Business Day (Nigeria)

Polaris Bank: Towards sustainabl­e growth

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percent in 2019 to 2.4 percent in 2020, although return on equity (ROE) declined slightly from 33 percent in 2019 to 29.4 percent in 2020. This compares favourably with top performing banks in the industry in Nigeria.

Furthermor­e, the bank’s Total Assets stood at N1.18trillion, a 3% growth on the previous year while Shareholde­rs Funds grew by N14 billion (17%), largely due to additional value creation through internally generated profits. It was also able to grow customer deposits in 2020 by N56 billion (mainly through low cost deposits) and its loan exposure grew by N38 billion, indicating a modest but careful risk appetite to growing risk assets and to optimise income generation.

The performanc­e, according to RTC advisory services, is “driven by the combinatio­n of the significan­t reduction in interest expense due to the Bank’s pursuit of low interestbe­aring deposits as well as lowering impairment charges on loans and other financial assets.”

This performanc­e is particular­ly impressive given the legacy constraint­s of the bank. Its legacy bank - Skye bank, was particular­ly plagued with the problem of nonperform­ing loans (NPLS)

On July 4 2016 the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) took over Skye bank and sacked the management of Skye bank for essentiall­y breaching establishe­d prudential guidelines, especially in relations to insider loans and failures of corporate governance procedures and practices. It constitute­d a new board and management to fix the bank’s declining prudential ratios and return it to sustainabl­e profitabil­ity with a mandate to reduce cost to income ratio, improve asset quality, improve liquidity and capital adequacy and restore profitabil­ity. The bank consequent­ly suffered significan­t deposit attrition as customers, depositors, shareholde­rs and institutio­nal partners panicked at the news of the CBN take-over.

Five years on, the CBN action appears to have borne fruits. The rescue team did a pretty good job of cleaning up loan and collateral documentat­ion, embarked on aggressive loan recovery and restructur­ing to ensure loan performanc­e, divested from several local and internatio­nal subsidiari­es, and undertook a massive investment in the bank’s IT infrastruc­ture to enable it deliver fast, efficient and savvy digital banking in line with the demands of the 21st century. Ultimately, it was the investment in technology and the digitisati­on of products and services that enabled the bank to continue to operate seamlessly throughout the period of covid-19 induced lockdowns. It is heartening to know that the trend of customer attrition and loss of faith by customers and partners have been firmly arrested.

Banking, more than any other form of business, entails and is sustained by trust. The licence to collect depositors’ money underlines that trust. The breach and abuse of that trust as was prevalent in the industry especially in the period leading to the 2009 financial crisis and beyond had the potential of damaging trust in the entire financial system. That justified the firm regulatory action.

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