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Wema Bank’s Digital Bank, ALAT, Emerges Nigeria’s Best Digital Bank at Euromoney Awards 2025

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In recognition of its position as a digital pioneer in the African banking landscape, Africa’s first fully digital bank, ALAT, a trailblazing digital platform pioneered by Nigeria’s oldest indigenous and most innovative bank, Wema Bank, has been awarded Nigeria’s Best Digital Bank at the Euromoney Awards 2025.

Euromoney is a leading provider of competitive intelligence and benchmarking insight for the global banking and finance industry, trusted for over 50 years to deliver data-led analysis that informs strategy, validates performance, and supports decision-making at the executive level. The Euromoney Awards, pioneered by Euromoney, are regarded as the ultimate accolade in banking; the industry-leading stamp of approval that banks across the globe work yearlong to achieve. Recognised as Nigeria’s leading financial institution in digital innovation, Wema Bank’s revolutionary digital bank, ALAT, was awarded Nigeria’s Best Digital Bank at the Euromoney Awards 2025 held at The Peninsula London Hotel in London on Thursday, 17th July, 2025.

Since its launch on May 2nd 2017, ALAT has bridged the gaps in delivery of financial services to Nigerians within Nigeria and globally, evolving remarkably into a holistic hub of lifestyle and financial solutions for Nigerian adults of all ages and from all walks of life. From simply being the first fully digital bank in Africa, ALAT has evolved remarkably into a digital platform with an ecosystem of dynamic financial solutions tailored to provide seamless, reliable, and convenient service for all. With ALAT, basic financial services like transfers, airtime & data purchases, bill payments and loans are placed at the fingertips of users, in addition to a wide range of advanced financial services and solutions that merge banking with lifestyle.

From in-app local and international flight bookings to tailored personal and group savings options, investments and stocks, movie and event tickets, deals and discounts on a limitless pool of products and services, 24/7 health consultation, and a suite of customised loan options for salary earners and non-salary earners; ALAT changed the game, redefining banking and financial services in a world where digital has become the future. In view of ALAT’s groundbreaking role in blazing the trail for FinTechs in Africa and its intentionally-curated wealth of features and offerings designed to meet the needs of Nigerians in Nigeria and the diaspora, it is evident that the Bank is undeniably deserving of the recognition and accolade.

Underscoring Wema Bank’s commitment in shaping the future of banking through impactful innovations like ALAT, Wema Bank’s MD/CEO, Moruf Oseni, expressed appreciation to the Euromoney Awards for recognising the Bank’s impact on the proliferation of digital innovation in Africa, reiterating the Bank’s commitment to its sustainability vision of developing digital solutions for societal impact. Receiving the award, Oseni commented, “The world is moving fast and so is the permeation of ‘digital’ into the most critical aspects of our lives. 80 years ago when Wema Bank was established, typewriters were the extent of banking technology. Today, we have pioneered a fully digital bank, and possess technology advanced enough to power over 150 FinTechs. In ten years, one can only imagine what this fast-paced digital economy will bring. One thing is clear, any business, venture or institution that will remain relevant by the end of the next decade, must leverage digital technology today. This is why Wema Bank is so driven when it comes to digital. Innovation and empowerment”.

“As a Bank, our stance is clear. Wema Bank will never relent in empowering lives through innovation and developing digital solutions for societal impact. We will continue to pioneer innovation, empower innovators and bridge the gap between traditional and digital, leveraging the opportunities of the digital world to generate meaningful impact on lives and businesses in Nigeria, Africa and across the world. We have remained resilient in this commitment since 1945 and this award tells us that the world is feeling our impact. We are honoured by this recognition, and I take this opportunity to extend our sincerest gratitude to the Euromoney Awards. We take this as a challenge to keep up the good work, go harder, and continue going above and beyond in shaping the future of banking through digital innovation. Here’s to 80 years of impact and a future of limitless possibilities with Wema Bank”. Oseni concluded.

Wema Bank continues to raise the bar in financial services, placing Nigeria on the global map for banking and digital innovation. Since 1945, the Bank has spearheaded a positive transformation in Africa’s banking and financial landscape, proving that Nigerian-owned businesses have the capacity to last and stand the test of time. As the Bank celebrated its 80th anniversary on May 2nd 2025, its futuristic digital platform, ALAT simultaneously clocked 8, marking 8 years of digital transformation.

The world continues to watch in anticipation as Wema Bank leads the movement in digital innovation, shaping the future of banking in Africa.

ABOUT WEMA BANK

Established on May 2nd, 1945, Wema Bank is Nigeria’s oldest indigenous bank, most innovative, and pioneer of Africa’s first fully digital bank, ALAT. Commemorating a remarkable 80 years of impact and a future of possibilities, Wema Bank celebrated its 80th anniversary on May 2nd 2025 alongside the 8th anniversary of ALAT by Wema.

The publicly quoted Nigerian company has successfully built a legacy of trust, resilience and banking excellence that has won it the loyalty of its customers for 8 decades and counting. The Bank has remained innovative in delivering value to its stakeholders, constantly introducing products and services tailored to the needs of its customers at every stage of their lives.

Wema Bank is a proud partner to more than one million individuals, families, and businesses across Nigeria, helping them achieve their personal and financial goals.

Since its establishment in 1945, Wema Bank has built a legacy of pioneering innovation and empowering innovation to thrive, connecting traditional with digital and introducing several digital gamechangers and industry-firsts that have redefined standards across various industries and verticals.

From launching Africa’s first fully digital bank, ALAT, in 2017, Wema Bank went on to launch the ALAT For Business App, a business-focused version of ALAT; CoopHub App, a-first-of-its-kind digital solution designed to empower cooperatives for optimal productivity; Wema Phygital, a self-service implementation adding a digital touch to the physical experience in Wema Bank’s branches; ALATPay, an end-to-end payment gateway that provides instant settlement for business transactions; and the ALAT Xplore App, Nigeria’s first fully licensed banking app for teenagers, among others.

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Banking and Finance

Stewardship, Not Seizure: What the Union Bank Case Is Really About

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There is a particular genre of financial commentary that mistakes legal process fora factual verdict. A court delivers a first-instance ruling, procedural questions areraised, and before the ink is dry on the appeal filing, the narrative has alreadyhardened: the regulator overreached, investor confidence is shattered, andNigeria’s financial governance is on trial before the world. Much of thecommentary currently circulating about Union Bank of Nigeria belongs to thatgenre. It is not without merit on certain procedural questions. But it is, at its core,incomplete — and incompleteness in financial journalism carries costs that runwell beyond the column.The Acquisition That Started EverythingIn 2022, Titan Trust Bank Limited, then chaired by Mr Tunde Lemo, acquiredapproximately 94 per cent of Union Bank of Nigeria through two Dubai-registeredentities: Luxis International DMCC, promoted by Mr Rahul Savara, and MrCornelius Vink’s Magna International DMCC, both linked to the Tropical GeneralInvestments (TGI) Group. The US$300 million transaction was financedpredominantly through an Afreximbank facility. The CBN’s policy is unambiguous:borrowed funds may not be used to acquire shares in a licensed financialinstitution. That principle exists because debt-funded acquisitions hollow out thevery capital base they purport to build.That is precisely what happened. A forensic audit found that the Afreximbank loanwas ultimately reflected in Union Bank’s own books, with no hedgingarrangements against naira depreciation. As the currency weakened, revaluationlosses intensified, the capital adequacy ratio deteriorated into negative territory,non-performing loan exposure increased significantly, and a substantial capitalshortfall emerged. Critically, as stated in the Bank’s own Notice of Appeal, aspecial examination was conducted, and its findings were formally presented toformer Managing Director Mudassir Amray and the board then chaired by FaroukGumel, who were confronted with the institution’s grave financial condition andcontinuing regulatory infractions. The claim that the CBN acted without evidencebefore dissolving the board is, on the record, simply not accurate.The Legal PictureThe CBN acted under Section 34 of BOFIA 2020 and Section 52 of the CBN Act2007 — broad discretionary executive powers that do not require a specialexamination as a condition precedent. The Federal High Court’s characterisationof those powers as quasi-judicial is itself among the central questions now onappeal. Both the CBN and Union Bank have filed formal appeals. Union Bank’sown Notice of Appeal, filed the day after judgment on thirteen grounds and arguedby Olaniwun Ajayi LP, challenges the ruling on several fronts: that therespondents may never have had locus standi to sue in the first place, under therule in Foss v. Harbottle; that the application was filed nearly two years after theJanuary 2024 events, well outside the prescribed three-month limitation window;and that the CBN-supervised recapitalisation exercise, mandated under Section 9of BOFIA, cannot constitute evidence of bad faith. These are not technicalities.They are substantive questions of law that the Court of Appeal must nowdetermine. The Human Stakes and the Real QuestionBehind the legal arguments sit approximately 7.8 million depositors and around6,450 employees across 281 branches. Union Bank’s own affidavit describes it as asystemically important institution in a precarious financial situation, continuing torely on CBN forbearance for its existence — a frank admission that validates,rather than undermines, the case for intervention. Meanwhile, critics argue thedispute damages investor confidence. The wider evidence does not support thatconclusion. By April 2026, thirty-three Nigerian banks had raised N4.65 trillionunder the CBN’s recapitalisation framework — over ten times the 2004 to 2005consolidation figure. The Nigerian Exchange All-Share Index rose approximately29 per cent in the first quarter of 2026 alone. The market has read the CBN’sresolve as stability, not recklessness. Conflating this case with a systemicconfidence crisis runs the risk of misleading the very international investors thecommentary claims to be protecting.The structural vulnerability at the centre of this dispute originates not with theregulator but with an acquisition financed with borrowed funds, loaded onto theacquired institution’s balance sheet, and left unhedged against exchange-raterisk. When the CBN stepped in, it was doing what central banks everywhere areexpected to do. When Union Bank’s own legally constituted board subsequentlyfiled its own appeal, it was signalling what a properly constituted governancestructure recognises as being in the institution’s best interests. Nigeria’sappellate courts — not the court of commentary — are the appropriate arena forresolution.Union Bank of Nigeria is a 109-year-old institution serving nearly eight milliondepositors. It is not being dismantled. It is being stabilised under active regulatorysupervision, with operations intact and depositors protected. In the language ofinstitutional governance, that is called stewardship. The commentary thatmistakes it for anything else does the institution, its depositors, and Nigeria’sfinancial governance narrative a disservice that will outlast the headlines.*Bala Rabiu, writes from Kano

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Fidelity Bank Extends Food Bank Initiative to Thousands in Surulere

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Photo caption:L-R: Team Lead, Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), Fidelity Bank Plc, Victoria Abuka; Personal Assistant to the President on Constituency Affairs, Hon. Khadijat Kareem Omotayo; Branch Leader, Adeola Odeku Branch, Fidelity Bank Plc, Ifeyinwa Asomugha; Surulere Local Government Executive, Anthonia Adenike Adjivon; and First Vice Chairman, Community Development Committee (CDC), Surulere Local Government, Adebayo Odukoya; during the Fidelity Food Bank outreach in Surulere, Lagos recently.

Leading financial institution, Fidelity Bank Plc, has reinforced its commitment to community welfare and sustainable development with the distribution of food packs to over 1,500 residents in Surulere, Lagos state.The outreach, executed under the Bank’s Fidelity Food Bank initiative, was carried out in partnership with the Office of the Personal Assistant to the President on Constituency Affairs and the Sodiq Abiodun Ogundare (SAO) Foundation.Speaking during the event, Regional Bank Head, Victoria Island/Lekki, Fidelity Bank Plc, Nnamdi Edekobi, represented by the Branch Leader, Adeola Odeku Branch, Fidelity Bank Plc, Ifeyinwa Asomugha, described the initiative as a reflection of Fidelity Bank’s unwavering dedication to improving the wellbeing of its host communities.“Today goes beyond the distribution of food items; it is about uplifting lives, creating opportunities, and strengthening our commitment to the wellbeing of families in this community.” he said.He disclosed that since inception, the initiative has distributed more than 150,000 food packs across Nigeria’s six geopolitical zones, positively impacting hundreds of communities nationwide. “Today’s outreach has provided over 1,500 beneficiaries with essential feeding supplies that will help address hunger, support healthy living, and improve the overall wellbeing of families. This initiative also aligns with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 2, which focuses on achieving Zero Hunger,” he added.Edekobi further commended the Personal Assistant to the President on Constituency Affairs, Hon. Khadijat Kareem Omotayo for supporting the initiative and fostering impactful partnerships that benefit underserved communities.Also speaking at the event, Hon. Khadijat Kareem Omotayo praised Fidelity Bank and the SAO Foundation for bringing meaningful support to residents of Surulere.“I am very happy that the foundation is growing. Fidelity Bank are our people and I appreciate this collaboration that has brought this massive opportunity to our people in Surulere Constituency 1,” she stated.She expressed optimism about sustaining future partnerships with the Bank to continue improving the lives and livelihoods of Nigerians.It would be recalled that the bank was recently recognized as the CSR Champion of the year at the 2025 Independent Newspaper Awards for its Food Bank initiative. The outreach to Surulere continues a legacy of impact, attracting community leaders, residents, and food bank partners, many of whom described the intervention as a timely boost amid prevailing economic challenges.Ranked among the best banks in Nigeria, Fidelity Bank Plc is a full-fledged Commercial Deposit Money Bank serving over 10 million customers through digital banking channels, its 255 business offices in Nigeria and United Kingdom subsidiary, FidBank UK Limited.The Bank is a recipient of multiple local and international Awards, including the 2024 Excellence in Digital Transformation & MSME Banking Award by BusinessDay Banks and Financial Institutions (BAFI) Awards; the 2024 Most Innovative Mobile Banking Application award for its Fidelity Mobile App by Global Business Outlook, and the 2024 Most Innovative Investment Banking Service Provider award by Global Brands Magazine. Additionally, the Bank was recognized as the Best Bank for SMEs in Nigeria by the Euromoney Awards for Excellence and as the Export Financing Bank of the Year by the BusinessDay Banks and Financial Institutions (BAFI) Awards.

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Banking and Finance

Sterling Financial Holdings Sustains Growth Momentum as Assets Cross ₦4 Trillion Mark in Q1, 2026

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…Group Profit rises 89% in FY2025, 53% in Q1 2026

Sterling Financial Holdings Company Plc (“Sterling Financial” or “theGroup”) has announced its audited financial results for the year ended December 31,2025, alongside its unaudited results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026,delivering strong earnings growth, balance sheet expansion, and improved capitalstrength across the Group.According to statement by Group CFO, Sterling Financial Holdings Company PLC, Adebimpe Olambiwonnu, Gross Earnings for FY2025 increased by 44.4% to ₦486.8 billion, representing the strongest performance in the Group’s modern history. Profit Before Tax rose by 89.2% to ₦86.8 billion, while Profit After Tax increased by 74.8% to ₦76.3 billion.The Group’s balance sheet also strengthened significantly during the year. Total Assets reached ₦3.91 trillion, Customer Deposits grew to ₦2.98 trillion, and Loans and Advances closed at ₦1.41 trillion while Shareholders’ Funds expanded by 40.5% to ₦428.7 billion.Sterling Financial sustained this momentum into the first quarter of 2026, with TotalAssets crossing the ₦4 trillion threshold for the first time, reaching ₦4.07 trillion.Gross Earnings for Q1 2026 rose by 41.6% year-on-year to ₦134.8 billion, supported bya 36.8% increase in Net Interest Income to ₦64.9 billion.Operating income reached ₦93.4 billion during the quarter, while Profit Before Taxincreased by 52.8% to ₦27.9 billion and Profit After Tax rose to ₦23.4 billion.Shareholders’ Funds strengthened further to ₦542.5 billion following the successfulcompletion of the Group’s recapitalisation programme.Commenting on the Group’s performance, Yemi Odubiyi, Group Managing Directorof Sterling Financial Holdings Company Plc, said: “Our FY2025 and Q1 2026 results reflect continued growth across the Group’s core businesses, supported by disciplined execution, improved operating efficiency, and a strengthened capital position.The successful completion of our recapitalisation programme positions the Group for the next phase of growth across our commercial banking, non-interest banking, and wealth-management businesses. We remain focused on sustaining growth, strengthening our balance sheet and delivering long-term value across our diversified platform.”This period represents an important phase in Sterling Financial’s evolution, as thecontinued growth of Sterling Bank and The Alternative Bank, alongside the expansionof SterlingFI Wealth Management, positioned the Group to compete across multiple segments under a unified Group structure and shared strategic agenda.The Group enters the rest of 2026 with stronger capital, expanded operating capacity and continued momentum across its banking and wealth-management businesses.ABOUT STERLING FINANCIAL HOLDINGS COMPANYSterling Financial Holdings Company PLC (Sterling Financial) is a leading Nigerian financial services group committed to enriching lives through innovation and impact. It’s diversified portfolio includes Sterling Bank Limited, The Alternative Bank Limited and SterlingFI WealthManagement among other businesses.As a holding company, Sterling provides strategic direction, governance, and sharedcapabilities across its subsidiaries, enabling each to focus on its core mandate while benefiting from group-wide expertise, technology, and oversight.With a heritage of trust built over six decades, Sterling Financial is committed to financial innovation, advancing inclusion, and shaping sustainable growth in Nigeria’s economy. The group continues to champion customer-focused solutions and socially responsible initiatives while creating long-term value for shareholders, employees and the communities it serves.

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