The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has given three commercial banks until June 2016 to recapitalise after they failed to meet the minimum Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) of 10 per cent.
The CBN explained at the weekend, that 14 banks have licenses to operate as regional and national lenders with respective capital bases of N10 billion ($50 million) and N25 billion, three of which were asked to raise fresh funds.
The Liquidity Stress Test was conducted by the CBN, which indicated that the capital position of ‘three small banks’ has fallen below regulatory capital requirement.
The test, contained on the CBN’s Financial Stability Report showed the Capital Adequacy Ratios (CARs) of the affected banks were below five per cent regulatory threshold. The three banks are not among the domestic systemically important banks (D-SIBs), it said.
The report, which measured the lenders’ positions as at June this year, showed that the number of banks with CAR less than five per cent, also increased from zero to three from December 31, 2014 to June 30, 2015. The CAR is a ratio of a bank’s assets to its risks
According to CBN’s Director, Financial Policy and Regulation Department, Kelvin Amugo, the liquidity stress test was conducted, using the Implied Cash Flow Analysis (ICFA) and the Maturity Mismatch/Rollover Risk approaches to assess the resilience of the banking industry to liquidity and funding shocks.
He said the ICFA approach assessed the ability of the banking system to withstand unanticipated substantial withdrawal of deposits, as well as short-term wholesale and long-term funding over a five-day and cumulative 30-day periods, with specific assumptions on the fire sale of assets.
The report said liquidity ratio (LR) of the Nigerian banking industry decreased by 6.5 percentage points to 39.3 per cent from the 45.8 per cent December, 2014 position.
The decline in the LR position was driven mainly by the large and medium banks with 6.5 and 7.4 percentage points decrease respectively from their December 2014 LR position to 36.9 per cent and 45.5 per cent respectively. This decline may be traced to the sustained tight monetary policy stance of the CBN.
The test results revealed that the industry liquidity ratio declined to 9.30 and 6.10 per cent, from 39.3 per cent baseline position after the five-day and cumulative 30-day shocks, respectively. The result of the stress tests indicated potential vulnerability to liquidity risk in the event that these scenarios crystallized.
“Overall, there was an improvement in the baseline CAR of the Nigerian banking industry at end-June 2014 compared to the December 2014 position. The baseline CAR rose by 0.23 percentage point over the December 2014 position to 17.38 per cent at end-June 2015. This was driven mainly by improvements in the baseline CAR of the large banks which rose by 1.03 percentage points over their December 2014 position to 18.56 per cent at end-June 2015,” the report said.
“Equally, the number of banks with CAR greater than the 15 per cent prudential hurdle rate for international banks increased from 13 at end-December 2014 to 16 at end-June 2015. However, the number of banks with CAR less than five per cent also increased from zero to three over the period,” he said.