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Crude earnings fall by N3.18tn amid output surge

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Nigeria’s crude oil exports declined by N3.18tn in the first half of 2025 despite an increase in production volumes, the latest foreign trade statistics report from the National Bureau of Statistics has shown.

It was observed that while the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission reported a 12.7 per cent rise in crude oil output during the period, export earnings from crude fell by more than 11 per cent year-on-year.

Between January and June 2025, crude oil exports totalled N24.92tn, down from N28.10tn in the same period of 2024. This represents an 11.3 per cent decline in value, or a loss of N3.18tn.

Further analysis of the foreign trade data from the NBS by The PUNCH showed that in the first quarter of 2025, crude exports stood at N12.96tn, compared to N15.49tn in Q1 2024. The difference of N2.53tn amounts to a 16.3 per cent fall. By the second quarter, the decline was less steep: exports dropped from N12.61tn in Q2 2024 to N11.97tn in Q2 2025, a reduction of N642bn or 5.1 per cent.

The contribution of crude oil to total exports also weakened. In Q1 2024, crude accounted for 80.8 per cent of Nigeria’s exports, but by Q1 2025 this had dropped to 62.9 per cent, a decline of nearly 18 percentage points. The downward trend continued in Q2, with crude making up 52.6 per cent of exports, compared to 71.2 per cent in Q2 2024 — a decline of about 18.6 percentage points.

By contrast, non-crude oil exports surged. In H1 2025, they more than doubled to N18.43tn, compared with N8.79tn in H1 2024 — a growth of 109.6 per cent or an additional N9.64tn. Non-oil exports alone rose from N3.74tn to N6.21tn, an increase of N2.47tn or 66 per cent.

Overall trade also expanded. Total exports in H1 2025 reached N43.35tn, up from N36.89tn in H1 2024, reflecting a 17.5 per cent increase. Imports, on the other hand, rose by a slimmer margin of 6.9 per cent, from N28.72tn in H1 2024 to N30.71tn in H1 2025.

This contributed to an improved trade balance, which grew by 54.6 per cent, from N8.17tn in H1 2024 to N12.64tn in H1 2025. The PUNCH further observed that crude oil’s dominance in Nigeria’s export profile is being eroded, with its share sliding from 76.2 per cent in H1 2024 to 57.5 per cent in H1 2025.

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The development highlights a paradox in Africa’s largest oil producer where rising output has not translated into stronger export performance, raising questions about domestic absorption, global oil demand, and pricing conditions. The data suggest that while Nigeria is pumping more crude, weaker global prices, rising domestic utilisation, or both, may be weighing on export receipts.

Earlier in March 2025, The PUNCH reported that Nigeria’s 2025 budget could come under pressure as crude oil prices slipped below the government’s benchmark projection of $75 per barrel. The situation, compounded by a dip in average daily crude production, was also expected to impact local refineries, including the Dangote plant and others.

While global factors such as falling oil prices may have contributed to the decline in export earnings, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has been supplying crude to the Dangote Petroleum Refinery under a naira-for-crude arrangement — a move analysts say could be diverting some volumes away from international markets.

Earlier in June 2025, The PUNCH reported that the Federal Government sold crude oil valued at N219.38bn to the Dangote Petroleum Refinery in the first four months of 2025.

The government also earned $1.59m from crude oil exports in April 2025, during the period it suspended sales of domestic crude allocations to the Dangote refinery and local refiners. These details were contained in internal documents from the NNPCL, submitted at the Federation Account Allocation Committee meetings.

266.9m barrels crude

Nigeria pumped a total of 266.9 million barrels of crude oil between January and June 2025, according to figures obtained from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission by The PUNCH. The data show that the country recorded higher output across all six months compared to the same period in 2024, when production stood at 236.7 million barrels.

In January 2025, crude production rose to 47.7 million barrels, higher than the 44.2 million barrels recorded in January 2024. February output also increased to 41 million barrels, up from 38.3 million barrels in the same month of the previous year.

The upward trend extended into March, where production climbed to 43.4 million barrels, a gain of more than 5 million barrels compared to 38.2 million barrels in March 2024. April saw output reach 44.6 million barrels, rising by nearly 6 million barrels from the 38.7 million barrels recorded in April the previous year.

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May’s figures showed a further improvement, with Nigeria producing 45 million barrels compared to 39.1 million barrels in May 2024. The highest year-on-year increase came in June, when production hit 45.2 million barrels, up from 38.1 million barrels a year earlier, a difference of about 7.1 million barrels.

Overall, the first half of 2025 saw crude production rise by 30.2 million barrels compared with the same period in 2024, representing a growth rate of 12.7 per cent. When condensates are included, total liquid output for the period reached 303.2 million barrels, compared to 275 million barrels recorded in the first half of 2024.

Industry watchers say the steady increase in crude production reflects improved operating conditions in the oil sector, though they caution that challenges such as pipeline vandalism, theft, and underinvestment continue to pose risks.

However, the NUPRC earlier revealed a 50.2 per cent reduction in crude oil losses during the first seven months of 2025. In a recent statement by the Head of Media and Strategic Communications at NUPRC, Eniola Akinkuotu, it was noted that between January and July 2025, the country lost 2.04 million barrels of crude oil, averaging 9,600 barrels per day, which is the lowest level since 2009 when losses were recorded at 8,500 barrels per day.

The current figures represent a 94.57 per cent drop from the losses experienced in 2021. The statement read, “Between January and July 2025, crude oil losses were contained at 2.04 million barrels, averaging 9,600 barrels per day over the seven-month period. This marks a clear departure from the high-loss years that have long plagued the industry.

“By comparison, the entire 2024 calendar year recorded 4.1 million barrels lost at a daily average of 11,300 barrels. Remarkably, in just the first seven months of 2025, losses were cut by 50.2 per cent, with only 2.04 million barrels lost over the period.

“The figures for the period ending July 2025 also represent a dramatic 94.57 per cent drop in crude oil losses compared to the full year of 2021, when Nigeria lost a staggering 37.6 million barrels at a daily average of 102,900 barrels.”

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According to the statement, the progress was made possible by a combination of effective regulatory measures and collaboration with security agencies, oil operators, and local communities.

The NUPRC’s metering audit, aimed at ensuring accurate measurements of production and exports, has played a pivotal role in reducing discrepancies. NUPRC’s success is also attributed to the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act in 2021, which has significantly contributed to the downward trend in oil losses.

Also, the commission has adopted both kinetic and non-kinetic strategies to tackle the issue, continuing to work closely with stakeholders in the oil sector to ensure the country’s resources are better protected.

Earlier in June 2025, the Executive Coordinator of the Independent Petroleum Producers Group, Oyeleke Banmeke, said that crude oil theft in Nigeria has reduced significantly compared to figures recorded about two to three years ago.

Banmeke commended the current administration of President Bola Tinubu for improvements in security along the country’s oil-producing corridors, particularly in the Niger Delta.

Speaking earlier on the likely impact of crude oil prices on government revenue, an Energy Professor at the Lagos State University, Dayo Ayoade, said the drop in crude production prices would affect the budget adversely, though it would bring down fuel prices.

Ayoade also said that the government must do its best to achieve two million barrels per day, or the refineries will have to resort to imports, which may impact the fuel prices.

Similarly, Professor Adeola Adenikinju of the Department of Economics at the University of Ibadan argued that the decline in crude oil prices is like a two-edged sword. He said it would lower the prices of refined products, such as PMS.

“But macroeconomically, it’s going to have implications, especially for government revenue, simply because the two critical assumptions, you know, that would change the budget were the oil price and oil volume. So, if oil prices go down and persist, then that will mean that budget implementation will be very difficult,” he said.

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Domestic gas sales rise 30% on reforms – Report

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Nigeria’s domestic gas market recorded a significant increase in sales, rising by about 30 per cent between January 2022 and January 2025, driven by reforms under the Petroleum Industry Act 2021 and recent executive orders by President Bola Tinubu, according to a legal analysis by Tope Adebayo LP.

The Lagos-based full-service law firm said in a statement made available to our correspondent that the reforms have improved regulatory clarity, fiscal attractiveness and investor confidence across the gas value chain, even as infrastructure gaps and implementation challenges continue to slow the pace of growth.

It stated that Nigeria, which holds more than 206 trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves, has long struggled to convert its resource base into domestic energy supply due to underinvestment, weak infrastructure and gas flaring.

According to data cited in the report, domestic gas sales rose from 49.3bscf in January 2022 to 64.2bscf in January 2025, reflecting the gains attributed to ongoing reforms under the PIA.

The report noted that the legislation marked a turning point for the sector.

“The PIA represents the most comprehensive reform of Nigeria’s petroleum sector in decades and has established a stronger foundation for domestic gas development through regulatory clarity, pricing liberalisation mechanisms, infrastructure support and enhanced investment incentives,” the firm stated in a report titled ‘From Policy to Practice: Legal and Regulatory Drivers of Nigeria’s Domestic Gas Market Under the PIA and Recent Executive Orders’.

It explained that structural reforms under the Act, including the creation of separate regulatory authorities for upstream and midstream/downstream operations, have helped to improve oversight and reduce regulatory bottlenecks.

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The analysis also highlighted the Domestic Gas Delivery Obligation framework as a key intervention aimed at boosting supply to strategic sectors such as power generation and industry. The framework includes enforceable penalties for non-compliance.

It further noted improvements in gas utilisation and supply performance, alongside modest reductions in gas flaring and the expansion of the Nigerian Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme, which it said has seen multiple flare sites auctioned for monetisation projects.

Beyond production measures, the PIA, it stated, introduced open-access provisions for infrastructure, partial liberalisation of gas pricing and the establishment of the Midstream and Downstream Gas Infrastructure Fund to support investments in processing, transportation and distribution.

The law firm maintained that recent executive orders and presidential directives have also strengthened the investment climate through tax incentives, faster contracting timelines and more flexible local content implementation.

“These interventions signal a deliberate effort by the government to improve project economics and enhance Nigeria’s competitiveness as a destination for gas investments,” Tope Adebayo LP noted.

However, the firm warned that policy gains alone are insufficient to deliver the market’s full potential.

“Large-scale outcomes remain constrained by persistent infrastructure gaps, payment risks within the power sector, legacy debts, and implementation inefficiencies. The transition from policy to practice is clearly underway, but it remains incomplete,” it stated.

According to the analysis, achieving a fully functional and scalable domestic gas market will require sustained investment in pipelines, processing facilities, transportation networks and distribution systems, alongside stronger institutional coordination and consistent regulatory execution.

The report stated that the foundations had been laid, but long-term success would depend on effective implementation and continued market reforms. It added that, to unlock the full promise of the Decade of Gas initiative, Nigeria must bridge the gap between legal design and operational reality.

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Nigerians, others buy $3.1bn airtime on credit

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Mobile phone subscribers in Nigeria and other emerging markets borrowed airtime worth $3.18bn on credit in 2025, with Africa accounting for more than 94 per cent of the total, according to the latest financial statements of fintech firm Optasia.

The company’s 2025 consolidated financial statements showed that airtime advances granted through telecom operators rose to $3.18bn last year from $2.83bn in 2024, reflecting a 12.3 per cent increase.

Optasia stated, “Airtime credit services represent service fees charged on airtime credit amounting to $3,176.34m (2024: $2,829.2m) granted to subscribers of the telecom operators during the year.”

Using the exchange rates disclosed in the financial statements, the airtime advances amounted to about N4.61tn in 2025 in naira terms, up from approximately N4.38tn in 2024.

Despite the growth in dollar terms, the naira value rose by a slower pace as the exchange rate strengthened to N1,450.58/$ at the end of 2025 from N1,547.30/$ a year earlier.

The report showed that Africa remained the dominant market for the service, accounting for $2.99bn, or 94.2 per cent, of all airtime credit disbursed in 2025. This was up from $2.53bn recorded in 2024. Europe and Asia accounted for $96.1m, while the Middle East contributed $87.7m.

The figures highlight the growing dependence of millions of mobile users across Africa on small-value digital credit products, particularly in economies where access to formal financial services remains limited, and household purchasing power is under pressure.

Optasia, which provides airtime advances and nano-loan services through partnerships with mobile network operators and financial institutions, said its technology platform assesses subscribers’ behaviour and determines their eligibility for credit.

According to the company, the platform handles “scoring, financial decisioning and disbursements” by analysing subscribers’ credit history and other relevant data before determining the amount of advance that can be granted.

The report explained that the company also assumes part of the credit risk associated with the service. “As part of the airtime credit service, the Group also commits to indemnify the MNO for the amount of advance so granted, in case the subscriber fails to pay the same within a specified period of time from the date of grant of advance,” it stated.

Beyond airtime lending, the company recorded a sharp increase in nano-loan transactions during the year. Its Mobile Financial Services segment facilitated nano-loans worth $2.30bn in 2025, more than double the $967.9m recorded in the previous year.

Africa accounted for $1.41bn, representing 61.4 per cent of the total, while Europe and Asia contributed $888.9m. The company said the loans were provided through arrangements involving telecom operators and financial institutions, with its proprietary platform supporting credit scoring, approvals, disbursements and collections.

The growth in airtime lending and nano-loan transactions boosted the firm’s earnings during the year. Revenue rose by 75.5 per cent to $265.36m in 2025 from $151.19m in 2024. Mobile Financial Services contributed $167.53m to revenue, while airtime credit services generated $96.86m.

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Africa remained the company’s biggest revenue source, contributing $234.81m, or 88.5 per cent of total revenue, compared with $121.31m in the previous year. Europe and Asia generated $25.43m, while the Middle East accounted for $5.12m.

Profit after tax increased to $43.13m from $36.23m in 2024, while total assets more than doubled to $302.17m from $141.79m.

The company described itself as “an analytics technology services provider in the fintech sector offering its services to large mobile telecom operators to provide airtime/data credit, micro- and nano-cash loans to underbanked populations in the emerging markets.”

According to the financial statements, Optasia operates across more than 25 countries, including Nigeria, South Africa, Ghana, Tunisia, Algeria, Zambia, Uganda, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Egypt, Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia, Lesotho, Mozambique, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Indonesia, Malaysia, Qatar, Brazil, Greece, Cyprus and the United Arab Emirates.

However, the report showed that Africa remained the dominant market for the firm, with operations in 16 African countries, including Nigeria, South Africa, Ghana, Egypt, Ethiopia, Algeria and Zambia.

The financial statements also showed that Optasia has a direct operating presence in Nigeria through two wholly owned subsidiaries, Nairtime Nigeria Limited and Xtra MFS Nigeria Limited.

Both entities are listed as Nigerian subsidiaries, with Optasia holding a 100 per cent beneficial ownership stake in each company. Nairtime Nigeria Limited was incorporated in 2012, while Xtra MFS Nigeria Limited was incorporated in 2019.

Although the company did not disclose separate revenue or profit for its Nigerian operations, the report suggests that Nigeria remains one of its more significant African markets. The report showed that Nigeria was material to Optasia’s foreign exchange exposure, with the Nigerian naira listed among the currencies that expose the group to currency risk.

Under its financial risk management note, the company stated that it was exposed to currency risk on revenues, expenses and intercompany transactions denominated in currencies outside its functional currency.

It listed the Nigerian naira alongside the euro, Congolese franc, Tanzanian shilling, South African rand, Zambian kwacha and Ghanaian cedi. As of December 31, 2025, Optasia reported total naira-denominated assets of N19.72bn and naira-denominated liabilities of N357.09m, leaving a net naira exposure of N19.37bn.

This was lower than the N25.03bn net naira exposure recorded in 2024, when naira-denominated assets stood at N25.11bn and liabilities at N81.01m. The decline means the group’s net naira exposure fell by N5.66bn, or 22.6 per cent, year-on-year.

However, the remaining N19.37bn exposure still makes Nigeria one of the company’s major currency-risk markets, meaning movements in the naira can affect the value of its earnings, assets and liabilities when translated into dollars.

Optasia also disclosed that a five per cent movement in the dollar against the naira would have affected equity by $668,000 in 2025, compared with $809,000 in 2024. This means the company’s sensitivity to naira movement reduced during the year, in line with the fall in its net naira exposure.

At the end of 2025, Nigeria accounted for $7.73m in gross trade receivables, more than double the $3.80m recorded a year earlier. The increase of 103.6 per cent was one of the strongest among the group’s disclosed markets, indicating a substantial rise in transaction activity and outstanding balances linked to Nigerian operations.

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The report also highlighted the company’s exposure to Nigeria’s financial system through naira-denominated credit facilities obtained from local banks. According to the financial statements, Optasia maintained an invoice discounting facility and a cash-backed term loan facility in Nigeria, both denominated in naira and carrying interest rates of 30 per cent per annum.

While the facilities were not utilised as of December 31, 2025, they demonstrate the company’s access to local currency funding to support its operations in the country. Nigeria also featured prominently in the company’s discussion of its investment in Quickcheck Holding Limited, a digital lending business in which Optasia holds a 10.05 per cent stake.

The report noted that Quickcheck is “primarily exposed to operations in Nigeria”, making developments in the Nigerian economy important to the investment’s performance.

In its assessment of the investment, the company pointed to policy measures introduced by the Central Bank of Nigeria and broader economic reforms as factors supporting a more stable operating environment.

The report stated that recent policy actions by the CBN, alongside improved oil revenues and narrowing foreign exchange risk spreads, were early indicators of macroeconomic stabilisation.

It added that these developments could help strengthen local-currency earnings and reduce the impact of foreign exchange volatility on businesses operating in Nigeria.

The report further shows that telecom-linked lending is becoming an increasingly important source of short-term financing for underbanked consumers, particularly in Africa, where mobile phone penetration significantly exceeds access to formal banking services.

However, the rapid growth of digital lending also carries rising credit risks. The company’s provision for expected credit losses on financial guarantee contracts climbed to $65.21m in 2025 from $33.42m a year earlier, reflecting the growing exposure associated with airtime advances and nano-loan products.

Despite the higher risk provisions, the strong growth in transactions, revenue and profitability indicates that demand for small-ticket digital credit remains robust across the markets in which the company operates.

However, in Nigeria, Optasia faces a push by the Federal Government to open the country’s airtime credit and data advance market to indigenous fintech firms.

Reports claimed that the Presidency backed regulatory efforts championed by the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission to dismantle what it described as Optasia’s 12-year dominance of the sector, arguing that broader participation would promote competition, support local content development and reduce capital flight.

According to recent reports, the FCCPC convinced the Presidency that the current market structure had limited opportunities for Nigerian firms while enabling significant profit repatriation abroad.

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However, the FCCPC has distanced itself from reports that it recommended the opening of the airtime credit market to nine new operators or submitted the names of local fintech firms to the Presidency for approval.

In a statement issued recently, FCCPC Director of Corporate Affairs, Ondaje Ijagwu, said the commission was neither aware of nor involved in the claims attributed to it, describing reports linking it to the alleged approvals as inaccurate.

“The commission wishes to state clearly that it is not aware of, and was not involved in, the claims attributed to it in the report absolutely,” Ijagwu said.

The reports had alleged that President Bola Tinubu approved plans to restructure the airtime credit market and endorsed the participation of nine Nigerian fintech firms.

However, the FCCPC maintained that it had no involvement in any such approvals and noted that the regulatory framework under which the firms were reportedly approved remains suspended.

According to the commission, implementation and enforcement of the DEON Consumer Lending Regulations 2025 were halted following an interim injunction granted by the Federal High Court in Lagos on April 15, 2026, in a suit filed by the Wireless Application Service Providers Association of Nigeria.

The commission said it remained bound by the court order pending the determination of the substantive case, which is scheduled for further hearing on July 20, 2026.

The FCCPC’s position leaves unresolved the basis of the earlier reports that detailed alleged policy proposals, market reforms and a list of companies said to have been approved to participate in the airtime credit market.

The Presidency has yet to publicly comment on whether any directive relating to the DEON framework or the sector was issued, further depending the controversy around airtime lending.

The controversy began in April when MTN, Airtel, Glo and T2mobile suspended airtime credit offerings following an FCCPC directive requiring compliance with the DEON framework.

The commission had classified airtime credit as a form of consumer lending, bringing it under regulations originally designed to address abuses by digital lending platforms. The move sparked a regulatory dispute with the NCC, which oversees telecommunications services under the Nigerian Communications Act 2003.

However, airtime and data credit services gradually have been restored across Nigeria’s telecommunications networks after weeks of disruption that affected millions of subscribers.

The Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria earlier applauded the FCCPC for suspending the enforcement of the Digital, Electronic, Online, or Non-traditional Consumer Lending regulations against telecommunications operators, describing the move as a major boost for regulatory certainty and investor confidence in the sector.

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Banks earn N225bn from ATM, e-banking charges

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Nigerian banks generated N224.69bn from electronic banking services and ATM/card-related charges in the first quarter of 2026, representing a 12.56 per cent increase from N199.61bn recorded in the corresponding period of 2025, an analysis of the unaudited financial statements of 11 listed lenders has shown.

The increase came as banks continued to deepen digital banking adoption and electronic payment services, with income from e-banking channels accounting for a significant share of non-interest revenue during the period under review.

Findings by The PUNCH showed that electronic banking and ATM/card management fee income rose by N25.06bn year-on-year, from N199.61bn in Q1 2025 to N224.67bn in Q1 2026. A breakdown showed that income from electronic banking and e-business activities increased by 11.57 per cent to N177.97bn from N159.52bn recorded a year earlier.

Similarly, earnings from ATM and card management fees climbed by 16.48 per cent to N46.70bn from N40.09bn in Q1 2025.

The growth in digital banking revenue coincided with a broader increase in banking sector fee income. The PUNCH earlier reported that the total fee and commission earnings of the 11 lenders rose by 13.64 per cent to N984.47bn from N866.30bn. Also, account maintenance fee income increased by 14.07 per cent to N209.18bn from N183.37bn.

Among the lenders reviewed, Access Holdings recorded the highest earnings from e-banking services, generating N55.71bn in Q1 2026. UBA followed with N46.93bn, while Ecobank earned N35.53bn from card management fees. GTCO posted N21.90bn in e-business income, and Zenith Bank generated N21.54bn from electronic product fees.

Other notable contributors included First Holdco with N20.75bn, Wema Bank with N6.10bn, Fidelity Bank with a combined N8.81bn from ATM charges and e-banking commissions, Stanbic IBTC with N4.33bn from card-based commissions and electronic banking fees, Sterling Financial Holdings with N2.89bn, and Jaiz Bank with N187.05m.

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An analysis of growth rates showed that Fidelity Bank recorded the strongest expansion in digital banking-related income. The lender’s combined ATM charges and e-banking commissions rose by 164.9 per cent to N8.81bn from N3.08bn in the corresponding period of 2025, driven largely by a 240.8 per cent jump in ATM charges.

GTCO followed with a 68.64 per cent increase in e-business income to N21.90bn from N12.99bn. Stanbic IBTC’s combined card-based commission and electronic banking income rose 52.8 per cent to N4.33bn, while Zenith Bank’s fees on electronic products increased by 58.91 per cent to N21.54bn.

Sterling Financial Holdings recorded a 22.15 per cent increase in e-business commissions and fees, while Access Holdings posted a 15.2 per cent rise in channels and e-business income to N55.71bn.

However, some lenders recorded declines in digital banking-related income. Wema Bank posted the sharpest decline, with fees on electronic products dropping by 50.68 per cent to N6.10bn from N12.37bn.

Stanbic IBTC’s electronic banking fees declined by 20.57 per cent to N865m, while UBA’s electronic banking income slipped marginally by 1.91 per cent to N46.93bn. Ecobank’s card management fees also declined slightly by 1.52 per cent to N35.53bn.

Further analysis showed that digital banking channels accounted for a significant portion of banks’ fee income. At Access Holdings, e-banking income contributed 27.2 per cent of total fee and commission earnings of N205.03bn. GTCO derived 27.27 per cent of its fee income from e-business services, generating N21.90bn out of N80.31bn total fee income.

UBA’s electronic banking income represented 37.82 per cent of its N124.07bn fee and commission revenue, making it the bank’s largest fee-generating line item. First Holdco generated 21.59 per cent of its fee income from electronic banking services, while Zenith Bank earned 25.4 per cent of its fee and commission income from electronic product fees.

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Ecobank’s card management fees accounted for 14.94 per cent of total fee income, while Wema Bank’s electronic product fees contributed 35.08 per cent despite the sharp decline recorded during the quarter.

Stanbic IBTC’s combined card-based commission and electronic banking income represented 5.21 per cent of total fee income, while Sterling Financial Holdings generated 17.13 per cent of fee income from e-business commissions and fees.

The strong performance of digital banking income comes amid signs of improving economic activity, according to analysts.  Nigeria’s private sector expanded to a nine-month high in May 2026, with the Stanbic IBTC Purchasing Managers’ Index rising to 54.1 points on the back of stronger demand, increased output and improved logistics.

The growth also aligns with ongoing reforms in the banking sector. Earlier this year, the Central Bank of Nigeria said financial-sector reforms, including the recapitalisation programme and efforts to stabilise the foreign exchange market, were strengthening the foundations of the economy and positioning banks to support long-term growth.

Payment digitalisation drive

Digitalisation of financial services has also become a major policy conversation across Africa, with development institutions increasingly linking digital payments and electronic banking adoption to economic formalisation, financial inclusion and government revenue mobilisation.

In its Africa Economic Outlook 2026 report, the African Development Bank said digitalisation was helping countries lower the cost of business registration, reporting and payments, making it easier for firms and individuals operating outside the formal economy to participate in regulated financial systems.

The report noted that countries with higher usage of digital public administration services tend to record stronger domestic revenue mobilisation and lower levels of informality.

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According to the AfDB, digital platforms improve taxpayer registration, enhance transaction traceability and strengthen compliance monitoring, enabling governments to capture previously unregistered economic activities without increasing tax rates.

The bank stated that digitalisation also improves administrative efficiency, reduces leakages and broadens the tax base, creating a sustainable pathway for strengthening domestic resource mobilisation and fiscal capacity.

Beyond revenue generation, the AfDB said digitalisation promotes economic and financial inclusion by providing informal businesses with access to digital payment platforms and financial services.

The report stated that digital financial tools enable small businesses to build transaction histories, reduce information gaps with lenders and gain access to savings, credit and risk-management products.

The AfDB explained that these developments help improve the resilience and productivity of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises while encouraging gradual migration from the informal to the formal economy.

The growing contribution of e-banking, card services and other digital channels to banks’ fee income reflects the broader shift toward digital finance across Africa, as consumers and businesses increasingly rely on electronic payment systems for everyday transactions.

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