this year was below last year’s 47 per cent. This was because part of the bank’s safety net was used up to increase risk assets, which generated more profit for the bank.
The Bank’s shareholders’ funds moved up from N21 billion in 2005 to N27.059 billion. Tier one capital to net loan was 68 per cent in 2006 while tier one capital to deposit liabilities was 25 per cent in 2006. These are comfortable figures. The minimum tier one to net loan is 10 per cent. This shows that the bank’s capital base (Using the conventional measures) is comfortable. However, with increasing competition in the market, the bank needs to source for more funds.
MANAGEMENT EFFICIENCY
Staff productivity in the bank rose considerably. On the average, in terms of Gross Earnings, a staff accounted for N4.15 million in 2005. This figure increased to N4.9 million in 2006. Net productivity also increased from N85,000.00 to N831,000.00. The bank made considerable impact in the level of efficiency in the management of its expenses. Managerial Efficiency in the area of expenses increased from a measure of 2 per cent in 2005 to 25 per cent in 2006. Remarkable improvement in the management of the Bank’s cost of fund led to increase in its net interest earnings. The Bank also recorded remarkable improvement in the management of its administrative expenses. Success in both areas made the expense efficiency ratio to increase significantly from 2 per cent to 25 per cent.
DIVERSIFICATION
To grow its presence in the specialised financial services sector, Afribank has put up elaborate plan to establish more subsidiaries in addition to the existing ones. The Bank recently established Afribank Capital Markets to handle capital market operations. The establishment of the new subsidiary was consistent with the bank’s overall objective of creating a one-stop financial institution. The company has effectively taken off and would leverage on business opportunities in investment banking. This development would free Afribank to concentrate on its core businesses. Afribank Registrar‚Äôs Department was recently upgraded to a full-fledged subsidiary under the name ‚Äî Afribank Registrar‚Äôs Limited. The Company is adequately equipped to handle big registrar services. It is already working for many big quoted companies.
CAPITAL BASE
Afribank remains a major player in the industry. To achieve this, the Bank is putting finishing touches to plans that will see it increase its capital base to a competitive level. It intends to access capital market as part of its long-term plan to boost its capital base from its present position to N100 billion.
SIGNIFICANT DEVELOPMENTS
The Bank has initiated several strategic moves to make the Bank a frontline financial institution locally and globally in the post consolidation era. The measures being employed are geared toward building profit capacity in the medium to long term, increasing clientele base, increasing investment in strategic sectors, improving efficiency, diversification of operations, empowerment of staff, streamlining and restructuring of operations among others. The desire is to make Afribank a topmost financial institution in all the essential indices.
Building Profit Capacity In The Medium To Long Term
Afribank investments in major sectors are geared towards keying in into such businesses and redirecting the flow of patronage to Afribank on a fairly long-term basis. The Bank’s strategic investment in African Petroleum Plc has positioned it for emerging opportunities in the energy sector and enables it to reap the huge collateral benefits of opening of LCs, cash collections and a host of other businesses offered by the investment.
Afribank has entered into strategic alliance with Mr. Biggs. To date, it has financed 30 outlets and all cash evacuation is handled by Afribank so are all other attendant businesses.The Bank has acquired the private sector deposits of Lead Bank and Assurance Bank. This immediately beefs up the bank’s deposit base and asset base. Also, through this strategy, all the 35 branches of Lead and Assurance banks have automatically become Afribank branches. Out of the 35, 27 branches have been delivered to Afribank. Apart from this, the bank will in the near future open 49 new branches. This will bring total branch network to 251.
Afribank’s aim is to enlarge its market share with unique market penetration strategies with clear emphasis on areas the Bank has comparative advantages. The move is to increase the worth of the brand and retain a decent market share.
The bank’s strategies are perfect brand roll out, speed to market, cost efficiency, accelerating service delivery time by 100 per cent, total customer relationship management with 24-hour access and control, total quality assurance, and comprehensiveness of IT. From day one, all the bank’s new branches will be linked on-line real-time.
Afribank recently engaged in information technology system upgrade to increase the Bank’s stake in e-banking business. The bank intends to drive its post-consolidation era with its state-of-the-art banking application, which will enable it serve the needs of its growing local and global clientele. The Bank has deployed Automated Teller Machine (ATM), Africash, strategic branches and centres in major cities.
The Bank also took advantage of the liberalization of the foreign exchange policy of CBN. The Bank now offers Bureau De Change services in most of its branches nationwide. This has increased the bank’s capacity in the foreign exchange business. All these are aimed at enhancing shareholders value.
Strategic Alliances
Afribank entered into a business relationship with Industrial and Commercial Bank of China to facilitate international payments and trade services between the two countries. The partnership was initiated to eliminate bottlenecks and problems associated with current means of payment, settlement for international businesses and remittance between customers in Nigeria and Asian countries.The alliance has positioned Afribank to offer specialized services to the Chinese Community in Nigeria and Nigerians doing businesses in China. The United Nations Development (UNDP) early this year appointed Afribank as a sole paying institution for the Population Census nationwide. The Bank satisfactorily executed the national assignment to the admiration of the local and international communities.

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Afreximbank successfully closed its second Samurai Bond transactions, raising JPY 81.8bn or $527m

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African Export-Import Bank said it has successfully closed its second Samurai bond transaction, securing a total of JPY 81.8 billion (approx. USD 527 million) through Regular and Retail Samurai Bonds offerings.

The execution surpasses the Bank’s 2024 debut issuance size, attracting orders from more than 100 institutional and retail investors, marking a renewed demonstration of strong Japanese investor confidence in the Bank’s credit and its growing presence in the yen capital markets.

On 18 November, Afreximbank priced a JPY 45.8 billion 3-year tranche in the Regular Samurai market following a comprehensive sequence of investor engagement activities leveraging Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD9), including Non-Deal Roadshows (NDRs) in Tokyo, Kanazawa, Kyoto, Shiga and Osaka, a Global Investor Call, and a two-day soft-sounding process which tested investor appetite across 2.5-, 3-, 5-, 7-, and 10-year maturities.

With market expectations of a Bank of Japan interest rate increase, investor demand concentrated in shorter tenors, resulting in a focused 3-year tranche during official marketing.

The tranche attracted strong participation from asset managers (22.3%), life insurers (15.3%), regional corporates, and high-net-worth investors (39.7%).

Concurrently, Afreximbank priced its second Retail Samurai bond on 18 November, a JPY 36.0 billion 3-year tranche, more than double the inaugural JPY 14.1 billion Retail Samurai issuance completed in November 2024.

The 2025 Retail Samurai bond also marks the first Retail Samurai bond issued in Japan in 2025.

Following the amendment to Afreximbank’s shelf registration on 7 November 2025, SMBC Nikko conducted an extensive seven-business-day demand survey through its nationwide branch network, followed by a six-business-day bond offering period.

The offering benefited from strong visibility supported by Afreximbank’s investor engagement across the country, including the Bank’s participation at TICAD9, where Afreximbank hosted the Africa Finance Seminar to introduce Multinational Development Bank’s mandate in Africa and its credit profile to key Japanese institutional investors.

MBC Nikko Securities Inc. acted as Sole Lead Manager and Bookrunner for both the Regular and Retail Samurai transactions. Chandi Mwenebungu, Afreximbank’s Managing Director, Treasury & Markets and Group Treasurer, commented:

“We are pleased with the successful completion of our second Samurai bond transactions, which marked a significant increase from our inaugural Retail Samurai bond in 2024, and which reflect the growing depth of our relationship with Japanese investors.

The strong demand, both in the Regular and Retail offerings, demonstrates sustained confidence in Afreximbank’s credit and mandate.

We remain committed to deepening our engagement in the Samurai market through regular investor activities and continued collaboration with our Japanese partners.”

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Ecobank unveils SME bazaar: a festive marketplace for local entrepreneurs

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Ecobank Nigeria, a member of Africa’s leading pan-African banking group, has announced the launch of the Ecobank SME Bazaar—a two-weekend festive marketplace designed to celebrate local creativity, empower entrepreneurs, and give Lagos residents a premium shopping experience this Detty December. The Bazaar will hold on 29–30 November and 6–7 December at the Ecobank Pan African Centre (EPAC), Ozumba Mbadiwe Road, Victoria Island, Lagos. Speaking ahead of the event, Omoboye Odu, Head of SMEs, Ecobank Nigeria, reaffirmed the bank’s commitment to supporting small and medium-sized businesses, describing them as the heartbeat of Nigeria’s economy. She explained that the Ecobank SME Bazaar was created to enhance visibility for entrepreneurs, expand market access, and support sustainable business growth.
According to her, “This isn’t just a market—it’s a vibrant hub of culture, commerce, and connection. From fresh farm produce to trendy fashion, handcrafted pieces, lifestyle products, and delicious food and drinks, the Ecobank SME Bazaar promises an unforgettable experience for both shoppers and participating SMEs. Whether you’re shopping for festive gifts, hunting for unique finds, or soaking in the Detty December energy, this is the place to be.” Ms. Odu added that participating businesses will enjoy increased brand exposure, deeper customer engagement, and meaningful networking opportunities—making the Bazaar a strong platform for both festive-season sales and long-term business growth. The event is powered by Ecobank in partnership with TKD Farms, Eko Marche, Leyyow, and other SME-focused organisations committed to building sustainable enterprises.

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16 banks have recapitalised before deadline—CBN

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The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has said that16 banks have so far met the new capital requirements for their various licences, some four months before the March 31, 2026 deadline. The apex bank also indicated that 27 other banks have raised capital through various methods in one of the most extensive financial sector reforms since 2004. Addressing journalists at the end of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja, CBN Governor Mr Olayemi Cardoso said the banking recapitalisation was going on orderly, consistent with the regulator’s expectations. He said, “We are monitoring developments, and indications show the process is moving in the right direction.” Nigeria has 44 deposit-taking banks, including seven commercial banks with international authorisation, 15 with national authorisation, four with regional authorisation, four non-interest banks, six merchant banks, seven financial holding companies and one representative office.
Cardoso explained that eight commercial banks had met the N500 billion capital requirement as of July 22, 2024, rising to 14 by September of the same year. The number has now increased to 16 as the industry continues to race toward full compliance. He said that the reforms would reinforce the resilience of Nigerian banks both within the country and across the continent. “We are building a financial system that will be fit for purpose for the years ahead. Many Nigerian banks now operate across Africa and have been innovative across different markets. These new buffers will better equip them to manage risks in the multiple jurisdictions where they operate,” Cardoso said. According to him, the reforms would strengthen the financial sector’s capability to support households and businesses. He said, “Ultimately, this benefits Nigerians—our traders, our businesses and our citizens—who operate across those regions. “It should give everyone comfort to know that Nigerian banks with deep local understanding are present to support them. Commercial banks are also creating their own buffers through the ongoing recapitalisation.”
He added that the apex bank considered several factors in determining the new capital thresholds, including prevailing macroeconomic conditions, stress test results and the need for stronger risk buffers. He reassured on the regulator’s commitment to strict oversight as the consolidation progresses. “We will rigorously enforce our ‘fit and proper’ criteria for prospective new shareholders, senior management, and board members of banks, and proactively monitor the integrity of financial statements, adequacy of financial resources, and fair valuation of banks’ post-merger balance sheets,” Cardoso said. He said the CBN remained confident that the banking system would emerge stronger at the conclusion of the recapitalization exercise, with institutions better prepared to support Nigeria’s economic transformation Banks have up till March 31, 2026 to beef up their minimum capital base to the new standard set by the apex bank. Under the new minimum capital base, CBN uses a distinctive definition of the new minimum capital base for each category of banks as the addition of share capital and share premium, as against the previous use of shareholders’ funds.
While most banks have shareholders’ funds in excess of the new minimum capital base, their share premium and share capital significantly fall short of the new minimum definition. The CBN had in March 2024 released its circular on review of minimum capital requirement for commercial, merchant and non-interest banks. The apex bank increased the new minimum capital for commercial banks with international affiliations, otherwise known as mega banks, to N500 billion; commercial banks with national authorisation, N200 billion and commercial banks with regional license, N50 billion. Others included merchant banks, N50 billion; non-interest banks with national license, N20 billion and non-interest banks with regional license will now have N10 billion minimum capital. The 24-month timeline for compliance ends on March 31, 2026. Under the guidelines for the recapitalisation exercise, banks are expected to subject their new equity funds to capital verification before the clearance of the allotment proposal and release of the funds to the bank for onwards completion of the offer process and addition of the new capital to its capital base. The CBN is the final signatory in a tripartite capital verification committee that included the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC). The committee is saddled with scrutinising new funds being raised by banks under the ongoing banking sector recapitalisation exercise.

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