By Chinwendu Obienyi
Shareholders of Nigerian banks are poised to reap massive gains from the ongoing banking sector recapitalisation exercise, with combined shareholders’ funds projected to approach or exceed N27 trillion.
This marks a sharp increase from the N21.97 trillion recorded in 2024.
The surge in shareholders’ funds follows aggressive capital raising efforts by lenders as they move to comply with the new minimum capital requirements introduced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) aimed at strengthening the resilience of the financial system and positioning banks to support the country’s long-term economic growth ambitions.
The recapitalisation programme, which officially concluded in March 2026, enabled banks to raise an estimated N4.65 trillion in fresh capital over a 24-month period through public offers, rights issues, private placements, mergers, and strategic equity investments.
According to the CBN, 33 banks successfully met the new capital thresholds, with domestic investors contributing more than 72 per cent of the total funds raised during the exercise, reflecting growing confidence in the Nigerian banking industry despite prevailing macroeconomic challenges.
An analysis of the audited financial statements of 12 major lenders showed that shareholders’ funds rose by N5.8 trillion, representing a 26.4 per cent increase year-on-year. Analysts attributed the growth largely to fresh equity injections, retained earnings, and internal restructuring initiatives undertaken by banks during the recapitalisation period. Among the top-tier lenders, Zenith Bank maintained its leadership position with shareholders’ funds rising to N4.9 trillion in 2025 from N4 trillion recorded in 2024. Ecobank Transnational Incorporated (ETI) followed closely with N4.12 trillion, while United Bank for Africa (UBA) posted N4.2 trillion in shareholders’ funds.
Guaranty Trust Holding Company (GTCO) recorded N3.4 trillion, while Access Holdings grew its shareholders’ funds to N3.8 trillion as the lender continued its aggressive pan-African expansion strategy and capital strengthening initiatives.
FirstHoldCo posted N2.7 trillion in shareholders’ funds, underscoring the impact of its recent restructuring and capital raising activities. Fidelity Bank crossed the N1 trillion mark with N1.09 trillion, while Stanbic IBTC Holdings reported N1.12 trillion.
Among the mid-tier lenders, FCMB Group grew shareholders’ funds to N688 billion, while Wema Bank posted N620 billion following strong earnings growth and improved investor participation.
Sterling HoldCo recorded N424 billion in shareholders’ funds, while Jaiz Bank, Nigeria’s premier non-interest lender, posted N68 billion.
Financial analysts said the recapitalisation exercise would significantly improve the banking sector’s capacity to absorb economic shocks, finance large-scale infrastructure projects, and support Nigeria’s ambition of building a $1 trillion economy. They also noted that stronger capital buffers would improve banks’ risk management capacity amid persistent foreign exchange volatility, inflationary pressures, and global economic uncertainty. Speaking on the development, analysts at investment and research firms noted that the enlarged capital base would position banks to increase lending to critical sectors such as manufacturing, agriculture, infrastructure, oil and gas, and small and medium enterprises (SMEs).
According to them, shareholders are expected to benefit not only from capital appreciation but also from improved dividend payouts as banks leverage stronger balance sheets to boost profitability over the medium to long term.
The banking sector has continued to attract investor interest on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX), with several banking stocks recording strong price appreciation following successful capital raises and improved earnings performance.
Industry experts believe the recapitalisation exercise may also trigger another wave of consolidation within the banking industry, especially among smaller lenders seeking to strengthen competitiveness and expand operational scale.
The CBN had in 2024 announced new minimum capital requirements for commercial, merchant, and non-interest banks as part of broader reforms aimed at enhancing financial sector stability and aligning the industry with Nigeria’s economic development objectives.
The apex bank maintained that stronger and better-capitalised banks would be in a better position to withstand financial shocks, support cross-border transactions, deepen financial inclusion, and compete effectively in the global financial system.
With most lenders now exceeding the new capital thresholds, attention is gradually shifting from capital raising to profitability, digital transformation, operational efficiency, and sustainable returns for shareholders.
For investors, however, the recapitalisation exercise is already translating into stronger valuations, improved market confidence, and what analysts describe as one of the biggest wealth creation phases in Nigeria’s banking sector in recent years.
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