Nigeria’s banking sector recapitalization exercise has gained significant momentum, with 14 commercial banks successfully meeting the stringent new capital requirements imposed by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Governor Yemi Cardoso announced yesterday.
Speaking at the conclusion of the 302nd Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja, Cardoso revealed that the banks have fully complied with capital thresholds that represent the most ambitious banking reform since Nigeria’s landmark 2004 recapitalization program.
Historic Capital Requirements Drive Consolidation
The current exercise mirrors the transformative 2004 banking reform, which saw the minimum capital requirement surge from N2 billion to N25 billion, ultimately reducing the number of banks from 89 to 25 through mergers and acquisitions. Today’s requirements are even more demanding, with commercial banks holding international authorization now required to maintain N500 billion in capital – a twenty-fold increase from the previous benchmark.
The tiered structure reflects the CBN’s nuanced approach to banking supervision. Commercial banks with national authorization must meet N200 billion requirements, while those with regional authorization face N50 billion thresholds. Merchant banks are required to maintain N50 billion, with non-interest banks facing N20 billion (national) and N10 billion (regional) requirements, respectively.
Monetary Policy Pivot Signals Economic Confidence
In a significant policy shift, the MPC voted to reduce the benchmark Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) by 50 basis points to 27 percent from 27.50 percent, marking the committee’s growing confidence in Nigeria’s inflation trajectory.
“The decision to lower the MPR was predicated on the sustained disinflation recorded in the past five months,” Cardoso explained, citing projections of continued declining inflation through 2025 and the imperative to support economic recovery efforts.
Accompanying the rate cut, the CBN adjusted the standing facilities corridor to ±250 basis points around the MPR and reduced the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) for commercial banks from 50 percent to 45 percent. However, merchant banks retained their 16 percent CRR, while the liquidity ratio remained unchanged at 30 percent.
Enhanced Liquidity Management Measures
In a notable policy innovation, the CBN introduced a 75 percent CRR on non-Treasury Single Account (TSA) public sector deposits, designed to enhance liquidity management in the financial system. This measure reflects the central bank’s sophisticated approach to managing excess liquidity while maintaining monetary policy effectiveness.
Regulatory Discipline Yields Results
The MPC acknowledged the successful termination of forbearance measures and waivers on single obligors, moves that have strengthened transparency and risk management across the banking system. Cardoso emphasized that the impact of removing these regulatory accommodations is “transitory and does not pose any threat to the soundness and stability of the banking system.”
Broader Economic Stability Indicators
The CBN governor expressed satisfaction with prevailing macroeconomic conditions, highlighting improvements across multiple indicators, including sustained disinflation, improved output growth, stable exchange rates, and robust external reserves. These developments provide the foundation for the central bank’s more accommodative monetary stance.
Looking Ahead
With 14 banks having successfully met the new capital requirements, the focus now shifts to ensuring the remaining institutions complete their recapitalization within the prescribed timeline. The CBN has committed to continuing policy implementation that supports the successful completion of this critical banking sector reform.
The recapitalization exercise represents more than mere regulatory compliance; it positions Nigeria’s banking sector for enhanced competitiveness, improved risk management, and stronger support for the nation’s economic development objectives in an increasingly complex global financial environment.
The policy adjustments announced yesterday signal the CBN’s confidence in the trajectory of both the banking sector reforms and broader economic recovery, setting the stage for what officials hope will be a more resilient and dynamic financial system capable of supporting Nigeria’s growth ambitions.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s banking sector is undergoing its most significant transformation in two decades, with 14 banks already meeting dramatically increased capital requirements—ranging from N10 billion to N500 billion depending on bank type. This represents a major strengthening of the financial system since the last major reform in 2004.
Simultaneously, the Central Bank has cut interest rates from 27.5% to 27% and reduced cash reserve requirements, signaling growing confidence in Nigeria’s economic stability and declining inflation trends.























