The Executive Director, Finance & Strategy of Sterling Bank Plc, Mr. Abubakar Suleiman, has said the bank would consolidate on the positive ratings by the various international rating agencies by ensuring that it continues to deliver quality services to its customers and adhere to best practice as applied to banking worldwide.
Abubakar, who attributed the ratings by Global Credit Rating (GCR), Moody’s and Lafferty Bank Quality Ratings (LBQR) to the lender’s strong performance and resilience amid challenging operating conditions, noted that the ratings is a validation of its business models.
Earlier, GCR affirmed Sterling Bank’s national long-term and short- term ratings of BBB (NG) and A3(NG), with the outlook accorded as stable.
Similarly, Moody’s Investors Service had also assigned B2 Issuer rating to the bank.
This, according to Moody’s, is a confirmation of the Bank’s “solid assets quality metrics and provision coverage, improvements to the Bank’s Information Technology (IT) infrastructure and risk management processes as well as its high liquidity buffers and a solid deposit funding base”.
Assessing the bank’s quality, the Lafferty Bank Quality Ratings (LBQR) also this year, reckoned Sterling Bank to be among the top 10 in the world, top three in Africa (after Capitec and Barclays Africa) and the top bank in Nigeria.
The Lafferty Group approach to bank ratings involves an evaluation of key quantitative and qualitative criteria such as strategy, culture, customer care, brand promise and financial performance.
Michael Lafferty, Chairman, Lafferty Group had statement that “banks that score well on Lafferty Bank Quality Ratings tend to trade at a premium price to their tangible book value”.
GCR in a report made available to newsmen by Sterling Bank in Lagos at the weekend attributed its rating to its strong performance and resilience amidst challenging operating conditions.
Part of the GCR Report reads: “Sterling’s total assets amounted to N796.4bn (representing a market share of 2.8 per cent) at FYE15. The bank’s capital base grew 12.2 per cent in FYE15, solely through internal capital generation, with the risk weighted capital adequacy ratio (“RWCAR”) improving to 17.5 per cent at FYE15 (FYE14: 14.0 per cent). To further strengthen its capital base and support asset growth, the bank is in the process of raising up to N35 billion Tier II capital expected to be concluded in the third quarter of FYE 16. 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 (automated teller machines) nationwide.