Bank lending should rise significantly in the second quarter of the financial year once the April 2011 elections, which have prompted a slowdown, are over, according to Bisi Onasanya, group managing director and chief executive officer of First Bank Nigeria.
Mr Onasanya told Oxford Business Group (OBG), a consultancy firm, that financial risk exercises undertaken last year by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the April elections had both contributed to a dip in loan growth.
Figures show that lending growth turned a corner to reach 5 percent by the end of last year after plummeting in the wake of the 2008 global financial crisis, which was exacerbated in Nigeria by troubles in the domestic banking sector.
“Lending growth was suppressed last year, partly due to a conservative response from banks following the stress test which the CBN conducted in 2010,” he said. “The elections are slowing loan growth for the first half of 2011, but there will be a major increase after elections in April. I expect loan growth of 10 percent in 2011, which is double the 5 percent figure for 2010.”
Businesses face challenges
Mr Onasanya acknowledged that businesses in Nigeria still faced an uphill struggle to obtain credit from banks, despite CBN Governor Lamido Sanusi’s high-profile campaign to encourage growth by stimulating Small and Medium Enterprise financing. He believes banks are unlikely to increase lending to smaller businesses, which are viewed as a higher risk than big corporations, unless lending rules are relaxed.
“Although SMEs have access to some credit, the risk tolerance limit is too high,” he said. “The banks can’t be blamed since they have to meet provisions when the CBN tests their portfolios. The government and the Central Bank should consider implementing risk sharing to increase the flow of credit to higher risk areas.” With bidding for Nigeria’s unhealthy banks drawing nearer, Mr Onasanya highlighted the importance of ensuring that the selling process was clearly laid out in a framework if legal wrangles and lengthy court cases were to be avoided.
Ten of Nigeria’s banks are up for sale after they failed to meet standards set out in an audit undertaken by the CBN in the wake of the 2008 crisis. The move is set to bring consolidation to the sector, with observers expecting the process to reduce the number of players to 15.
“Due process must be followed involving the boards of directors and shareholders,” he said. “Otherwise, if the distressed banks are sold by the CBN rather than by the actual owners, each acquisition will go into irreconcilable litigation.”