The combined balance sheets of Nigeria’s top ten commercial banks expanded to ₦202 trillion (approximately $147 billion) in the first quarter of 2026.
This monumental asset surge reflects broader financial system liquidity, the inclusion of newly acquired regional assets, and balance sheet adjustments forced by the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) newly completed structural recapitalization cycle.
What’s driving the numbers
Access Holdings led the pack with ₦53.43 trillion in assets, followed by United Bank for Africa at ₦33.13 trillion and Zenith Bank at ₦32.01 trillion.
FirstHoldCo Plc reported ₦26.87 trillion, Guaranty Trust Holding Company ₦18.75 trillion and Fidelity Bank ₦11.35 trillion.
Rounding out the top 10 were Stanbic IBTC HoldCo (₦9.7 trillion), FCMB (₦7.54 trillion; December 2025 figure), Wema Bank (₦5.23 trillion) and Sterling Bank (₦4.07 trillion).
Composition and implications
Investment securities, loans and advances, and cash and bank balances were the major components of the asset bases, underscoring a mix between liquidity buffers and interest-earning assets.
The concentration at the top — with Access Holdings’ balance sheet more than 1.6 times the size of the next largest lender — highlights the increasing scale advantage enjoyed by a few groups, a factor that can drive pricing power in corporate and wholesale markets.
The Top-10 Banking Asset Leaderboard (Q1 2026)
The industry remains heavily top-heavy, with the traditional “FUGAZ” elite five capturing 81.25% of the entire asset pool of the top ten banks.
Macro Implications & Investor Impact
Bigger balance sheets bolster capacity to underwrite large corporate credits and deploy capital across regional opportunities, but they also raise scrutiny on asset quality and capital adequacy as banks chase growth.
Investors will monitor how the largest lenders manage risk-weighted assets, provisioning and funding costs, particularly if macro pressures or higher interest rates test asset-quality resilience.
This scale of capital accumulation however provides a vital protective shield for Nigeria’s broader economic system as it enters the second half of the year.
Fund Syndication Moats:
The ₦202 trillion asset base allows the local banking industry to single-handedly anchor mega-scale real-sector projects. High-profile transactions like the upcoming $11 billion Dangote Refinery expansion can now be comfortably syndicated internally using localized trade finance structures.
The Frontier Inflow Window:
These immense asset sizes line up perfectly with FTSE Russell’s upcoming September reclassification of Nigeria back to Frontier Market status. Because Chapel Hill Denham’s recent data shows that banks like Access, UBA, continue to trade at steep discounts (0.36x to 0.45x Price-to-Book), these massive balance sheets make the Nigerian banking index an appealing target for incoming global index-tracking funds.
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