The Nigerian banking sector is, by most superficial readings, having a complex quarter.
Several listed banks have announced FY2025 results that include no final dividends.
Reported Non-Performing Loan (NPL) ratios at operating-company level have moved upward across multiple institutions.
Share prices have, in some cases, softened in the immediate aftermath of recent announcements. The financial press has, predictably, treated each of these as a separate problem.
For investors who read the sector through that lens, the next few weeks will look uncomfortable. For those who read it as a deliberate sector recalibration, the next few weeks will look like the most attractive entry window into Nigerian financial services stocks in several years.
The difference between the two readings is whether you understand what the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is actually trying to do.
The CBN is NOT merely executing a series of isolated measures
Step back from the individual headlines and the architecture of the past 18 months reveals a remarkably coherent sequence.
The CBN has, in deliberate order: (i) reset the minimum capital base of every deposit money bank in the country through a sectoral recapitalisation programme; (ii) withdrawn the pandemic-era forbearance measures that had been masking the true credit quality of bank loan books; (iii) tightened enforcement of credit-classification discipline as part of a broader effort to restore the industry’s Non-Performing Loan (NPL) ratio toward the 5% prudential threshold, from sector averages that several market analysts now estimate closer to 7%; and (iv) adopted a prudential posture on dividend distribution by deposit money banks during the recapitalisation cycle, which has prevented operating banks from upstreaming dividends to their holding companies, which in turn has prevented those holding companies from recommending final dividends to shareholders.
Each of these measures, considered in isolation, looks like a tightening. Considered together, they describe something different: a deliberate, end-to-end recalibration of the Nigerian banking sector toward a stronger, more transparent, more conservatively provisioned, and more disciplined-in-distribution baseline. The CBN is rebuilding the foundations of the sector for the next decade, not punishing it for the last one.
The institutions that emerge from this recalibration cycle with stronger capital, cleaner provisioning, transparent disclosure, and the institutional discipline to deploy retained earnings productively will be the institutions that compound at materially higher rates of return for the rest of the decade. Current market pricing does not yet appear to fully reflect that longer-term possibility.
Why the dip (if you see one) is the signal
Retail investors who watch the market in the immediate aftermath of FY2025 reporting season are going to see something that should, if read correctly, be welcomed.
When a bank announces results that include no dividend and a higher headline NPL print, a portion of the shareholder base responds mechanically. Dividend-yield funds rebalance. Retail investors who hold the stock for income trim. Short-term traders who follow the headline narrative exit. The supply-side of the order book temporarily exceeds the demand-side, and the share price softens, sometimes by 5%, sometimes by 8%, sometimes more.
What does not happen, in the same window, is any commensurate deterioration in the underlying institution. The capital base is unchanged. The earnings power is unchanged. The franchise is unchanged. The growth trajectory is unchanged. What has changed is who is holding the stock and at what price they are willing to hold it.
This is the structural pattern across banking sectors globally during regulatory tightening cycles. The mechanical sellers leave first. Historically, deep-horizon institutional capital tends to re-enter after the initial volatility subsides. The window between those two events is, historically, the most attractive entry window for retail investors with multi-year horizons. The pattern has been observed across the South African banking recalibration of the late 1990s, the Turkish banking restructuring of the early 2000s, the Indian banking clean-up of the late 2010s, and the European banking stress-test era of the 2010s. The mechanism is the same. The opportunity is the same.
If Nigerian bank shares have softened in the days following recent announcements, and a check of the NGX board will reveal where they have, the question for a retail investor with a horizon of two years or longer is not whether the dip is justified. The question is which names, among those that are still delivering tangible growth but are underpriced, have the architecture to compound through the next phase.
A short list of what to look for
A defensible screen for which Nigerian bank stocks are worth accumulating during this window rests on five criteria, applied in order.
First, recapitalisation status. Institutions that have substantially completed the CBN’s recapitalisation programme have removed the largest single source of forward equity issuance risk. Their share counts are stabilised, the licensing designation is set, and their dilution exposure is behind them.
While there will still be capital raises in different forms and for different reasons, Banks/HoldCos looking to execute IPOs soon may carry an uncertainty that the others who have theirs in the rear view do not.
Second, shareholders’ funds expansion. A bank whose shareholders’ funds expanded by 30% or more during FY2025 has materially strengthened its balance sheet during the cycle in which strength is being demanded by the regulator. Institutions in that bucket include several listed names; Sterling Financial Holdings Plc, which expanded shareholders’ funds by 40.5% to ₦428.7 billion in FY2025 and further to ₦542.5 billion in Q1 2026, is a clear example. So are one or two others.
Third, disclosure posture on NPLs. This is the variable most retail investors underweight, and the one most likely to determine which banks emerge from the cycle with reinforced credibility. Institutions that have absorbed elevated credit loss expense during the framework recalibration are likely to exit the cycle with cleaner books, stronger provisioning discipline and improved long-term market confidence.
For example, institutions like First Holdco, which took a ₦748 billion impairment charge in FY2025 (up from ₦426 billion the previous year), while Sterling absorbed ₦32.9 billion (three times the prior year), with a further ₦9.2 billion provisioned in Q1 2026, have clearly chosen the prudent side of the cycle.
The absolute magnitudes differ because the underlying loan books differ; the directional posture is what remains consistent: recognise the risk now, absorb the income statement impact, and emerge from the recalibration cycle with stronger balance-sheet credibility. Both institutions also did not recommend a dividend for FY2025, reinforcing the consistency between conservative provisioning and capital retention.
That combination is more indicative of an underwriting culture preparing for the next decade than one optimising for the next quarterly result. Banks whose provisioning has remained flat or declined during the same period, particularly those that have continued to distribute earnings through the cycle, may be signalling a different level of prudential conservatism.
Fourth, HoldCo architecture in active use. Several Nigerian banks have transitioned to holding company structures. The differentiator now is which institutions are actively deploying retained capital across multiple subsidiaries rather than treating the structure as a regulatory wrapper.
Sterling’s diversified multi-subsidiary platform (Sterling Bank, The Alternative Bank, SterlingFi Wealth Management) represents one configuration of this approach; GTCO operates a different configuration through HabariPay, its pension fund manager and its asset management business; FBN Holdings and Stanbic IBTC operate further variants. Banks still functioning largely as single-line commercial banking institutions under a HoldCo structure represent a different proposition altogether.
Fifth, share price relative to tangible book value. This is perhaps the simplest variable, and the one retail investors should weigh most carefully. Banks trading near or below tangible book, particularly those that meet the first four criteria, may represent structurally attractive valuation levels despite short-term news flow. Historically, the period during which fundamentally strengthening financial institutions trade around those levels tends to be limited.
The retail-investor playbook
The structural argument for accumulating Nigerian bank stocks during this window, especially the HoldCo-structured institutions that have completed recapitalisation, strengthened their capital bases, provisioned conservatively, and are visibly deploying retained earnings across diversified subsidiaries, remains compelling.
The tactical argument, however, depends significantly on entry pricing, which current market conditions appear to be offering on more favourable terms than retail investors have seen in some time.
The mechanical sellers will likely continue exiting over the next several weeks. Historically, longer-horizon institutional capital tends to re-enter after the initial volatility subsides and valuation levels become difficult to ignore. The market is now entering the phase where longer-horizon investors typically begin reassessing value.
For retail investors with a horizon of two years or longer, the FY2025 reporting cycle is less a story about dividends withheld and NPLs disclosed, and more a story about a sector being recalibrated for the next decade. A relatively small group of institutions appear structurally positioned to compound through that recalibration. The names that meet the criteria above are not numerous, and current pricing in some cases appears to reflect short-term sentiment more heavily than long-term institutional architecture.
That gap is what deep-horizon investors will increasingly be evaluating closely.








