Moody’s Investors Service, a leading global rating agency, has re-affirmed the resilience of the Sterling Bank franchise by maintaining the bank’s standalone Baseline Credit Assessment (BCA) ratings of B3.
BCAs are inputs to Moody’s joint-default analysis for ratings on issuers subject to extraordinary government support. It measures the financial strength of issuers subject to extraordinary government support, which can include banks, sub-sovereigns and government-related corporate issuers (GRIs).
It explicitly excludes the likelihood of extraordinary government support in the event that a bailout is required, but does incorporate support as may be necessary for ordinary operations.
The rating agency in a statement made available to newsmen in Lagos, expressed confidence that with its current profile, Sterling Bank will remain resilient in the face of more challenging operating conditions, given its adequate capital and liquidity buffers.
The statement noted that “Sterling Bank’s B2 deposit ratings continue to incorporate one notch of rating uplift on account of government support, as the bank’s ratings remain lower than the sovereign rating and its foreign currency deposit rating is now in line with the lowered foreign currency deposit ceiling of B2.”
Specifically, Moody’s rated Sterling Bank b3 in Adjusted Baseline Credit Assessment; B1 (cr) in Long-Term Counterparty Risk Assessment; B2 in Long-Term Issuer Rating (Local and Foreign Currency); B2 in Long-Term Deposit Rating (Local and Foreign Currency), while the outlook changed to stable.
It would be recalled that the agency in a statement in March this year noted that the ratings of the bank reflected its “solid asset quality metrics and provision coverage, improvements to its information technology (IT) infrastructure and risk management processes as well as its high liquidity buffers and a solid deposit funding base.”
According to Moody’s, the primary driver for confirming Sterling Bank’s BCAs is Moody’s expectation of the resilience of the bank’s standalone credit profiles, despite the challenging operating environment. “While lower oil prices will continue to exert pressure on corporate borrowers and on the domestic economy more generally, we expect any deterioration in asset quality and liquidity at Sterling Bank to be manageable and within the tolerance levels assumed in their standalone ratings, given their capital and liquidity buffers,” the agency said.
In his reaction, Abubakar Suleiman, bank’s executive director, finance and strategy, noted that the reaffirmation of the rating was a testimony of the resilient of the bank to remain strong and professional, despite the challenging operating environment in which it operate.
Sterling Bank, “the one-customer bank,” is a full-service national commercial bank with an asset base above N800 billion, with over 187 business offices and more than 800 ATMs nationwide. In over 55 years of service, Sterling Bank (formerly NAL Bank) has evolved from the nation’s pre-eminent investment banking institution to a fully-fledged commercial bank.
Furthermore, with a strong national presence, it is one of the top 30 most capitalised institutions on the Nigerian Stock Exchange. The bank also remains one of Nigeria’s fastest growing banks and is recognised as a dynamic financial services organisation.