Nigeria’s banking recapitalisation programme, driven by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), is expected to wrap up by March 31, with regulators projecting a stronger financial system capable of funding larger transactions and supporting the Federal Government’s $1 trillion economy target.
The exercise, described as one of the most ambitious under CBN Governor Olayemi Cardoso, has already attracted significant inflows. According to the latest update referenced in the report, ₦4.05 trillion has been lodged with the CBN by 20 banks, while other lenders are still in the market raising funds. Industry projections put total proceeds at not less than ₦5 trillion when the window closes.
Beyond the fundraising itself, the recapitalisation framework includes a strict verification process. Banks must submit new equity proceeds for validation before allotment clearance and the eventual release of funds for completion of the offer process and recognition in their capital base. The CBN serves as the final signatory in a tripartite capital verification committee alongside the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC), tasked with scrutinising fresh capital raised by banks.
Cardoso has repeatedly framed the programme as part of a wider push to deepen resilience and restore trust. “At the same time, we remain vigilant to emerging risks, including cyber threats, credit-concentration pressures, and operational vulnerabilities. These are being addressed through strengthened risk-based supervision and our ongoing transition to Basel III, which will further bolster resilience, improve capital quality and strengthen liquidity monitoring,” he said.
He added that stress testing supports the regulator’s view that the system remains stable: “As we strengthen the capacity of our banks, stress-testing this year confirms that Nigeria’s banking sector remains fundamentally robust. Key financial soundness indicators overwhelmingly satisfied prudential benchmarks during the year,” Cardoso said.
The CBN also linked the reform agenda to operational discipline in cash and payments. “Our starting point was a comprehensive, end-to-end review of the entire cash lifecycle: from production, to transportation, to distribution, and eventual access by consumers…,” Cardoso said, adding that the bank has updated cash-printing models, issued guidelines on ATM-to-card ratio, tightened approvals for ATM or branch closures, enforced sanctions for cash-dispensing failures, and intensified oversight of payment agents and POS operators.
Stakeholders say the next test is translating stronger balance sheets into economic transformation. World Bank Country Director Matthew Verghis said: “A stronger banking system creates the foundation to finance Nigeria’s long-term ambitions from empowering MSMEs and expanding productive capacity to unlocking large-scale infrastructure development…”
For everyday Nigerians, this matters because stronger banks are generally safer for savers and better able to support the economy, even though the benefits may take time to show in daily life.




