Access Bank paid about $60 million to purchase a controlling interest in South Africa’s 74-year-old Grobank, its CEO said Tuesday, signalling the culmination of the tier 1 lender’s aspiration to foray into Africa’s most industrialised nation and tap its market.
The move makes it Nigeria’s first bank to do so, with Access Bank ploughing in both equity and debt in Grobank as part of the grand plan to explore trade banking deals on its way to becoming “Africa’s Gateway to the World”, Managing Director Herbert Wigwe told CNBC Africa.
It will open up the means to widen trade finance capacity in Grobank, which is presently increasing its attention on the country’s agriculture industry.
No mention changed into made of the suitable stake size but the lender said in a word in September “the first is an preliminary coins consideration for a forty nine according to cent shareholding, increasing to a majority stake within the 2nd tranche”.
Banks in Nigeria are stepping up efforts to create new ways of bolstering profits beyond its shores as a buffer to an economic downturn that has prompted a fall in authorities bond yields and multiplied the prevalence of restructured mortgage, helped by way of the pandemic.
“We have a complete retail banking licence in South Africa. We will pursue a wholesale banking franchise. We will pursue trade finance,” Mr Wigwe said.
The South African acquisition is its 0.33 in eight months, having taken over Kenya’s Transnational Bank in July and Zambia-based Cavmont Bank in January.
It hopes to leverage the African Continental Free Trade Area settlement to go into Morocco, Algeria, Egypt, Ivory Coast, Senegal, Angola, Namibia and Ethiopia.
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