Wema Bank plans to raise N20 billion from the bond market by July and aims to pay a dividend this year for the first time in a decade, paving the way for an equity sale next year, its chief financial officer, Tunde Mabawonku, has said.
He said the mid-tier bank was focused on selling debt this year after it raised N6.2 billion in its first tranche of a N50 billion ($159 million) debt programme. He said the bank would start the process next month.
“We would want to pay dividends first to existing shareholders before raising equity in early 2019. It could be a combination of rights issues and private placement,” Mabawonku told Reuters.
The debt issue would help Wema boost its capital ratio above its internal guidance of 15 per cent, from 14.3 percent, the bank said earlier. The regulatory minimum capital ratio for Wema and its peers is 10 percent.
In July, Wema Bank said it could issue debt assuming government bond yields dropped below 18 percent with falling inflation. Yields are now at around 14 per cent.
It also talked about raising equity in 2018 to bolster its capital ratio and cut its operating costs as its new digital strategy gains traction. Nigerian firms are tapping debt markets this year after the government redeemed some treasury bills, instead of rolling them over, to bring down yields. Analysts expect the central bank to cut interest rates this year as inflation slows.
Nigeria’s biggest and oldest leasing firm C&I Leasing plans to raise N7 billion in a bond issue next month.
Wema aims to revive loan growth this year by focusing on small firms after its lending dropped by 4.9 per cent last year – despite the bank’s target of 1.5 per cent growth. It plans to increase lending by 10 per cent in 2018.