Sterling
Bank Plc has ended talks to buy rival Keystone Bank Limited after finding it
unsuitably fit, and is now focused on raising funds as it considers other
acquisitions, its chief finance officer, Abubakar Suleiman, said.
“We
reviewed Keystone Bank and concluded the strategic fit was not strong enough.
We will continue to evaluate all the options. As new candidates come into the market,
we will also review them,” Suleiman, told Reuters on phone.
Sterling
Bank said in February it was aiming to buy one or two mid-sized lenders as
sharp falls in the value of the naira and increased regulatory pressure forced
banks to recapitalise. Keystone Bank is the last of Nigeria’s nationalised
lenders, which state-backed “bad bank” AMCON is seeking to sell.
Suleiman
said Sterling’s strategic plan was still to acquire a rival in Nigeria, but
that any move was likely to come after studying the impact of last month’s 30
per cent fall in the value of the naira.
The
central bank ditched its 16-month old peg of N197 to the dollar in June to
allow the currency to trade freely, in an effort to resolve a chronic dollar
shortage that has stifled economic growth.
However,
dollar shortages remain as Nigeria suffers from a plunge in oil prices which
has battered its currency and stoked inflation to an almost 11-year high.
Analysts see the slowdown as catalyst for mergers.
Sterling
has completed book building for a N35 billion bond sale, its first tranche of a
debt programme, Suleiman said, but added that the bank will raise only 20 per
cent of that amount to gauge appetite once it receives regulatory approval.
Bond
yields in Nigeria are currently below inflation at 16.5 per cent in June. The
most liquid 5-year government bond traded at a yield of 15.17 per cent on
Tuesday.
“Once
we see that the structure is acceptable and yields are moderate, we will
complete series one this year. If the market remains turbulent, we will do it
next year,” Suleiman said.
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