CBN’s Latest Rate Cut Sets Stage for Post-Recapitalisation Bank Lending, Analysts Say

Nigeria’s latest benchmark rate cut is a calibrated move to support bank recapitalisation without undermining gains in inflation control, naira stability and reserves, analysts at Comercio Research said.

In a note on Tuesday, the Lagos-based firm noted that the move aligns with the apex bank’s broader financial-sector strategy, particularly the ongoing recapitalisation of deposit money banks.

“The drive aims to strengthen banks’ shock-absorption capacity, expand credit to productive sectors, and position the banking system to support Nigeria’s goal of a trillion-dollar economy,” the note said.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) lowered the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) by 50 basis points to 26.5 percent — the second cut in five months — pushing borrowing costs to their lowest level since June 2024.

The decision, announced by CBN governor Olayemi Cardoso after the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting in Abuja, is intended to support growth as inflation pressures gradually moderate.

So far, only 20 of Nigeria’s 33 deposit money banks (DMBs) have met the new minimum capital requirements announced in March 2024, according to the CBN governor.

Under the framework, international banks must raise paid-up capital to N500 billion, national banks to N200 billion and regional banks to N50 billion by the March 31, 2026 deadline.

Commercio said stronger capital buffers will enable banks to scale lending more aggressively once compliance is achieved, with the latest MPR cut helping to ease funding costs across the system.

“In effect, monetary easing and recapitalisation work in tandem to boost credit capacity while stimulating economic activity,” the report added.

Policy stance remains cautious

Despite the rate cut, the MPC retained all other key parameters, signalling a still-tight liquidity stance.

The asymmetric corridor was held at +50/-450 basis points around the MPR, the Cash Reserve Ratio remained at 45 percent for deposit money banks and 16 percent for merchant banks, while the liquidity ratio was unchanged at 30 percent.

Comercio said the unchanged prudential settings suggest the easing is being carefully managed to avoid reigniting inflation or destabilising financial markets as banks prepare to expand lending.

Market implications

According to the firm, the rate move should support both credit and asset markets in the near term.

“The rate cut reinforces momentum by lowering corporate borrowing costs and improving relative equity valuations,” Comercio said. “In fixed income, bond and treasury yields face downward pressure, easing government borrowing costs and supporting fiscal space.”

The analysts, however, note that the ultimate growth impact will depend on how quickly banks complete recapitalisation and whether monetary easing effectively transmits to lending rates in the real economy.

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