Site icon Nairametrics

Nigerian banks increase interest rates on mortgage, personal, corporate loans by at least 2%

Fitch says Nigerian banks can withstand the depreciation of the Naira 

Commercial Banks in Nigeria have implemented interest rate hikes for loans raising rates by as much as 200 basis points (2%).

The interest rate hike is in response to the recent increase in the central bank’s monetary policy rate (MPR) which was jacked up from 11.5% to 13%, a one-hundred-and-fifty-point basis point increase.

The MPR is a benchmark rate used by the apex bank to lend money to commercial banks in Nigeria. Banks often add a premium to the MPR when setting interest rates for their borrowers.

What banks are doing

In a letter to borrowers seen by Nairametrics, a commercial bank (name withheld) informed the customer that they will be “reviewing the interest rate” upwards due to “prevailing market conditions” in the market.

The Monetary Policy Committee of the Central Bank of Nigeria voted unanimously last month to raise the benchmark interest rate to 13% after two years of expansionary monetary policy. Whilst, the CBN’s hawkish move is targeted at curbing the rising rate of inflation in the country, it is likely to slow down economic activity in the country especially if it slows down loan creation.

News continues after this ad

Exit mobile version