Tag: Nigerian banks

  • AI Poised to Revolutionize Risk Pricing and Fraud Detection in Nigerian Banking

    AI Poised to Revolutionize Risk Pricing and Fraud Detection in Nigerian Banking

    According to The Guardian Nigeria, financial experts are forecasting a major shift in the banking sector as Artificial Intelligence (AI) takes a lead role in real-time risk pricing. Omolade Oke, a prominent industry analyst, stated that AI will soon become the primary tool for fraud detection and personalized liquidity management across major Nigerian banks.

    This technological evolution is expected to significantly reduce the rate of non-performing loans by providing more accurate credit scoring models. Banks are already increasing their tech budgets to integrate these AI solutions, aiming to compete with the rising dominance of fintech platforms.

    BusinessDay supported this outlook, noting that ‘AI will revolutionise risk pricing’ and modernize how banks interact with their customers. Vanguard also reported on the trend, emphasizing that ‘Cardoso’s brilliant monetary management’ is creating the stability needed for such long-term tech investments.

    Echotitbits take: AI is the ‘silver bullet’ for Nigeria’s high credit risk environment. If banks can successfully automate fraud detection, we might finally see a reduction in the massive interest rate spreads that currently make borrowing so expensive for small businesses.

    Source: The Guardian — https://guardian.ng/interview/ai-will-revolutionise-risk-pricing-fraud-detection-and-personalised-liquidity-management-in-real-time-says-omolade-oke/
    The Guardian January 3, 2026

    Photo Credit: The Guardian

  • Naira Opens 2026 With Strong Gains as Reform Confidence Grows

    Naira Opens 2026 With Strong Gains as Reform Confidence Grows

    Figures cited by Daily Post show that the Nigerian Naira began the 2026 trading year on a positive note, appreciating to N1,430.84 against the U.S. dollar in the official market. This represents a 0.34% gain compared to the closing rate of N1,435.75 recorded on December 31, 2025.

    The currency’s performance is being linked to renewed investor confidence following the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) aggressive monetary tightening and structural reforms in the foreign exchange market. Market analysts suggest that the stability seen in the opening days of the year could signal a less volatile period for the local currency.

    In its first trading assessment of the year, BusinessDay noted that the ‘Naira extends rally in first trading day of 2026,’ as supply liquidity showed signs of improvement. Meanwhile, The Nation reported that the apex bank is betting on ‘structural changes in oil, tax, and foreign exchange markets to sustain growth and disinflation’ throughout the fiscal year.

    Echotitbits take: This early gain is a psychological victory for the CBN’s ‘orthodox’ monetary policy. If the bank can maintain this trajectory without depleting reserves too quickly, we may see a gradual convergence between the official and parallel market rates by the second quarter.

    Source: Nigeria Housing Market — https://www.nigeriahousingmarket.com/news/naira-outlook-2026-analysts-project-stronger-fx-stability-as-fundamentals-improve
    Nigeria Housing Market January 3, 2026

    Photo Credit: Nigeria Housing Market

  • CBN outlook: bank recapitalisation may keep markets bullish—but concentration risks loom

    CBN outlook: bank recapitalisation may keep markets bullish—but concentration risks loom

    2026-01-02 06:00:00
    In an update published by Punch, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) projects that Nigeria’s capital market could remain upbeat in 2026, helped by banking-sector recapitalisation, improved investor sentiment and pro‑growth policies.

    The CBN’s broader outlook links market sentiment to macro stability—exchange-rate management, inflation expectations and the credibility of policy signals—suggesting that a cleaner macro picture could support risk appetite.

    But the outlook also flags potential downsides, including investor fatigue if bank capital raises crowd out other issuers.

    The Guardian, referencing the CBN outlook, notes the market is expected to stay “bullish, supported by bank recapitalisation” and rising confidence. In an analysis of recapitalisation dynamics, a separate market brief warns that “despite the bullish momentum, the capital market could face higher concentration risk” as bank issuance dominates.

    Echotitbits take: Recapitalisation can be a turbo‑charge for bank resilience—but it can also soak up liquidity and attention. Watch how quickly banks stagger rights issues/placements, whether pension funds rebalance, and if non‑bank corporates still find room to raise long‑term capital without being priced out.

    Source: The Punch — January 2, 2026 (https://punchng.com/bank-recapitalisation-to-drive-bullish-capital-market-says-cbn/)
    The Punch 2026-01-02

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • FirstBank hits ₦500bn recapitalisation mark as market eyes the next wave of bank fundraising

    FirstBank hits ₦500bn recapitalisation mark as market eyes the next wave of bank fundraising

    2026-01-02 06:00:00
    According to Punch, FirstBank says it has completed a ₦500 billion capital raise, positioning it to meet the CBN’s new minimum capital thresholds and to compete more aggressively in a tighter regulatory environment.

    The fundraising is being framed as a resilience move—strengthening buffers and supporting growth—while also sending a signalling effect to investors ahead of the broader recapitalisation race across the sector.

    Market watchers say the milestone could influence peers’ timelines and pricing, as more banks line up with rights issues, private placements and other instruments.

    Premium Times reports FirstBank “successfully completes ₦500bn capital raise,” noting the wider recapitalisation push and investor attention. The Sun similarly says the bank has “met the ₦500 billion minimum capital base required by the Central Bank of Nigeria,” highlighting the compliance angle.

    Echotitbits take: Completing early matters—capital raising gets tougher when several banks are in the market at once. Watch whether FirstBank’s move shifts competitive pressure to mid‑tier lenders, and whether pricing dynamics start to favour banks with stronger retail funding and clearer growth narratives.

    Source: The Punch — January 2, 2026 (https://punchng.com/firstbank-completes-n500bn-capital-raise/)
    The Punch 2026-01-02

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • Nigeria’s Tax Agencies Can’t Just Debit Your Account — Oyedele Warns

    Nigeria’s Tax Agencies Can’t Just Debit Your Account — Oyedele Warns

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-25 09:00:00

    According to The Punch, Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee chair Taiwo Oyedele says tax authorities cannot simply “dip hands” into bank accounts without going through due legal process. He explained that while a “power of substitution” process exists, it is not a shortcut to bypass the courts.

    Oyedele said the typical pathway requires an assessment, notice, and (where disputed) a legal determination before any enforcement action against a taxpayer’s funds. He framed the issue as a rule-of-law matter that protects both citizens and businesses from arbitrary action.

    The comment comes amid recurring complaints from individuals and SMEs about sudden debits and bank restrictions linked to tax compliance disputes, with Oyedele urging taxpayers to understand their rights and challenge improper actions through lawful channels.

    Separately, BusinessDay quoted Oyedele saying, “Nobody will debit your bank accounts without a court order,” while TheCable reported him stressing, “Even if you have N1 billion in your account… nobody can debit your bank account without a court order.”

    Echotitbits take: This is an important signal to calm public anxiety around tax enforcement. Watch what FIRS and state IRS agencies do next—policy clarity is one thing; operational compliance across banks and tax offices is another. Expect more taxpayer education, and possibly stronger complaint-resolution channels, if the reforms team wants legitimacy.

    Source: The Punch — December 25, 2025 (https://punchng.com/tax-agency-cant-debit-accounts-without-court-order-oyedele/)

    The Punch 2025-12-25

  • FCMB targets a ₦400bn capital raise as Nigerian banks brace for tougher buffers

    FCMB targets a ₦400bn capital raise as Nigerian banks brace for tougher buffers

    Photo credit: THISDAYLIVE — FCMB logo

    2025-12-20 12:20:00

    According to Punch, FCMB Group is preparing a major capital-raising programme reportedly up to ₦400 billion as the sector responds to recapitalisation pressures and risk-buffer expectations.

    The move reflects a wider banking reality: growth ambitions now require bigger cushions amid FX volatility, higher compliance costs and tougher risk management demands.

    Investors will be watching the structure—rights issue, public offer, private placement or a mix—because dilution and pricing will shape sentiment.

    In the broader market, large raises can act as a confidence test: strong subscription signals trust in earnings outlook, while weak uptake raises questions about macro risks and sector fundamentals.

    An NGX filing referenced shareholder authority to “raise up to N400,000,000,000,” aligning with the reported target.

    Leadership also reported FCMB’s recapitalisation-driven raise plan as part of a broader sector-wide capital push.

    Echotitbits take: Timing and pricing will matter. If offers are priced aggressively, investors may demand clearer earnings visibility. Also watch for consolidation pressure among mid-tier banks—recapitalisation cycles often trigger mergers and strategic exits.

    Source: THISDAYLIVE — December 20, 2025 http://thisdaylive.com/2025/12/19/fcmb-group-secures-shareholders-approval-to-raise-n400bn-fresh-capital/

  • FG’s electronic transfer levy revenue doubles to N360bn

    FG’s electronic transfer levy revenue doubles to N360bn

    Federal revenue from the electronic money transfer levy hit about N360.29 billion between January and October 2025, more than doubling the comparable 2024 figure, according to an internal FIRS document cited by Punch. The year-on-year jump suggests increased taxable transfer volumes and/or stronger compliance, with the report noting monthly gains across the period. The data adds another angle to ongoing debates about the balance between broadening non-oil revenue and the public sensitivity around transaction-related taxes. Source: Punch, December 7, 2025.