GCR Ratings has upgraded Fidelity Bank Plc.’s national scale long-term and short-term issuer credit ratings to A (NG) and A1 (NG) from A-(NG) and A2 (NG) respectively, with the outlook revised to stable from negative.
According to GCR, the ratings upgrade reflects Fidelity Bank Plc.’s strong growth trajectory over the review period covering the financial year 2017 to the end of the first half of 2021, whilst maintaining moderate credit losses through the cycle.
It was noted that the bank has a relatively low non-performing loans ratio, as well as a stable funding structure.
The emerging market-focused rating firm also said Fidelity’s competitive position is underpinned by its positioning within the tier 2 segment of the Nigerian banking industry.
With a balance sheet size of N3.1 trillion as of 1H21, Fidelity controls 5.3%, 5.8%, and 7.4% of the industry total assets, customer deposits, and gross loans and advances respectively, it added.
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GCR believes that the bank has demonstrated revenue stability over the review period, with net interest income maintaining an upward trajectory, notwithstanding the highly competitive lending space and decreasing yield on investment securities.
However, the firm observed that the bank’s operations are limited to Nigeria, with a narrow focus on core banking activities.
“This limited product and geographic diversification are a constraint on the competitive position. Management and governance standards of the bank are in line with industry best practices”.
GCR stated that Fidelity Bank capital and leverage is a rating negative. While the bank’s capital adequacy ratio improved to 18.8% at 1H21 from 18.2% at FY20 (FY19: 18.3%), it was largely supported by tier 2 funding.
“While this is above the 15% regulatory minimum for its international banking license category, rapid risk-weighted assets growth saw the tier 1 capital adequacy ratio declined from 15.5% at FY2019 to 14.1% at 1H2021”, GCR stated.
The rating report indicated that GCR computed capital ratio is forecast to register within the intermediate range, at c.16%, over the next 12-18 months.
The bank NPL ratio moderated to 2.8% at 1H2021, after rising to 3.8% at FY2020 from 3.3% recorded at FY2019. This is well below the regulatory tolerable limit of 5% and the industry average NPL ratio of about 6% in FY2020”, according to the rating note.
The bank’s foreign currency lending is also above the industry average of 35%, standing at about 40% of gross loans.
“We also factored in the sizable portion of the bank’s loan book (1H21: 26.8%) restructured in line with the CBN’s regulatory forbearance initiative in 2020, albeit balanced against management’s representation that the facilities are performing in line with agreed terms”.
However, the ratings agency said the deposit book is relatively diversified and supportive of funding costs for the bank.