Analysts Anticipate Pressure on Nigerian Banks’ Revenue

Analysts Anticipate Pressure on Nigerian Banks’ Revenue

Nigeria’s banks are expected to take a big hit to revenues and face rising borrowing costs this year as Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) measures to support the naira squeeze lenders already hit by fallout from coronavirus and the oil price shock, analysts told Reuters.

Banks in Africa’s largest economy – a mainstay for equity and fixed income frontier market investors – have learned to navigate challenges in a country that has long struggled with dollar shortages and multiple exchange rates.

But the prospect of anaemic growth, dwindling oil revenues, declining remittances and dollar shortages exacerbated by the central bank’s latest action aimed at curbing naira liquidity and currency speculation are putting pressure on lending by banks and the quality of existing assets.

The central bank has sucked as much as N900 billion out of the local banking system since raising the cash reserve ratio (CRR) by five per cent to 27.5 per cent in January, according to analysts’ calculations.

“General sentiment in the markets is that CRR debits are carried out quite close to FX auctions to prevent the banks from presenting large ticket FX demands at auctions,” said Nkemdilim Nwadialor at Tellimer Capital.

Those debits also hamper wider lending, going against central bank measures of lowering banks’ loan to deposit ratios, she said.

“Banks are dealing with slow growth, fall in lending, a lack of forex in the market and asset quality issues,” senior director EMEA bank ratings at Fitch, Mahin Dissanayake said.

He expects banks’ revenues to drop at least 20 per cent this year, though he did not expect any to make a loss.

Some banks had already indicated they expect a hit.

In April, mid-tier lender Fidelity Bank had warned 2020 profits would drop by 15 per cent.

Bankers said lenders were relying on existing customers to weather the storm as new lending looked risky with the economy expected to tip back into recession.

Fitch predicts impaired loan ratios will rise sharply in 2020 with Nigerian banks the most exposed to stress in the oil sector compared to their peers in emerging markets elsewhere.

Nwadialor expected a, “significant pick-up” of non-performing loan ratios from 6.6 per cent in the first quarter to an average of 10 per cent for the full year – double the central bank’s benchmark.

Some banks have already announced plans to tackle this. Mid-tier lender FCMB plans to complete a restructuring of half its loan book at the end of April. A central bank policy maker predicted last month that banks would restructure over a third of loans.

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