Nigeria’s real economy suffers as banks prefer treasury bills to loans

Published Sep 11, 2012

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Chijioke Ohuocha Lagos

The recovery of Nigeria’s banking sector has failed to get credit flowing to the real economy, as high interest rates and a liquidity squeeze funnel money away from businesses or consumers into high-yielding government debt, market players say.

Three years after a credit crisis led to the near collapse of nine lenders, banking capital ratios have recovered, but lenders are piling cash into treasury bills at yields that are unlikely to be sustainable, banking analysts say.

Yields have already fallen in the past month, as JPMorgan prepares to include Nigeria’s debt in one of its indices.

“Eventually banks are going to have to take real economy risks to drive up returns. I can’t imagine that regulators will continue to licence the operation of banks… without there being evidence of some lending to the real sector,” said Razia Khan, the head of Africa research at Standard Chartered Bank.

Nigeria’s economy grew 6.17 percent in the first quarter of this year, according to the latest available figures, but credit to the private sector grew just 4.3 percent by July, while lending to the government shot up 56.5 percent.

Interest income accounted for 50 percent to 70 percent of gross earnings for Nigerian banks, Francis Ikenga, the head of strategy at Fidelity Bank, said, but it was mostly in government debt.

Small businesses in the country say loans are not easy to come by. “Interest rates and lending criteria are too difficult to meet,” Lagos household product saleswoman Titi Adeojo said recently. “We do a lot of deposits (but) it’s not easy to get a loan.”

In 2008, credit to the private sector passed government borrowing for the first time, and many analysts had thought this heralded a consumer driven boom.

But 6.3 percent of the 7.4 trillion naira (R381.8 billion) in loans granted in 2008 turned bad, Renaissance Capital says, leaving nine overleveraged banks in need of a bailout.

Banks are reluctant to risk burning their fingers again.

“Our lending pattern has changed as it is more skewed towards major corporates. Our approval processes… [are] now more stringent,” said Kayode Fadahunsi, an investor relations director at United Bank for Africa.

Banks worry consumers and firms may not be able to pay back loans at high interest rates, whereas tax-free government bond returns are a safe bet at rates of 15 percent to 16 percent – a huge spread over average bank deposit rates of 1 percent to 2 percent.

“Access to credit is a bit more difficult for businesses and households,” said Femi Aribaloye, the head of risk management at Skye Bank. He said lending rates for big firms like Dangote Flour Mills had risen to 14 percent this year, from 12 percent in 2008. For consumers, by contrast, they went up to 33 percent this year, from 22 percent last year.

If treasury yields continue to fall, banks over-reliance on them for earnings could hurt profitability down the line. – Reuters

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