Stanbic IBTC Bank Nigeria PMI®: Business Activity Continues To Rise, But Higher Fuel Costs Limit Growth

The Nigerian private sector remained in growth territory at the start of
the second quarter of the year as customer numbers and market demand
continued to strengthen. That said, the impacts of higher fuel costs as
a result of the war in the Middle East were felt again, pushing up
prices and reportedly limiting expansions in new orders and business
activity. The headline figure derived from the survey is the Stanbic
IBTC Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI®). Readings above 50.0 signal
an improvement in business conditions on the previous month, while
readings below 50.0 show a deterioration. The headline PMI ticked up to
52.4 in April from 51.9 in March, above the 50.0 no-change mark for the
third month running and signalling a solid strengthening in the health
of the private sector. The rate of improvement was slightly greater than
that seen in the previous survey period.

Muyiwa Oni, Head of Equity Research West Africa at Stanbic IBTC Bank
commented: “The health of Nigeria’s private sector improved in April
– remaining above the 50-points growth threshold for the third
consecutive month – as new orders increased in line with higher
customer numbers and rising demand even as price pressures remain
prevalent. Accordingly, the headline PMI increased to 52.4 points in
April from 51.9 points seen in March. Despite the improvement in new
orders, we understand that lingering inflationary pressures limited the
pace of expansion. Notably, companies increased their selling prices in
April to the highest level since December 2024 in response to rising
fuel and raw material costs. Staff costs also increased modestly as some
companies increased their staff pay so as to help them with increasing
transportation fares. Business expectations also improved in April
compared to March as businesses plan to expand their operations through
the opening of new branches, stock building, and entry into new markets.

“The improved start of the second quarter of the year by Nigerian
businesses continues to support our view of improved growth expectations
in 2026 relative to 2025. Hence, we still maintain our expectation that
the Nigerian economy is likely to grow by 4.22% y/y in 2026, from 3.87%
y/y in 2025. We estimate the non-oil sector’s growth at 4.24% y/y in
2026, from 3.71% y/y in 2025, likely driven primarily by services, which
we see growing by 5.64% y/y in 2026 (vs 2025: 4.14% y/y). The
government’s continuous investment attraction across oil & gas, solid
minerals, electricity, agriculture and general manufacturing should
continue to support sentiment on production activity. However, the oil
sector’s growth is likely to moderate to 3.01% y/y (vs 2025: 8.50%
y/y), as we now expect crude oil production (including condensates) to
average 1.70m bpd, from 1.64m bpd in 2025.”

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Improving demand conditions meant that new orders continued to rise,
albeit with the rate of growth softening amid inflationary pressures.
Business activity also increased, and at a solid pace that was slightly
faster than that seen in March. Here too, however, companies mentioned
that rising prices had limited the pace of growth. Activity rose in
three of the four monitored sectors, the exception being services.
Anecdotal evidence suggested that prices were often driven higher by
increased fuel costs due to the war in the Middle East. Purchase prices
increased rapidly, with the rate of inflation little-changed from
March’s 15-month high. Meanwhile, staff costs rose modestly as companies
in some cases increased pay to help workers deal with higher
transportation fares. The pass through of increased input costs to
customers resulted in a further sharp rise in output prices, with the
rate of inflation quickening to the fastest since December 2024.

Companies took on extra staff in April in response to rising workloads,
but the rate of job creation was only marginal and the softest in three
months. Some firms reported that staff shortages had been behind the
latest accumulation of backlogs of work, while others cited customer
payment delays and issues securing raw materials. Outstanding business
increased for the third consecutive month in April.

Further efforts were made to secure materials, with purchasing activity
increasing for the seventeenth month running in April. Stocks of
purchases also rose amid improving customer demand, and at a marked pace
that was the sharpest in five months. Where companies placed orders for
materials, they often made sure to pay on time in order to secure
deliveries. As a result, supplier lead times shortened again, albeit to
the least extent in 2026 so far.

Business sentiment ticked higher in April, with companies often citing
plans to expand operations. Half of all respondents predicted that their
output will increase over the next 12 months.

Omatek Ventures Posts ₦500,000 Revenue As ₦16.62 Million Costs Deepen Loss In Q1 2026

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Omatek Ventures Plc has reported a weak financial performance for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026, as its revenue base remained extremely limited while operating costs surged. The technology firm generated just ₦500,000 in revenue during the period, slightly higher than ₦300,000 recorded in the same quarter of 2025. After cost of sales of ₦100,000, gross profit stood at ₦400,000. However, administrative expenses of ₦16.62 million wiped out earnings, pushing the company into an operating loss of ₦16.22 million for the quarter.

The financial statements also highlight a severe imbalance between assets and operational output. Total group assets stood at ₦2.43 billion, but a dominant ₦2.2 billion of this value is locked in investment property, which did not generate any income during the period. Other asset classes remain minimal, with property, plant and equipment valued at ₦15 million, inventories at ₦25 million, and cash holdings at just ₦3 million, underscoring the company’s limited liquidity position.

Brandspur Banking News Desk gathered that Omatek’s financial structure continues to reflect significant pressure, particularly on the balance sheet. Total current liabilities rose to ₦5.14 billion, far exceeding current assets of ₦28 million, resulting in a deeply negative working capital position. Trade and other payables accounted for ₦3.92 billion, including ₦3.25 billion in accrued expenses, while other liabilities contributed an additional ₦216 million.

Equity figures also remained severely negative, with total group equity recorded at minus ₦2.71 billion. Retained earnings showed an accumulated deficit of ₦5.85 billion, while non-controlling interests stood at a negative ₦3.32 billion, reflecting sustained losses across subsidiaries and weak capital recovery over time.

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Despite the weak financial position, the company disclosed that all borrowings from the Bank of Industry and First Bank have been fully settled, leaving long-term borrowings at zero. Management maintained that the company remains a going concern, although no new equity injection or confirmed investor funding was disclosed in the latest filing, raising further questions about future capital stability.

Over a five-year period, Omatek’s revenue trend has remained consistently low, falling from ₦3.75 million in 2021 to ₦1.11 million in 2023, ₦1 million in 2024, ₦1.15 million in 2025, and ₦500,000 in the latest quarter. The engineering segment, once its core business driver, recorded no external revenue in Q1 2026. The company, still listed on the Nigerian Exchange, continues to file statutory reports despite minimal operational activity. It was founded by the late Engr. Florence Seriki, whose estate retains a 52.77 per cent controlling stake.

Educating Nigeria, One Community At A Time: Inside Union Bank Of Nigeria’s Approach To Corporate Responsibility

Nigeria’s economic ambitions, whether higher productivity, a more competitive private sector, or stronger household resilience, all eventually run through the same bottleneck: the quality of the country’s human capital. For a bank, that fact carries a quiet implication. The customers, entrepreneurs, and employees of the next two decades are sitting in classrooms today, and many of those classrooms are under-resourced.

It is in that context that Union Bank of Nigeria has built its corporate social responsibility agenda around one of its major pillars – education. The thinking is not that a bank can fix Nigerian education, but that a bank has both the reach and the long-term interest to contribute meaningfully to it.

THE SCOPE OF THE WORK
Union Bank’s education work runs through Edu360, a platform that gathers the Bank’s various school, teacher, and youth interventions under one roof. Three threads run through it.

The first is teacher development, anchored by the Bank’s partnership with the Maltina Teacher of the Year (MTOTY) programme, which recognises and rewards classroom excellence. Teachers are the highest-leverage point in any education system and supporting the people who already do the work well tends to produce more durable gains than one-off interventions with students alone.

The second is practical, future-facing learning. School hackathons supported by the Bank give students the chance to work in teams, tackle real problems, and encounter technology as something they can build with rather than simply consume. For young people who may otherwise meet computing only as a subject on a timetable, that shift in posture matters.
The third is financial literacy, delivered through outreach tied to globally recognised events like World Savings Day and Financial Literacy Day. The premise is straightforward: habits formed early outlast lessons learned late. A student who understands saving, budgeting, and the basic mechanics of a bank account at fourteen, carries that understanding into adulthood, regardless of which institution they eventually bank with.

Beyond these threads, Edu360 has anchored long-running partnerships with educational institutions outside the Bank. One of the most established was with Greensprings School in Lagos, where Union Bank sponsored eleven consecutive editions of an annual football academy that pairs sport with leadership development for children aged five to seventeen, run alongside coaches from West Bromwich Albion Football Club. Reflecting on the partnership at the close of the 2025 edition, the school’s founder and chief executive, Mrs Lai Koiki, put it plainly:
“We are being future-ready, we are preparing the youth for the future.”

It is the kind of unadorned framing that the Edu360 intervention tends to invite from the people closest to it.

The work is mapped to Sustainable Development Goals 4 and 8, which deal with quality education and decent work, but the more useful test is whether the interventions show up in the lives of the people they are meant to serve.

A MORNING AT EBUTTE ELEFUN
That test is easier to apply at the level of a single school.

As part of its back-to-school programme this year, Union Bank visited Ebutte Elefun High School in the Lafiaji Ward community on Lagos Island, distributing school bags and learning materials to hundreds of students. The contribution was funded and delivered by the Bank.
Present at the school that day was the Bank’s Chief Financial Officer, Oluwagbenga Adeoye, who attended the school as a boy. His role during the visit was personal, rather than operational. He spoke to the students about his own journey from those classrooms to the office he now holds, took their questions, and stayed to meet teachers. For students who rarely encounter senior professionals in person, the conversation was as much a part of the day as the supplies.

Outreaches of this kind are modest in scale. Distributing hundreds of bags do not transform a school system, and Union Bank does not claim that they do. What they do is reduce friction at a moment – the start of a school year, when small financial pressures can quietly push children out of consistent attendance. They also send a signal, both to the students and to the teachers around them, that someone outside the school gates is paying attention.

WHY A BANK, AND WHY EDUCATION
There is a reasonable question about why a financial institution should be in this work at all, and it deserves a direct answer rather than a sentimental one.

A bank’s long-term performance is bound up with the financial health of the households and small businesses around it. Children who stay in school longer earn more, save more, and are more likely to use formal financial services when they do. Teachers who feel supported, produce students who can read a contract, manage a budget, and start a business. None of this is altruism dressed up as strategy; it is simply the recognition that a bank’s commercial future and the country’s educational present are connected.

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That recognition shapes how Union Bank approaches the work. Programmes are run with partner organisations that have deeper roots in the communities than any bank can claim on its own. Interventions are chosen for whether they address a real constraint, not whether they photograph well; and inclusion is treated as a discipline rather than a slogan, with specific work supporting girls, underserved learners, and students with disabilities.

THE HONEST LIMITS
It is worth naming what corporate education work cannot do. It cannot replace public investment, fix curriculum gaps, or compensate for the structural challenges facing Nigerian schools. A back-to-school outreach addresses access at a moment; it does not address learning outcomes over a year. A hackathon introduces students to technology; it does not, on its own, build a pipeline into the digital economy. Financial literacy sessions plant seeds; whether those seeds grow depends on what happens in the years that follow.

Union Bank of Nigeria is candid about this internally, and the structure of Edu360 reflects it.
The platform is designed to keep the Bank engaged with the same schools and communities over time, rather than rotating through one-off events. Whether that consistency translates into measurable shifts in attendance, completion, and downstream economic participation is the question the Bank itself is most interested in answering, and the next phase of the work is increasingly oriented around tracking it.

A QUIETER KIND OF CORPORATE CITIZENSHIP
There is a tendency, in Nigerian corporate communications, to describe CSR interventions in language larger than the work itself. Union Bank’s education programme is not transformational in any single year. It is steady, locally grounded, and built on the recognition that education is a long game in which banks are one of many players.
Ebutte Elefun is a useful illustration of the posture.

A school in Lagos Island. Hundreds of students who started the year with what they needed. A senior executive who walked back into the corridors he once knew, not to take credit but to remind a room full of teenagers that the distance between where they sit and where he sits is shorter than it looks.

That, more than any platform name or programme title, is what corporate responsibility in education looks like when it is taken seriously.

Show up. Stay. Build the systems that let the showing-up scale, and measure honestly in years, rather than headlines, whether it worked.

Trump Removes Tariffs On UK Whisky Imports In Major Boost To Scottish And Northern Irish Distillers

The United States has announced the removal of tariffs on whisky imports from the United Kingdom, a policy shift expected to significantly strengthen export prospects for distillers in Scotland and Northern Ireland.

The decision was confirmed by US President Donald Trump on 30 April 2026, following a four-day state visit by King Charles III and Queen Camilla, during which trade relations between both countries featured prominently in discussions.

Brandspur Trade And Beverage Desk reports that the tariff removal applies to all whisky produced in the UK, marking a reversal of previous import restrictions and restoring preferential trade conditions for British distillers in the American market.

In a statement shared on his Truth Social platform, President Trump said the move was made “in honour of” the royal visit and aimed at deepening commercial ties between Scotland’s whisky industry and the bourbon-producing state of Kentucky.

US Trade Representative Ambassador Jamieson Greer later clarified that the tariff exemption covers all UK-distilled whisky categories, although Irish whisky remains subject to the standard 15 percent tariff applied to European Union imports.

The Scotch Whisky Association welcomed the announcement, describing it as a significant relief for producers operating in the sector’s most valuable export destination.

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Chief Executive Mark Kent said distillers would “breathe a little easier” following the decision, adding that sustained diplomatic and industry engagement on both sides of the Atlantic had contributed to restoring more favourable trading conditions.

Kent noted that the development could help reinvigorate long-standing trade relations between the Scotch whisky and American whiskey industries, particularly bourbon producers in the United States.

He further stated that while broader challenges persist in the global spirits market, the removal of tariffs provides an opportunity for renewed growth and stronger economic ties between whisky-producing regions in the UK and the US.

Industry stakeholders are now expected to focus on expanding export volumes and strengthening supply chain collaboration as the sector adjusts to the updated trade framework.

BMW Motorrad Appoints Josef Honeder As New Head Of Development To Drive Next Generation Motorcycle Innovation

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BMW Motorrad has announced a major leadership change in its engineering division, confirming the appointment of Josef Honeder as its new Head of Development, a role in which he will oversee the technical direction, engineering processes, and future innovation of all upcoming motorcycle models.

Honeder is scheduled to assume office on 1 June 2026 and will be responsible for guiding the development of BMW Motorrad’s product portfolio, including concept design, testing, and the advancement of new technologies across its global motorcycle lineup.

TheCable Business Desk reports that the appointment marks a strategic move aimed at strengthening BMW Motorrad’s engineering leadership as the brand continues its push into advanced mobility solutions and next-generation motorcycle performance systems.

According to the announcement, Honeder brings more than two decades of experience within the BMW Group, having held several senior roles in overall vehicle development and powertrain engineering. His most recent position was in charge of powertrain and fuel supply systems, where he contributed to key technological advancements within the group.

Honeder previously worked within BMW Motorrad between 2011 and 2013, where he held responsibility for multiple development areas, marking his return to a division closely aligned with his long-standing expertise in two-wheeled vehicle engineering.

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BMW Motorrad Chief Executive Officer, Markus Flasch, described the appointment as a significant boost to the company’s development strategy, noting that Honeder’s extensive engineering background will strengthen the brand’s ongoing product expansion and innovation drive.

Flasch highlighted BMW Motorrad’s recent product momentum and said the company is confident that Honeder’s experience will support the continued evolution of its motorcycle portfolio across global markets.

Honeder succeeds Christof Lischka, who previously led BMW Motorrad’s development unit and oversaw the introduction of several key models before leaving the BMW Group at his own request.

The appointment is expected to reinforce BMW Motorrad’s long-term strategy of combining advanced engineering with performance-focused innovation as the company positions itself for future growth in the global motorcycle industry.

Chartered Institute Of Stockbrokers Makes History As Fiona Ahimie Becomes First Female President In 30 Years

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The Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS) has elected Fiona Ahimie as its 14th President and Chairman of Council, marking a historic milestone as the first woman to lead the Institute since its establishment over three decades ago.

Ahimie’s election was confirmed during a Council meeting held on Thursday, signalling a leadership transition that industry stakeholders have described as a major step forward for gender inclusion and professional development within Nigeria’s capital market ecosystem.

TheCable Business Desk reports that her emergence follows the Institute’s structured succession framework, as she takes over from outgoing President Oluropo Dada, who completed his tenure after overseeing key reforms and strategic initiatives within the organisation.

Dada, while announcing the transition, described Ahimie as a seasoned professional with strong leadership capacity, noting that she brings “proven expertise, strong leadership, and a clear vision” for the future direction of the Institute.

Ahimie, who currently serves as Managing Director of First Securities Brokers Limited, previously held the positions of 2nd Vice President and 1st Vice President of the Institute, positioning her within the leadership structure prior to her elevation.

Following her appointment, Akeem Oyewale has assumed the role of 1st Vice President, while the Institute is expected to announce a new 2nd Vice President in line with its governance framework.

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Brandspur Banking News Desk reports that Ahimie’s leadership journey spans more than 15 years across Nigeria’s financial services sector, with experience in investment management, stockbroking, and capital market operations.

Her professional background includes senior roles at Stanbic IBTC Stockbrokers, FBNQuest Capital, and Lead Capital, alongside academic credentials that include an MBA from Lagos Business School and executive training from IESE Business School in Spain.

Ahimie is also a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers and an Associate of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria, reflecting her strong professional standing within the financial services industry.

Her formal inauguration as President is scheduled for 25 June 2026, where she is expected to outline her strategic agenda for the Institute, including market development, professional capacity building, and capital market reforms.

Industry stakeholders have described her election as a significant moment for Nigeria’s financial sector, reflecting growing emphasis on diversity, leadership transition, and institutional strengthening within professional bodies.

UBA Leads Industry Push For Unified African Banking And Fintech Payment Ecosystem

United Bank for Africa (UBA) has called for stronger collaboration between traditional banks and fintech companies to secure and accelerate the future of Africa’s digital payment ecosystem, signalling a shift away from competition-driven fragmentation within the financial services sector.

The message came during UBA’s inaugural Fintech Conference held in Lagos, themed “Navigating Regulatory Milestones: The Future of Bank–Fintech Partnerships”, which brought together major players including OPay, PalmPay, Mastercard, and representatives of the Central Bank of Nigeria to discuss the future of financial integration on the continent.

TheCable Business Desk reports that discussions at the event centred on the need for a unified financial ecosystem where banks provide regulatory strength and trust, while fintech firms contribute innovation and speed to drive inclusion and efficiency across Africa’s payment infrastructure.

UBA’s Executive Director of Digital Banking, Emmanuel Lamptey, said the industry must move beyond rivalry, stressing that “the future is not banks versus fintechs but banks with fintechs,” adding that collaboration would unlock a more inclusive and scalable financial system for millions of Africans.

Fintech operators at the conference echoed similar views, noting that rapid technological advancement has outpaced standalone infrastructure development. Seyi Ebenezer, Chief Executive Officer of PayAza, said the sector has reached a critical point where “collaboration is no longer optional” but necessary to achieve scale and remove systemic barriers.

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Security concerns also featured prominently, as stakeholders warned that the growth of digital payments has intensified cyber risks. Mastercard executive Peter Ehizogie highlighted that innovation must be matched with stronger defence systems, noting that each advancement in payments introduces new vulnerabilities.

UBA’s Head of Digital Banking Sales, Shamsideen Fashola, reinforced this position, stating that cybersecurity has evolved into a technological arms race where “cybersecurity is now AI versus AI,” requiring equal investment in both innovation and protection.

UBA, which operates across 20 African countries and international markets including New York and Paris, said its long-term vision is to build seamless cross-border payment systems that combine the agility of fintech platforms with the regulatory strength of traditional banking institutions.

Participants at the conference also called on regulators to simplify compliance frameworks and accelerate cross-border integration, arguing that streamlined “regulatory milestones” are essential to supporting innovation and financial inclusion across Africa.

The event concluded with a shared commitment from both banks and fintech firms to deepen cooperation, strengthen ecosystem resilience, and build a unified payment structure capable of supporting Africa’s rapidly expanding digital economy.

Nigeria Urged To Strengthen Policy Support For .Ng Domain To Boost Digital Sovereignty And Business Identity

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The Nigeria Internet Registration Association (NiRA) has called for stronger government policy backing to accelerate the adoption of the country’s .ng domain, warning that Nigeria risks underutilising a key digital asset critical to its growing internet economy.

The appeal was made during NiRA’s 18th Annual General Meeting held in Lagos, where stakeholders from government, technology, and business sectors examined strategies to deepen the integration of Nigeria’s national domain into corporate and institutional operations.

TheCable Business Desk reports that participants at the meeting described the .ng domain as a strategic component of Nigeria’s digital infrastructure, noting that its wider adoption could strengthen online trust, improve national identity, and support the country’s digital economy ambitions.

Stakeholders also emphasised the need for deliberate policy intervention, particularly urging closer collaboration between NiRA and the Corporate Affairs Commission to ensure that .ng domain registration is embedded in the business incorporation and renewal process. They argued that such integration would help new businesses establish a Nigerian digital presence from inception.

NiRA President, Adesola Akinsanya, reinforced the importance of the domain, stating that “.ng is more than a domain; it is Nigeria’s digital identity,” adding that increased adoption remains central to strengthening trust and maximising value within the country’s internet ecosystem.

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NiRA’s Chief Operating Officer, Oluwaseyi Onasanya, said the association remains committed to enhancing registry security, infrastructure resilience, and stakeholder engagement, while expanding awareness of the benefits tied to locally registered domains.

Former NiRA President, Muhammed Rudman, also stressed that policy alignment and stronger inter-agency coordination were essential to driving broader adoption among Nigerian businesses. He noted that existing frameworks must be supported with sustained political will to achieve meaningful progress.

Industry stakeholders at the AGM further called for increased partnerships between NiRA, financial institutions, government agencies, and private sector operators to boost awareness and adoption of the .ng domain as a national digital asset.

NiRA added that it would continue investing in cybersecurity and infrastructure upgrades to support Nigeria’s expanding digital economy, while positioning the .ng domain as a trusted foundation for online business identity and governance.

The association concluded that stronger institutional support and coordinated policy direction remain key to ensuring Nigeria fully benefits from its internet ecosystem and strengthens its position in the global digital space.

Nigerian Banks Face Dividend Freeze As Nestoil Loan Crisis Triggers N2.9 Trillion Exposure Concerns

Pressure is mounting on Nigeria’s banking sector following revelations that bad loans linked to Nestoil Limited have significantly contributed to dividend suspensions across major lenders, raising fresh concerns over asset quality and systemic stability.

Three banks are reportedly unable to declare dividends for the 2025 financial year after being hit by large impairment charges tied to non-performing loans in the oil and gas sector, with Nestoil’s outstanding indebtedness estimated at about N2.9 trillion across multiple financial institutions.

Brandspur Banking News Desk reports that the situation has intensified scrutiny on banks’ exposure to the energy sector, where total lending stood at approximately N21 trillion at the end of 2024. Major lenders including United Bank for Africa, Access Holdings, First HoldCo, FCMB Group, Union Bank, Ecobank, and Afreximbank are among those impacted by the unfolding credit stress.

The Central Bank of Nigeria, under Governor Olayemi Cardoso, has reportedly maintained a strict regulatory stance, directing affected banks to fully provision for non-performing loans before distributing dividends. This policy shift has already resulted in an estimated N2.16 trillion in impairment charges across five major lenders, including Access Holdings, UBA, Ecobank, First HoldCo, and FCMB.

The ripple effects of the credit crisis are already visible in financial statements. UBA recorded a loan loss provision of N331 billion for 2025, while Access Holdings saw its impairment charges on loans surge by 209 percent to N287.3 billion. Both institutions have consequently suspended dividend payments for the period under review.

First HoldCo, which owns First Bank of Nigeria, reported one of the largest sector-wide hits with an impairment charge of N748 billion, reflecting significant exposure to distressed oil and gas loans. Ecobank Group also posted net impairment losses exceeding N707 billion, further weighing on profitability and capital distribution plans.

FCMB Group, meanwhile, recorded a doubling of net impairment losses to N92.5 billion, prompting a more conservative balance sheet approach and contributing to its decision to withhold dividends for the financial year.

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The crisis has been linked to syndicated loans extended to Nestoil during periods of optimistic oil production forecasts, which have since become unsustainable due to repayment challenges. Legal actions have followed, including a Mareva injunction freezing Nestoil’s assets across multiple financial institutions, as banks intensify recovery efforts.

Assets under dispute include bank deposits, properties, and oil cargoes, with receivership processes ongoing despite legal resistance from the borrower. Analysts warn that prolonged litigation could further strain liquidity within the banking system.

Industry observers note that the current wave of provisioning is part of a broader regulatory clean-up aimed at improving transparency in bank balance sheets. The Central Bank’s directive has effectively ended the use of forbearance as a tool for masking credit deterioration, forcing lenders to recognise losses upfront.

While painful for shareholders in the short term, financial analysts argue that the aggressive provisioning approach is necessary to strengthen long-term banking stability and prevent deeper structural risks within the sector.

However, concerns remain that rising non-performing loan ratios, which are approaching the 7 percent threshold, could pose additional challenges if exposure to the volatile oil and gas sector continues to deteriorate.

Despite the pressure, the banking sector is also undergoing recapitalisation efforts, which are expected to help absorb losses and improve resilience. Still, the Nestoil-related debt overhang continues to highlight the risks associated with concentrated lending to high-value energy projects in Nigeria’s financial system.

UEFA Set To Surpass $5.9 Billion Annual Revenue As New Global Broadcast Rights Cycle Expands

UEFA is projected to generate more than $5.9 billion in annual revenue from 2027, driven by a fresh wave of international television rights agreements covering its major club competitions, including the UEFA Champions League, Europa League, and Europa Conference League.

The projected earnings reflect a new broadcast cycle running from 2027 to 2031, with media rights alone expected to exceed €5 billion annually, representing an increase of about 20% compared to the current cycle. The development underscores the continued global commercial strength of European club football in an increasingly competitive media rights market.

Brandspur Brand News reports that UEFA’s commercial expansion is being powered by its joint venture UC3 with the European Football Clubs association, which has successfully concluded multiple high-value broadcasting deals across key global territories. The agreements already secured in Europe’s five largest markets, including the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Spain, and Italy, have been complemented by new contracts covering 19 additional countries across Europe and the Americas.

These newly signed deals alone are estimated at around $910 million, marking nearly a 40% increase compared to similar markets in the previous rights cycle. With more territories still under negotiation, including Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa, UEFA has already secured more than $3.8 billion in annual media rights revenue ahead of the final auction rounds.

The surge in value has been supported by intensified competition among global broadcasters and streaming platforms. Major players such as Paramount+, Disney+, DAZN, and Canal+ have all expanded their UEFA rights portfolios across multiple regions, reflecting the growing importance of live football in driving subscriber growth and retention in the digital streaming era.

Paramount+ has strengthened its footprint in Canada and Latin America, while maintaining exclusive UEFA rights in the United States. Disney has expanded its coverage in Northern Europe through packages on Disney+ and ESPN, while DAZN has reinforced its presence in markets such as Austria, Portugal, and Switzerland. Canal+ has also increased its reach in select European territories.

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UEFA’s restructuring of its commercial rights strategy through UC3 has been credited with driving stronger financial performance. By centralising negotiations and creating a more competitive bidding environment, UEFA has increased pricing power and attracted a wider pool of global media partners.

The governing body’s distribution model ensures that more than 90% of revenues generated from men’s club competitions are returned to participating clubs through prize money, participation fees, and solidarity payments. This structure means that rising broadcast income is expected to directly boost club earnings across Europe, particularly for teams competing in elite competitions.

However, analysts caution that the growing financial gap between top-tier clubs and smaller domestic teams may widen further as revenue concentration increases at the highest level of European football.

The projected rise in UEFA’s annual revenue also highlights the continued global appetite for premium football content, with emerging markets in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East expected to play a key role in future growth cycles as new rights packages are finalised.

If current negotiations are completed at expected values, UEFA’s annual media rights income could firmly surpass the $5.9 billion threshold from 2027, cementing its position as one of the most valuable sports organisations in the world.