Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År

Prøve GULL - Gratis

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$NaN
 
$NaN/År

Skynd deg, tilbud i begrenset periode!

0

Timer

0

minutter

0

sekunder

.

The Business NG - June 18, 2025

filled-star
The Business NG

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Lese The Business NG sammen med 9000+ andre magasiner og aviser med bare ett abonnement  

Se katalog

1 måned

$14.99

1 år $149.99

$74.99

$6/month

Save 50%
Hurry, Offer Ends in 11 Days

(OR)

Abonner kun på The Business NG

Kjøp denne utgaven: June 18, 2025

undefined problemer som starter fra June 18, 2025

52 problemer som starter fra June 18, 2025

Kjøp denne utgaven

$0.99

1 år

$49.99

Please choose your subscription plan

Avbryt når som helst.

(Ingen forpliktelser) ⓘ

Hvis du ikke er fornøyd med abonnementet, kan du sende oss en e-post på help@magzter.com innen 7 dager etter abonnementets startdato for full refusjon. Ingen spørsmål - lover! (Merk: Gjelder ikke for enkeltutgavekjøp)

Digitalt abonnement

Øyeblikkelig tilgang ⓘ

Abonner nå for å begynne å lese umiddelbart på Magzter-nettstedet, iOS, Android og Amazon-appene.

Verifisert sikker

betaling ⓘ

Magzter er en verifisert Authorize.Net-forhandler. Les mer

I dette nummeret

BusinessNG Editorial Focus for June 18

As the Central Bank of Nigeria tightens its regulatory grip, banks burdened by non-performing loans are now barred from paying dividends, awarding executive bonuses, or making new offshore investments until full provisioning is made. This decisive policy targets institutions previously shielded under forbearance during past economic crises.

Renaissance Capital’s report, “Nigerian Banks, Cash is King,” reveals that Zenith Bank has the largest exposure at 23% of its loan book ($1.6 billion), followed by FirstBank (14%, $887 million), and Access Bank (4%, $304 million). Fidelity and FCMB also face scrutiny, while GTCO and Stanbic IBTC are in the clear.

These restrictions hit the core banking arms hardest, dampening shareholder returns. Although holding companies may try to cushion the impact via non-bank subsidiaries, such payouts will likely be minimal. The move has drawn anger from shareholders, many of whom rely on consistent dividend income.

BusinessNG examines the full implications for the banking sector, market confidence, and investor trust.

The Business NG Description:

The BusinessNG, a leading business news publication across Nigeria and WestAfrica With a strong team of 30 staff members and a weekly print circulation of over 10,000 copies, we are poised for growth and report all political relating to business news at all level

Nylige utgaver

Spesielle problemer

  • October 21, 2024

    October 21, 2024

Relaterte titler

Populære kategorier