Banks Brace for COVID-19, Oil Price Crash

Banks Brace for COVID-19, Oil Price Crash

Nume Ekeghe with agency report

Nigerian banks still trying to recover from an economic contraction in 2016 now face a triple whammy of COVID-19 plunging oil prices and volatile markets that could further delay progress.

The 2014 collapse in crude dried up foreign exchange in Africa’s biggest producer of the commodity, resulting in the first recession in 25 years and a currency devaluation, a report by Bloomberg stated. Then, businesses struggled to make repayments, heaping piles of toxic loans onto the books of lenders.

The conditions, “pose downside risks to the profitability of banks in 2020, mainly given the likely impact on asset quality and loan growth,” a banking analyst at Lagos-based Chapel Hill Denham, Aderonke Akinsola said.

“Capital adequacy ratios of banks are more at risk amid the current macro realities.”

The central bank on Monday announced the extension of a one-year moratorium on the repayment of all principal debt repayments among a range of measures to buffer the economy against the impact of the coronavirus.

Oil has slumped to around $31 a barrel, below the government’s $57 target, amid a price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia, and as widening global efforts to fight the spread of the coronavirus risks triggering a drop in demand.

If oil prices remain at current levels for the next two quarters, Nigerian banks’ problem-loan ratios could rise beyond the initial expectation of six to eight per cent, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

The Central Bank of Nigeria recently disclosed that banking industry capital adequacy ratio, liquidity and other prudential ratios have remain within desired levels, whilst the non-performing loans’ (NPLs) ratio in particular, reduced further to 6.1 percent as at end December 2019, from 6.6 percent at end-October 2019.

Most Nigerian lenders have their oil exposure hedged at $40-$50 a barrel, which will mean they would have to make provisions if prices remain where they are, said Emmanuel Adeleke, a banking analyst at ARM Investment Managers in Lagos. He, “expects flat growth in earnings for most banks this year.”

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