Fitch Ratings warns Nigeria against establishing FX gateway bank, says it may affect banks’ liquidity

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Fitch Ratings, a global credit rating agency, has cautioned the Nigerian Federal government over the proposed establishment of a foreign currency gateway bank recently announced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). According to Fitch Ratings, this move may have a negative impact on the liquidity of Nigerian Deposit Money Banks (DMBs). This warning was revealed in the latest Fitch Ratings commentary on Nigerian banks titled “Fitch Takes Rating Action on 12 Nigerian Banks Following Naira Devaluation” released recently.

 

In an earlier announcement, the CBN governor, Dr Olayemi Cardoso, had unveiled plans to introduce a new foreign currency gateway bank to ease the country’s forex crisis. Cardoso had disclosed that the apex bank was “introducing a single FCY gateway bank to centralize all correspondent banking activities, currently dominated by two major banks in the corresponding banking space.”

 

Reacting to this, Fitch Ratings said, “The Governor of the CBN, Yemi Cardoso, also announced plans to establish an FC gateway bank with the intention of centralizing correspondent banking activities, while asserting that a recent audit has determined $2.4bn of overdue FX forwards invalid. Fitch believes these measures by the CBN may negatively affect the banking sector’s FC liquidity.”

 

Furthermore, due to the devaluation of the local currency by about 70% since end-2022, banking sector impaired loans are expected to increase at a faster pace than before the devaluation.

 

“Fitch expects the banking sector’s impaired loans (Stage 3 loans) ratio to increase at a faster pace than before the devaluation, which itself has caused already material FC-denominated problem loans (Stage 2 and Stage 3 loans; predominantly oil and gas sector loans) to have inflated relative to gross loans and core capital and accentuated credit concentration risks,” the credit rating firm said.

 

On the impact of the CBN circular prohibiting banks from holding net long foreign currency positions, Fitch said that it would lead to a further moderate depreciation of the naira.

“The Central Bank of Nigeria has published new circulars and made a number of statements accompanying the recent devaluation. One circular issued after the devaluation on January 31, aimed at increasing the supply of FC, prohibited banks from having net long FC positions and set February 1 as the deadline for compliance.

 

“Net long FC positions have mitigated the impact of past devaluations, including the recent devaluation, on capital ratios as they result in foreign-exchange revaluation gains that cushion the impact of inflated FC-denominated risk-weighted assets.

 

“Without net long FC positions, banks’ capital positions are now more exposed to Fitch’s expectation of a further moderate depreciation of the naira, but total capital adequacy ratios (CAR), in most cases, will remain above regulatory minimum requirements,” the report said.

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