A Lagos-based investment and
research firm, CSL Stockbrokers Limited, has expressed fear that Nigerian Banks
are likely to face challenges serving their US dollar obligations.
The organisation stated this
in a report titled: “Banks and FX Devaluation,” held the view that given very
limited international dollar credit to Nigeria, banks may either resort to
supranational lenders and development banks, or else buy US dollars at costly rates
to meet their obligations.
“Borrowings in US dollars
are problematic under a devaluation scenario. Banks need to have performing US
dollar assets in order to receive dollars with which to service their own US
dollar borrowings. The worse these US dollar assets perform in cash terms (for
example, re-scheduled US dollar loans to the oil & gas sector, with grace
periods during which banks do not receive cash) the more banks have to find
other sources of US dollars with which to service their own borrowings.
“An extreme case of this
would be a bank simply purchasing US dollars with Naira at unfavourable rates
in order to service a US dollar obligation. Note that it has become quite
difficult for most banks to refinance US dollar loans with international banks,
though we assume that most have access to the supranational lenders, and to
development banks, for re-financing,” it added.
It also anticipated that
cost of risk (CoR) would “rise as a result of devaluation, though much of the
economy has been working with the parallel naira/dollar rate for over a year.”
The report explained:
“Devaluation, in theory, challenges capital adequacy ratios (CAR) because the
naira-equivalent value of risk-weighted assets (RWA) rises as these include
foreign currency loans. “However, the weight of foreign currency loans in RWAs
is for the most part moderate (34%-44%), and banks will likely make windfall
gains from net long FX positions which in turn boost capital.
We see moderate erosion of
CAR overall, and note that the CBN has postponed hiking the minimum total CAR
from 15 per cent to 16 per cent.”
The report assessed the
likely impact of notional 50 per cent naira devaluation on the top-five listed
Nigerian banks.
The banks are FBN Holdings,
Zenith Bank Plc, Guaranty Trust Bank Plc, United Bank for Africa Plc (UBA) and
Access Bank Plc.
It expressed optimism that
banks will retain comfortable capital levels, adding that although devaluation
“would probably bring some liquidity challenges, but since the biggest
challenges are faced by the strongest banks (notably Zenith Bank), we believe these
can be overcome.
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