Business Day (Nigeria)

Escaping bad loans is about to get harder for Nigerian banks

...IMF expects economy to expand at below-average 1.7% next year ...Lenders need 4%-5% growth to avoid bad-debt spike, EFG says

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Nigeria’s economy is poised to expand at less than half the pace needed by banks next year to avoid a spike in unpaid loans.

The 2021 outlook for sub-saharan Africa’s largest economy was cut to growth of 1.7% by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund on Tuesday, compared with a June forecast of 2.6%. That will make Nigeria the fourthwors­t performer among nations measured by the Washington- based lender in the region.

Lenders need the economy to accelerate after restructur­ing about 40% of loans on their books that would’ve soured and should have been booked as non-performing loans. As growth lags, the risk of these reorganize­d loans going unpaid rises.

“There’s no real sense the economy will bounce back to 4% to 5% growth,” Ronak Gadhia, director for subSaharan African banks research at Efg-hermes, said by phone. “We expect banks’ credit quality to remain under pressure.”

Nigeria’s gross domestic product will probably shrink 4.3% for this year, the IMF said, as a lockdown to contain the Covid-19 outbreak, lower oil prices and rampant dollar shortages weighon output. GDP last expanded by more than 3% in 2014.

“We won’t have as much money to drive the infrastruc­ture plans that the government intends to implement to open up activities in different sectors of the economy,” Mosope Arubayi, chief economist at Lagosbased Vetiva Capital said by phone. “We’re not seeing a situation whereby oil prices will be significan­tly stronger next year.”

The central bank anticipate­s that almost two-thirds of credit in the economy will be reorganize­d this year to help borrowers cope with the economic fallout from the pandemic. EFG expects NPLS will rise to 7.6% of total credit at the end of the year, as the economy deteriorat­es, increasing impairment charges, Gadhia said.

Cairo-based EFG predicts that Nigeria’s GDP will increase by 1% to 2% in 2021, “which is very low, and doesn’t help the banks from an asset-quality perspectiv­e,” the analyst said. Earnings per share at Nigerian banks could decline 65% this year, Gadhia said.

The government doesn’t have the financial resources to support the economy, said Yvonne Mhango, the subSaharan Africa economist for Renaissanc­e Capital.

“Nigeria’s recovery will be undermined by a consumer who was already in recession pre- Covid- 19,” she said, adding that wholesale and retail trade has contracted for four straight quarters. A drop in remittance­s from Nigerians living abroad, which accounts for 6% of GDP, will further weigh on the consumers.

“Nigeria’s deteriorat­ing fiscal position also implies a weak and slow recovery,” Mhango said. “Nigeria’s government revenue is peculiarly low. This significan­tly constrains spending.”

 ??  ?? Onome Adewuyi (l), president/chairman of council, Institute of Chartered Accountant­s of Nigeria (ICAN), presenting a copy of the reviewed curriculum of the accounting programmes of Nigerian universiti­es conducted by ICAN, to Abubakar Rasheed, executive secretary of National Universiti­es Commission, in Abuja, yesterday.
Onome Adewuyi (l), president/chairman of council, Institute of Chartered Accountant­s of Nigeria (ICAN), presenting a copy of the reviewed curriculum of the accounting programmes of Nigerian universiti­es conducted by ICAN, to Abubakar Rasheed, executive secretary of National Universiti­es Commission, in Abuja, yesterday.

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