In a move underscoring a broader push for enhanced corporate governance across Nigerian financial services, First City Monument Bank (FCMB) has appointed Mrs Adepeju Adebajo as an Independent Non-Executive Director, effective immediately. The appointment, confirmed by the lender’s board on Wednesday, adds a layer of impartial oversight as the mid-tier bank navigates intensifying competition and tighter regulatory scrutiny.
Mrs Adebajo, whose prior executive experience spans risk management and strategic finance in sub-Saharan Africa, will serve on the board’s audit and risk committees. Unlike executive directors, an Independent Non-Executive Director holds no operational role or material shareholding, a structure designed to provide unbiased challenge to management and protect minority shareholders. Governance analysts note that such appointments have become a cornerstone of the Central Bank of Nigeria’s revised code on corporate governance, which mandates that at least one-third of board members be independent.
“This is not a ceremonial addition,” said a Lagos-based banking analyst who spoke on condition of anonymity. “FCMB is signalling to institutional investors that it takes fiduciary discipline seriously, especially as foreign portfolio investors return to Nigerian equities.”
The bank’s chairman described Mrs Adebajo as “a proven voice of constructive dissent,” a rare public acknowledgment of the tension that independent directors are meant to introduce. For FCMB, which reported a 14% rise in gross earnings last fiscal year but saw non-performing loan ratios tick upward, the appointment arrives at a sensitive moment. Ratings agencies have flagged governance depth as a key variable in their assessments of smaller African banks.
Market reaction was muted but positive, with FCMB’s shares closing up 0.8% in Lagos trading, outperforming the banking sector index. Analysts expect a fuller assessment at the bank’s next earnings call, where Mrs Adebajo’s committee assignments will be scrutinised.
The move also reflects a regional trend: from Nairobi to Accra, lenders are rushing to fill independent director seats ahead of stricter 2026 filing requirements under the African Continental Free Trade Area’s financial harmonisation protocol. For FCMB, the question is whether one appointment signals genuine governance reform or box-ticking. Investors will be watching for follow-on changes to executive compensation disclosures and related party transaction approvals.




