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CBN insists on stronger governance, risk discipline in bank recapitalisation

‎The Central Bank of Nigeria says strong governance and risk discipline are critical to the success of Nigeria’s ongoing bank recapitalisation programme.


‎Director of Risk Management Department and Chief Risk Officer at the CBN, Dr Blaise Ijebor, said this on Thursday at a virtual risk management roundtable organised by the Association of Enterprise Risk Management Professionals.


‎The event convened in Lagos had the theme: “Recapitalisation, Mergers and Acquisition in the Nigerian Financial System; Minimising Risks and Maximising Opportunities for Greater Post-Recapitalisation Value”.


‎Ijebor, represented by another Director, Olabanji Samuel, said the recapitalisation exercise was a macro-financial stability intervention designed to strengthen the resilience of financial institutions and position the sector for sustainable growth.

‎He said that lessons from past consolidation efforts, particularly the 2004–2005 banking reforms and the aftermath of the 2009 financial crisis, showed that capital alone could not guarantee stability

‎“Capital builds strength, but governance sustains it,” he said.


‎He said that weak governance, poor credit risk practices and incentive-driven lending had previously undermined well-capitalised institutions.


‎He said that the current recapitalisation exercise was forward-looking and aligned with global standards, incorporating stress testing, capital adequacy and recovery planning to ensure banks can withstand shocks without public intervention.


‎Ijebor said the exercise placed greater responsibility on risk and compliance professionals, describing them as strategic partners.


‎He urged risk leaders to provide forward-looking assessments of how recapitalisation and potential mergers and acquisitions could alter institutional risk profiles, while compliance officers should anticipate regulatory implications.


‎He identified key risk areas requiring attention, including balance sheet vulnerabilities, operational and integration risks, systemic risks, and governance and compliance concerns.


‎He stressed the need for rigorous stress testing, accurate asset valuation, strong board oversight and careful management of anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing frameworks.


‎According to him, the recapitalisation process also presents an opportunity for banks to strengthen enterprise risk management systems, improve data quality and integrate risk considerations into strategic planning.


‎Ijebor said that increased capital should not lead to excessive risk-taking, urging boards to recalibrate risk appetite frameworks and align capital allocation with long-term value creation.


‎He said that if properly managed, the exercise could unlock opportunities in infrastructure financing, capital market development, trade facilitation, innovation and cybersecurity resilience.


‎“Opportunities will not realise themselves; they depend on the choices we make today,” he said.

‎Ijebor further stressed the importance of board and executive accountability, noting that transparency, long-term incentives and strong governance structures were essential to the success of the recapitalisation exercise.

‎He said the ongoing exercise represented a pivotal moment for Nigeria’s financial system, with the potential to build stronger institutions capable of driving economic growth.

‎“The difference between success and failure will be shaped by governance, discipline and strategic clarity,” he said.


‎Panelists at the event however said that Nigeria’s multi-sector recapitalisation was strengthening institutions but creating systemic risks that require stronger coordination and governance.


‎Prof. Olufemi Awoyemi, Founder and Chairman of Proshare Ltd, said that simultaneous capital raising across sectors was straining market capacity and exposing coordination gaps among regulators.


‎Ms Bunmi Lawson, pioneer Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of EDFIN Microfinance Bank Ltd said that larger institutions demanded stronger risk frameworks, regulatory capacity and effective capital deployment.


‎Prof. Ehi Esoimeme, a Professor of Business Law and Ethics at James Hope University (Nigeria), highlighted financial crime risks, urging stricter due diligence, data management and monitoring systems.


‎The panelists agreed that while recapitalisation offered growth opportunities, effective governance and risk management were critical to sustaining value.


‎NAN

 

 


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