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    MarketForces Africa » MarketForces News » Wema Bank Plans Right Issue in Q3, Off Rating Watch List
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    Wema Bank Plans Right Issue in Q3, Off Rating Watch List

    Olu AnisereBy Olu AnisereJune 21, 2021Updated:June 21, 2021No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Wema Bank Plans Right Issue in Q3, Off Rating Watch List
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    Wema Bank Plans Right Issue in Q3, Off Rating Watch List

    Wema Bank Plc will boost its capital position with a right issue in the third quarter of the financial year 2021, a decision that removes the Tier-II lender from Fitch’s Rating Watch negative list.

    Closed at 55 Kobo per share on Friday, the bank is currently valued below N22 billion on 33.57 billion outstanding shares on the Nigerian Exchange. That means to raise N10 billion, the lender would probably need to issue 20 billion shares.

    Recently, Fitch Ratings affirmed the lender’s Long-Term Issuer Default Rating (IDR) at ‘B-‘ or highly speculative and removed it from Rating Watch Negative (RWN) last month with a stable outlook.

    It said the removal of the RWN on Wema’s IDRs, Viability Rating (VR) and National Ratings reflects Fitch’s expectation that, having recently received shareholder approval, plans for a significant rights issue in 3Q-2021 will likely proceed as intended and improve capitalisation and leverage to more acceptable levels”.

    Wema Bank Plans Right Issue in Q3, Off Rating Watch List
    Wema Bank Plc

    The rating agency said this also reflects a view that loan and asset growth will evolve at a slower pace than in recent years and near-term risks to the bank’s financial profile from the economic fallout of the pandemic have receded.

    It added that the stable outlook on Wema’s Long-Term IDR reflects view that the current rating has sufficient headroom to absorb moderate shocks from sustained downside risks to the operating environment over the next 12-18 months.

    Meanwhile, lender’s IDRs and National Ratings were driven by its standalone creditworthiness, as expressed by its ‘b-‘ VR.

    Fitch said the VR considers the concentration of the bank’s activities within Nigeria’s challenging operating environment, a small franchise, high credit concentrations and a weak funding profile.

    In addition, it also considers easing pressures on asset quality and profitability from the economic fallout of the pandemic and our expectation of a material improvement in capitalisation and leverage following the rights issue.

    “Capitalisation and leverage have weakened significantly in recent years as a result of an aggressive growth strategy, with the tangible leverage ratio declining to 4% at end-Q1-2021 from 7.6% at end of 2017, which is weaker than peers’.

    Wema’s Fitch Core Capital ratio printed 14.4% at end of Q1-2021, broadly in line with peers’ but is considered in view of the bank’s particularly low risk-weight density at 27% at end of Q1-2021.

    The rating explained that Wema’s capital adequacy ratio of 14.8% at end of Q1-2021, which is supported by Tier 2-qualifying subordinated debt, is comfortably above the 10% minimum requirement for a bank with a national license.

    “The removal of the RWN mainly reflects our view that the large rights issue planned for Q3-2021 will likely proceed as intended and will significantly improve the tangible leverage ratio to over 7%, which is more consistent with peers’.

    “This follows the recent approval of the resolution to raise additional capital at the annual general meeting, commitment from the largest shareholders to participate in the rights issue, and the commencement of the regulatory approval process”, the ratings said.

    Wema’s impaired loans -stage 3 loans under IFRS 9 – ratio increased moderately to 5.2% at end-2020 from 3% at end-2019 as a result of the pandemic.

    Also, Stage 2 loans also increased to 9.8% of gross loans at end-2020 from 5% at end-2020. The bank’s impaired loans ratio declined to 3.8% and stage 2 loans declined to 6.5% of gross loans at end-Q1-2021 owing to customer repayments due to a recovery in economic activity.

    Fitch said although the overwhelming majority of customers are making principal repayments following the expiry of most debt relief measures at end of Q1-2021, loan quality remains under pressure as a high percentage of gross loans (46% on a cumulative basis at end-Q1-2021) have been restructured since the start of the pandemic.

    The ratings noted that specific coverage of impaired loans which printed at 38% at end of Q1-2021 is fairly low due to continued recovery expectations and sound coverage by collateral.

    “Single-borrower concentration is significantly higher than peers’, with the 20-largest customer exposures equivalent to 39% of gross loans at end-2020”, Fitch said.

    However, the rating agency added that exposure to the problematic oil and gas sector is lower, representing 17% of gross loans and exposure to the riskier upstream segment is limited.

    Foreign-currency lending which accounted for 11% of gross loans at end-2020 is also distinctly lower than peers’, which results in less exposure to foreign currency shortage and naira devaluation risks.

    “Our asset-quality assessment also considers substantial non-loan assets (64% of total assets at end of Q1-2021) that largely comprise Nigeria sovereign fixed-income securities and cash reserves at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)”.

    Fitch said Wema Bank profitability metrics tend to be considerably lower than those of larger peers, with operating returns on risk-weighted assets averaging 2.1% over the past four years, due to weaker net interest margins (NIMs) and a high cost-to-income ratio. 

    “Weaker NIMs are explained by a greater reliance on more expensive term-deposit funding, whereas the high cost-to-income ratio is a function of weak revenue generation, investments in marketing and digitisation, and high regulatory costs applicable to all Nigerian banks”, it added.

    Lender’s operating returns on risk-weighted assets declined to 1.7% in 2020 from 2.6% in 2019, largely reflecting a material reduction in trading income from the high levels experienced in 2019.

    Wema’s NIM remained broadly stable at 5.9% in 2020, with the fall in sovereign fixed-income yields and increased cash reserves at the CBN being offset by a material decline in cost of funding.

    Loan impairment charges, which equalled 1.2% of average gross loans in 2020, were fairly contained as a result of strong collateral underpinning newly-classified impaired loans.

    Operating returns on risk-weighted assets recovered to 2.2% in Q1-2021 as a result of a significant decline in loan impairment charges.

    Fitch concluded that Wema’s National Ratings reflect the bank’s creditworthiness relative to that of other issuers in Nigeria.

    “They are at the lower end of the Nigerian national scale, primarily reflecting Wema’s small franchise, constrained profitability, adequate leverage following the rights issue and a weak funding profile”, it noted.

    Wema Bank Off Rating Watch Negative List on Capital Raise PlanI

    Wema Bank
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    Olu Anisere
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    Olu Anisere is a financial and economic journalist at MarketForces Africa, specialising in African macroeconomic policy, international finance, energy markets, and continental development.He covers major multilateral institutions, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), providing readers with frontline reporting on policies shaping Africa's economic trajectory.Olu has reported extensively on Nigeria's fiscal and monetary policy landscape, including CBN interest rate decisions, Nigeria's bond market, FX inflows, and the country's engagement with global financial institutions.His coverage spans IMF and World Bank Spring and Annual Meetings, African Ministers of Finance conferences, and high-level economic forums where Africa's development agenda is set.His reporting captures perspectives from Africa's most influential economic voices, including Tony Elumelu, senior IMF officials, and CBN leadership, bringing institutional insight and policy depth to MarketForces Africa's readers.Olu also covers Inside Africa — tracking economic, investment, and development stories from across the continent. Olu Anisere is based in Lagos, Nigeria.

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