Banking
UBA to Sustain Prudent Risk Management Practices—Uzoka
By Modupe Gbadeyanka
The Group Managing Director of United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc, Mr Kennedy Uzoka, has assured shareholders and stakeholders of the bank that the prudent management practices, which have made the lender to churn out good results, would be sustained.
Mr Uzoka said this while commenting on the first quarter results of the company for the period ended March 31, 2020, where the financial institution recorded double-digit improvement across its major income lines.
The bank chief said he was happy with UBA’s performance in the first three months of this year despite the challenging business environment.
“We are pleased with our top and bottom lines in the first quarter of 2020, delivering N147.2 billion in gross earnings and profit before tax of N32.7 billion.
“The double-digit growth in the topline testifies to the resilience of our business model as a group, even as the 17 percent growth in our fees and commission income underscores our diversified business model, enabling us to deliver best value to our stakeholders, even in tough macroeconomic scenarios,” he said.
According to him, “The bank leveraged on modest growth in both interest and non-interest income as well as increased efficiency to deliver an impressive 8.5 percent year-on-year growth in profit before tax in the first three months of 2020, to N32.7 billion compared with N30.2 billion recorded in the first quarter of 2019.
“Again, UBA sustained its strong profitability recording an annualized 20 percent Return on Average Equity (RoAE),” Mr Uzoka stated.
The GMD noted that “the recent successes we have recorded in all our business segments, especially our retail and electronic banking businesses within the period” have been encouraging.
He said in Q1 2020, retail deposits accounted for 72 percent of customer deposits even as cost-of-funds moderated to 3.3 percent.
“We will continue to grow market share in all our markets, whilst maintaining cost discipline across our businesses, driving efficiency in our processes using best-rated technology,” he assured.
Speaking on customers’ growing concerns on banking services during the lockdown due to the coronavirus pandemic, Mr Uzoka explained that the bank has put in place various strategic channels to ensure that customers transactions are effectively carried out with ease.
“In response to the spread of COVID-19 several national governments have announced a partial or total lock down in a number of our markets, post Q1 2020.
“Fortunately, we have built robust electronic channel platforms to enable us effectively serve our customers from the convenience of their homes.
“Despite the lock down, our banking channels have remained open to our customers 24/7, even as we continue to align and adapt our operating model to ensure we service our customers excellently and safely,” he said.
Mr Uzoka noted that as economies and businesses adjust to the headwinds occasioned by the novel COVID-19 pandemic, the bank has been identifying emerging strategic opportunities arising from this and positioning to take full advantage of this to delight customers and create value for stakeholders.
“We also remain committed to our prudent risk management practices, as profitable growth and good asset quality remain our priority in 2020,” he stated.
UBA, driven by a year-on-year growth in interest income, recorded a 11.8 percent year-on-year growth in gross earnings to close at N147.2 billion for the three months period ending March 2020, compared with N131.7 billion recorded in the first three months of the year 2019.
The bank’s total assets also rose by 13.4 percent to N6.4 trillion in the period under review in contrast to N5.6 trillion recorded at the end of the 2019 financial; while shareholders’ funds grew to N612.6 billion from N597.9 billion in the same period.
Banking
Ecobank Floats $450m Nature Bond for Sustainable Agric Businesses, Others
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
The world’s first ICMA commercial bank-issued Nature Bond has been launched by Ecobank Group to mobilise global capital for the protection of Africa’s natural ecosystems.
The debt instrument, up to $450 million, will be tradable on the London Stock Exchange (LSE), creating a new route for international and African capital to protect Africa’s biodiversity.
The bond will support African farmers, sustainable agriculture businesses and water systems, protecting some of the planet’s most important ecosystems.
Africa is home to some of the world’s most important natural capital, including arable land, tropical forests, freshwater systems and biodiversity across hundreds of millions of hectares. But, until now, private nature capital has not flowed to Africa at the scale the continent’s ecological significance warrants in global ecological resilience. Despite hosting 25 per cent of global biodiversity, Africa receives less than 3 per cent of nature finance.
Ecobank’s Nature Bond is a direct response to this gap. It will support smallholder farmers adopting sustainable agricultural practices, agri-processors with verified deforestation-free supply chains, and water infrastructure protecting freshwater ecosystems relied upon by millions of people.
Unlike many conservation-focused financing vehicles, Ecobank’s Nature Bond channels capital directly through Africa’s real economy — financing businesses and communities whose day-to-day activities shape environmental outcomes at scale.
The investments will be made in 24 markets, with significant deployment in biodiversity-priority countries such as Côte d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso and Ghana. Importantly, 81 per cent of the eligible lending pool is allocated to countries where agricultural land-use change is the primary driver of biodiversity loss, helping direct capital to the areas where it can have the greatest environmental impact.
The framework also incorporates independent monitoring and verification mechanisms, including deforestation screening and supply chain traceability requirements, helping ensure that financed activities deliver measurable nature-positive outcomes. Every eligible loan carries seven independently verified sustainability conditions.
A Nature Bond, under the ICMA secondary designation, requires proceeds to actively contribute to nature-positive outcomes, including transforming economic activities to reduce the drivers of nature loss at scale.
The Nature Bond was designed to reach those that conservation-focused instruments were not designed to serve – farmers, agri-processors and water operators whose daily activities collectively determine ecosystem outcomes.
While green bonds typically finance a broad range of environmental objectives, the Nature Bond designation focuses the use of proceeds specifically on nature-related outcomes, including biodiversity, sustainable agriculture, land use and water infrastructure.
“This transaction is a defining moment for African sustainable finance. Investors did not just support this bond. They demanded more of it, allowing us to increase the size and tighten pricing.
“We are not a bank that simply labels bonds. We have spent four years building the systems, governance and accountability needed to make nature finance credible and scalable in Africa.
“This bond is ultimately about the farmers, cooperatives and communities whose livelihoods depend on healthy ecosystems,” the chief executive of Ecobank Group, Mr Jeremy Awori, stated.
On her part, the Head of Sustainability and ESRM at Ecobank Transnational Incorporated, Ms Rachael Antwi, said, “Nature finance will only scale in Africa if it is practical, measurable and connected to the real economy. This bond is designed to do that by linking international capital to eligible lending for sustainable agriculture and water infrastructure across 24 countries. It reflects the systems and standards Ecobank has built to ensure nature finance supports both environmental resilience and the communities whose livelihoods depend on healthy ecosystems.”
Business Post gathered that the $450 million bond was priced following strong investor demand, with the final orderbook exceeding $1.36 billion, almost 400 per cent of the original target size. The strength of demand enabled Ecobank to increase the transaction by $100 million and tighten pricing by 50 basis points.
The transaction attracted support from both international and African investors, demonstrating Ecobank’s unique ability to mobilise capital across global and African markets.
Banking
Abbey Mortgage Bank Gets Green Light to Switch to Commercial Banking
By Adedapo Adesanya
One of Nigeria’s real estate lenders, Abbey Mortgage Bank Plc, has secured approval from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to convert into a regional commercial bank, marking a shift from its current status as a primary mortgage institution.
The development was disclosed in a regulatory filing, signalling a strategic change that will see the bank expand into broader commercial banking activities beyond housing finance.
The conversion is expected to take effect later this year, subject to the completion of regulatory and operational requirements, including system upgrades and restructuring.
The move comes amid ongoing changes in Nigeria’s banking sector, where institutions are seeking to strengthen capital bases and diversify operations in response to evolving regulatory and market conditions.
At its recent Annual General Meeting (AGM), its board gave approval to raise N100 billion in additional capital aimed at helping the company achieve its next growth phase.
Shareholders authorised the lender to raise the funds through various funding instruments, including shares, bonds, commercial papers, loans, and other securities, subject to regulatory approvals.
The directors were also allowed to raise fresh equity capital of up to N65.547 billion by way of private placement of 26,562,647,265 ordinary shares of 50 Kobo each at N2.43 per share, subject to regulatory approvals.
In addition, shareholders approved the increase in the company’s issued share capital from N5,076,923,077 divided into 10,153,846,154 of 50 Kobo each to N18,358,246,709.50 by the creation of up to 26,562,647,265 ordinary shares of 50 Kobo each, such new shares to rank pari passu in all respects with the existing ordinary shares in the capital of the bank.
Banking
CBN Scraps Form A for Domiciliary Account Remittances
By Adedapo Adesanya
In a significant easing of foreign exchange (FX) procedures, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has exempted domiciliary account holders from obtaining Form A before making eligible foreign remittances.
The provision is contained in the newly issued Forex Manual (4th Edition), which took effect on June 1, 2026. Under the new framework, customers using funds already held in their domiciliary accounts can make remittances without processing Form A.
The change is expected to shorten processing times for legitimate foreign transfers and reduce paperwork for banks and customers.
Form A remains relevant for certain transactions involving the purchase of foreign exchange through the official market.
The broader manual introduces new measures covering imports, exports, travel allowances, trade finance, and foreign remittances as the CBN seeks to improve transparency and efficiency in the forex market.
The apex bank said the reforms are intended to strengthen market discipline, improve data accuracy, and support confidence in Nigeria’s foreign exchange framework.
Under the revised framework, all import transactions must be backed by a valid Form ‘M’, with strict timelines imposed for the submission of shipping and exchange control documents.
Importers are required to ensure that all documentation is genuine, verifiable, and routed through authorised banking channels, as part of efforts to eliminate trade-based money laundering and illicit capital flows.
The apex bank also standardised the exchange rate for import duty payments, directing that duties be calculated using the prevailing Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market (NFEM) rate published daily by the CBN.
In a move to limit capital flight, the manual caps advance payments for imports at 30 per cent of transaction value and places a ceiling on interest rates for trade-related credit at 0.5 per cent above the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), with a maximum tenor of 180 days.
On the export side, the CBN has made it mandatory for all exporters to process Form NXP, regardless of the value of goods.
Export proceeds must be repatriated within 180 days for non-oil exports and 90 days for oil and gas shipments, reinforcing efforts to boost foreign exchange inflows.
The guidelines also introduce stricter inspection requirements, mandating pre-shipment verification and the issuance of Clean Certificates of Inspection before goods can be exported.
Exporters are further required to pay the Nigerian Export Supervision Scheme (NESS) levy, set at 0.5 per cent for non-oil exports and 0.12 per cent for oil and gas exports.
In addition, the manual strengthens oversight of insurance-related forex transactions, restricting foreign currency-denominated policies for residents and requiring regulatory clearance for certain offshore payments.
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