Zenith Bank PLC has been named bank of the Year Nigeria by the Banker,a publication of Financial Times of London. In a statement on its...
website the Banker said "Zenith has come a long way since it was
founded in 1990. The bank, which had $17bn of assets at the end of
2012, is the largest in Nigeria based on Tier 1 capital, according to
The Banker's latest Top 1000 rankings. By the same measure, it is the
sixth biggest lender in the whole of Africa.
"Zenith's performance in the past two years has been particularly
strong. One of the banks to come through Nigeria's 2009 financial
crisis relatively unscathed, it made a record pre-tax profit in 2012
of N102 billion ($651m). This year looks even better. It posted
profits before tax of N83 billion for the first nine months, up 10.4
per cent year on year. Analysts forecast it to earn about N106bn for
the full year, which would amount to a return on average equity of
close to 20 per cent.
Zenith's results for 2013 are all the more impressive given the
headwinds that Nigerian banks have faced recently. They have had to
contend with falling interest rates on government bonds, at least in
the first half of the year, and an increase in the levy they pay to
AMCON, a bad bank set up by the government amid the financial crisis.
Zenith has managed to overcome these by making plenty of effort to
expand its loan book. It has also been growing its non-interest
revenues. "[This year] will be a little bit difficult for the banks,"
says Godwin Emefiele, the bank's managing director.
"But it will still be a good year. Banks have got to diversify their
revenue base. That's what most of them, particularly Zenith, are
doing."
He adds that since the bank was established, it has invested in
technology to improve customer service, something that has enabled it
to grow its deposit base faster than most rivals. "We've always known
we need strong technology to back up customer service," he says. "We
will continue to do that.
website the Banker said "Zenith has come a long way since it was
founded in 1990. The bank, which had $17bn of assets at the end of
2012, is the largest in Nigeria based on Tier 1 capital, according to
The Banker's latest Top 1000 rankings. By the same measure, it is the
sixth biggest lender in the whole of Africa.
"Zenith's performance in the past two years has been particularly
strong. One of the banks to come through Nigeria's 2009 financial
crisis relatively unscathed, it made a record pre-tax profit in 2012
of N102 billion ($651m). This year looks even better. It posted
profits before tax of N83 billion for the first nine months, up 10.4
per cent year on year. Analysts forecast it to earn about N106bn for
the full year, which would amount to a return on average equity of
close to 20 per cent.
Zenith's results for 2013 are all the more impressive given the
headwinds that Nigerian banks have faced recently. They have had to
contend with falling interest rates on government bonds, at least in
the first half of the year, and an increase in the levy they pay to
AMCON, a bad bank set up by the government amid the financial crisis.
Zenith has managed to overcome these by making plenty of effort to
expand its loan book. It has also been growing its non-interest
revenues. "[This year] will be a little bit difficult for the banks,"
says Godwin Emefiele, the bank's managing director.
"But it will still be a good year. Banks have got to diversify their
revenue base. That's what most of them, particularly Zenith, are
doing."
He adds that since the bank was established, it has invested in
technology to improve customer service, something that has enabled it
to grow its deposit base faster than most rivals. "We've always known
we need strong technology to back up customer service," he says. "We
will continue to do that.
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ReplyDeleteWat d bleep hapnd to ma 2 fav banks? (Diamond b GTB???
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm not surprised. They've never failed me before. "Winks"
ReplyDelete