THISDAY

Report: Gap Between Tier 1, Tier 2 Banks Widens

- Obinna Chima with agency report

The divide between the haves and the have-nots among Nigerian banks is widening, according to a report by Bloomberg.

The country’s biggest lender is so flush with cash it plans to repay $400 million of bonds when they become due in November 2018 rather than issuing additional debt, while the next two largest banks sold internatio­nal bonds for the first time since 2014. At the other end of the scale, smaller lenders are scrapping plans to raise dollar loans and struggling to find investors to raise capital.

Top-tier banks in Africa’s mostpopulo­us nation and biggest oil producer are rallying after the central bank in April opened a foreign-exchange trading window, easing a crippling currency shortage that contribute­d to the worst economic contractio­n in 25 years. Smaller banks are lagging behind as they battle rising levels of non-performing loans and capital buffers near regulatory minimums.

“The gap between the Tier 1 and Tier 2 banks has been widening in profitabil­ity and balance-sheet size,” an analyst at Afrinvest West Africa Limited, Omotola Abimbola said

“In the next one or two years we will probably see the trend extending further.”

United Bank for Africa Plc, the third-biggest lender by market value, raised $500 million in its first Eurobond sale on June 1 at yields below initial guidance. This followed an equivalent issue a week earlier by Zenith Bank Plc in a deal that was four times oversubscr­ibed. Guaranty Trust Bank Plc said this month it has no plans to sell Eurobonds because it’s setting aside funds to repay existing debt.

By contrast, small- and midsized lenders like Wema Bank Plc dropped plans last month to raise dollar loans to rather sell naira debt locally in smaller tranches. Unity Bank Plc has been in talks with investors since October, while Diamond Bank Plc has started negotiatio­ns to issue debt, the report added.

“We view the Tier 2 banks as potentiall­y challenged,” Exotix Partners LLP analysts Jumai Mohammed and Ronak Gadhia said in a note last month. The lenders seem unable “to weather asset-quality deteriorat­ion storms.” Still, the five-year dollar bonds didn’t come cheap. Lagos-based United Bank for Africa settled on a coupon, or interest paid twice annually, of 7.75 percent. That’s the highest of at least 10 sales of $500 million by emergingma­rket banks this year from Turkey, Kuwait, Bahrain, South Korea and China. Zenith will pay 7.375 percent, compared with 6.25 percent on five-year notes sold in April 2014.

Even so, more lenders will issue Eurobonds because they need dollars to offer loans in the U.S. currency or to repay debt, an analyst at Vetiva Capital Management Limited, Lekan Olabode said.

Ecobank Transnatio­nal Incorporat­ed, based in Lome, Togo, plans to sell a $400 million, five-year convertibl­e bond this month to refinance debt and provide short-term bridge funding for non-performing loans at its Nigerian unit.

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