19 Banks Meet New Capital Requirements Ahead Of March 31 Deadline


Nigeria’s Banking Sector Hit Milestone as 19 Banks Meet CBN’s New Capital Requirements Ahead of March 31, 2026 Deadline



The banking sector in Nigeria made strides when 19 banks exceeded the capital requirement to be imposed by the CBN by the set deadline on March 31, 2026.

The Nigerian banking sector has reached a significant milestone in that the number of banks that have managed to meet the revised capital requirements by the Central Bank of Nigeria, which are set to be met by March 31, 2026, has contained the milestone of nineteen banks fulfilling the capital requirements of the Central Bank of Nigeria endeavor, which has resulted in an enhanced compliance exercise and the credibility of the operational strength of the financial system.

This recapitalization milestone is a key point in the strategic agenda of recapitalization by the CBN, which seeks to strengthen the stability and shock-cushioning capacity and to put Nigerian banks in the position to support economic recovery and growth.

What Is the Rationale behind the Recapitalization Exercise?

In March 2024, the Central Bank of Nigeria launched a new structure of recapitalization, which substantially increased the minimum paid-up capital requirement of all licensed banks in the country. Under the reform:

- Commercial banks in other countries must have a minimum of N500 billion of paid-up capital.

- The national commercial banks should have a target of N200 billion.

- Regional commercial banks are required to have a net worth of N50 billion.

- The merchant banks should also reach at least N50billion.

- Islamic (non-interest) banks have a threshold between N10 billion and N20 billion that depends on whether they have been authorized or not.

These mark significant increases over historic capital needs that push the banks to raise new capital through markets, shareholders, strategic partners, or through structural realignments through mergers and changes of licenses.

The rationale of raising capital requirements by CBN.

The policy purpose that is behind the high levels of capital floors is straightforward: to secure the banks against financial shocks, increase the ability to lend, lower overall system risk, and make the standards of the banking sector in Nigeria comparable with international standards. Augmented capital buffers assist in ensuring that banks are able to take up losses in a better way to sustain economic activities and improve credit creation, which is the key determinant of economic stability in the long run.

The analysts in the banking sector have come up with some motivations for the reforms:

- Making the financial system more resilient to global volatility.

- Boosting shareholder trust in the Nigerian banks.

- Promoting consolidation, especially of smaller banks, which find it difficult to keep pace with the increased capital requirements.

- Posting of greater funding in both infrastructural and business initiatives that require stronger balance sheets.

The 19 Banks That Break the Mark.

By the beginning of January 2026, the below-the-line banks have affirmed that they conform to the new capital requirement by the CBN:

International Banks (N500 billion Minimum)

These are institutions that have been able to reach the highest level of capital:

- Access Bank

- Fidelity Bank

- First Bank of Nigeria

- Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank)—of GTCO.

- United Bank for Africa (UBA)

- Zenith Bank

These financial institutions are systemically important, and they have a substantial portion of the cross-border banking in Nigeria.

National and Regional Banks (N200 000/50000 Minimum)

Banks that conform to the second-tier requirement are

- Citibank Nigeria

- Ecobank Nigeria

- Globus Bank

- Stanbic IBTC Bank

- Sterling Bank

- Wema Bank

- PremiumTrust Bank

- Providus Bank

These banks have wide domestic markets and are significant participants in the commercial banking of the country and the retail financial services of the country.

Merchant Banks and Non-Interest Banks.

There have also been three merchant banks and two non-interest banks that have passed their respective requirements:

- FSDH Merchant Bank

- Greenwich Merchant Bank

- Nova Merchant Bank

- Jaiz Bank (non‑interest)

- Lotus Bank (non‑interest)

Merchant banks are based on working with corporate finance and investment banking, whereas non-interest banks are oriented on working with the customers, who need the financial services to be Shariah-compliant.

How Banks Raised Capital

Their increased capital requirements required a strategic push. Strategies to raise capital used by the Nigerian banks included:

Private Placements and Rights Issues.

Various banks appealed to institutional investors and the current stockholders to raise new equity. Indicatively, on 31 December 2025, Fidelity Bank completed a N250.270 billion private placement, as the offer was successful because there was a lot of investor interest. The rights issues and the private placements are also attractive since they enable banks to generate funds without taking on any debts to save their financial health and meet the regulatory requirement.

Shareholder Support and Strategic Alliances.

Other banks have teamed up with strategic shareholders and investors to raise funds, a trend that does not only help in compliance but also instills strategic value over time by means of the partnerships that are capable of pushing growth and innovation.

Business Realignments

Other financial institutions considered merger, acquisition, or downgrade of licence or just to restructure to achieve capital requirements or reassess themselves in the market.

Market and Economic Implications.

The fact that the nineteen banks have been compliant early enough is seen as a major positive change in the financial sector of Nigeria. According to industry experts, this has a number of implications:

Enhancement of investor confidence.

Both local and foreign investors would now consider the banking sector as a favorable investment given that most of the key banks have passed critical capital bases. Good capital bases by themselves give an investor the clearance that the risk is well under control and that the banks have the ability to fund the economy.

Planning towards Economic Growth.

Greater equity capital allows the banks to increase their lending book, which they lend to small businesses and infrastructure developments as well as consumer financing. Increased access to credit is an economic stimulant.

Possibility of Sector Consolidation.

Although nineteen banks have achieved the requirements, some others are still to progress. Smaller banks, particularly those that find it hard to raise capital, may consider consolidating through a merger or acquisition to apportion the costs and gain compliance in a cost-efficient manner.

Empowered Financial System.

Banks that are well endowed with capital buffers are in a better position to absorb economic downturns, liquidity shocks, and market volatility, thus enhancing the stability of the entire financial ecosystem, lowering the systemic risk, and assuring depositors.

The Ongoing Supervision and Regulatory Prospect of CBN.

The Central Bank of Nigeria has still stated that they will be vigilant on the banks that have not met the minimum requirements. The March 31 2026 deadline is hard and a fine can be imposed using regulatory measures against non compliance institutions.

The recapitalization policy of CBN is a component of the larger changes to modernize the Nigerian financial sector, enhance the standard of the operations, and bring the regulation practices to the international standards. The reforms encompass being more transparent in its capital adequacy reporting and in routine supervisory interaction with banks.

Conclusion: The Nigerian banking turnaround.

The fact that the number of Nigerian banks that have satisfied the increased capital requirements of CBN before the March 31, 2026 deadline is epochal in the history of the development of the financial sector in Nigeria. It shows turnover success and market readiness to promote new requirements of financial soundness.


19 Banks Meet New Capital Requirements Ahead Of March 31 Deadline

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HANYEL

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