THISDAY

AMID TOUGH OPERATING ENVIRONMEN­T, 10 BANKS’ NPL HITS N811.7BN

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storage, and manufactur­ing sectors.

GTCO, the only Tier-1 bank with NPL ratio above the CBN requiremen­t as UBA and Access Holdings maintained NPL ratio below three per cent.

GTCO announced 5.19 per cent NPL ratio in 2022 from 6.04 per cent in 2021.

GTCO in a presentati­on said, “The Group’s IFRS 9 Stage 3 loans closed at 5.2 per cent in 2022 from 6.04 per cent in 2021. With Retail and Others emerged as Sectors with the highest NPL - 22.1 per cent and 20.5 per cent. IFRS 9 Stage 3 Loans improved to N102.8 billion in 2022 from N113.9 billion in 2021, primarily driven by the deleveragi­ng of Ghana and Kenya’s Loan books via the realizatio­n of pledged collateral­s.

“IFRS 9 Balance Sheet Impairment Allowance for Stage 3/ Lifetime Credit Impaired exposures closed at N54.9 billion representi­ng 53.4 per cent coverage of Loans in this classifica­tion. In aggregate terms (including Regulatory Risk Reserves of N93.9 billion), the Group has adequate coverage of 175.5 per cent for its IFRS 9 Stage 3 loans /NPLs. This position is consistent with the Group’s plan to maintain 100 per cent coverage of its NPLs.”

UBA and Access Holdings closed 2022 with 3.10 per cent NPL ratio respective­ly as Zenith Bank closed the year under review with 4.30 per cent NPL ratio as against 4.20 per cent reported in 2021.

Access Holdings with four per cent NPL ratio in 2021 hinged the decline in 2022 on proactive post - disburseme­nt monitoring and robust risk management practices.

With the increase in its NPL ratio, the management of Zenith bank explained that it has adopted a holistic and integrated approach to risk management and therefore, brings all risks together under one or a limited number of oversight functions.

NPL coverage ratio of Zenith Bank, thus, closed 2022 at 115.9 per cent from 114.4 per cent reported in 2021.

Meanwhile, stakeholde­rs have called on banks managers to take caution lending to real sector.

The Deputy Governor, Economic Policy, CBN, Kingsley Obiora in his personal statement during the first Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) in January 2023 said the total gross credit increased by N5.14 trillion or 20.93 per cent between the end of December 2021 and December 2022, from N24.57 trillion to N29.72 trillion, due to the increase in the industry funding base as well as the CBN’s directive on LDR, which has encouraged banks to increase lending to the real sector of the economy, and business strategy and competitio­n.

He hinted that, “The increase in credit to the key sectors of the economy is expected to bolster aggregate demand and promote economic growth, job creation, and poverty alleviatio­n.”

He expressed, “Overall, policymake­rs need to keep an eye on pre-existing macroecono­mic imbalances and headwinds. The global economic slowdown (especially in the United States, the Euro Area and China), the Russian-Ukraine war, geopolitic­al fragmentat­ion, weaker currencies in many EMDEs, and rising external debt are all weighing on domestic investment and further exacerbati­ng the existing domestic headwinds.

“With China re-opening after three years of zero Covid policy, these headwinds are, however, expected to moderate and improve global growth, but could also be a risk to global inflation. Domestical­ly, although oil production has improved, it is still below the OPEC allocation quota of about 1.8 mbpd due to high production costs, oil theft and pipeline vandalism. Low oil production in the face of high oil prices continues to reduce fiscal space, with consequenc­es for external debt and foreign reserves accretion.”

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