… her Subsidiaries win Best Bank in Congo, Tchad, Gabon and Senegal
Pan-African financial institution, United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc has once again proven its leadership on the continent, as the Banker Magazine crowned UBA the “African Bank of the Year 2017”. This Banker Award is premier for Nigeria, as it marks the first time a Nigerian-headquartered bank will be wining the prestigious and highly coveted regional award.
To
further demonstrate the group’s strength and dominance in the financial
sector on the continent, four of UBA Group’s operations in Africa also
led contenders in their
respective countries to emerge the Best Bank of the Year 2017 in their
respective markets. UBA Congo, UBA Tchad, UBA Gabon and UBA Senegal
emerged the Best Bank of the Year in Congo, Tchad, Gabon and Senegal,
reinforcing the strong franchise of the Group across
its chosen markets in Africa. Notably, UBA Gabon and UBA Senegal won
the same awards in 2016, as both subsidiaries of UBA Group remain the
Banks to beat in Gabon and Senegal.
A
publication of the Financial Times Newspaper, The Banker Magazine is a
global financial intelligence magazine that provides global bank
ratings/analysis and it is the definitive
reference in international banking for high level decision makers
globally. According to the magazine, the aim of the award “is to
highlight industry wide excellence within the global banking community.
The winner is selected from participating banks in each
of the 120 countries from which entries are received for the
competition.”
The
magazine went further to enumerate the various achievements recorded by
UBA group during the period, noting that earnings for the year reached
N384bn ($1.07bn) signalling
22% growth from its 2015 performance while profit before tax also grew,
by 32%, to reach N91bn. According to the organisers, “Equally
impressive is UBA’s capital adequacy ratio which, at the end of 2016,
stood at 20%, while its nonperforming loan ratio was
a healthy 3.9%. Operating across 19 markets in Africa, the bank serves
more than 14 million customers.”
The
organisers noted that UBA is making impressive strides in the digital
space, adding that in terms of internet banking, the organisation
processed 7 million transactions
valued at more than N600bn in 2016. Mobile banking processed
transactions valued at N70bn over the same period. UBA has also launched
eMailMoni, a service that lets customers transfer funds via e-mail,
while Chat Banking allows clients to perform basic transactions
through social media platforms. “For these reasons, and others, UBA is
the winner of our 2017 African Bank of the Year award,” the Magazine
stated.
Uzoka
added; “The bank remains focused on its goal of democratizing banking
in Africa, leveraging on new technologies and our rich pool of talent.
It is satisfying that our
efforts towards leadership are yielding great results. We continue to
gain market share across our chosen markets, as we deepen financial
inclusion, meeting basic and complex financial service needs of the
growing African population. We are Africans and determined
to change the narrative of financial services in Africa and this is
just the beginning,” he noted.
On
his part, Mr. Emeke Iweriebor, Regional CEO, UBA Francophone Africa,
described the awards as exciting, stating that the bank’s great work in
Africa is increasingly being
recognized.
He
added that the bank will continue to leverage its local knowledge,
global exposure as well as presence to drive positive change in Africa,
working actively with the government,
local businesses, regulators and other stakeholders in deepening
financial services.
The
Banker award’s “Bank of the Year Awards” are widely regarded as the
Oscars of the Banking Industry. For 90 years, The Banker has been the
world’s leading monthly journal
of record for the banking industry. The organisers note that the aim
of the awards programme is to highlight industry wide excellence within
the global banking community.
The
Banker selects one winning bank for each of the 120 countries that are
covered. Over 1,000 applications are entered and judges select winning
banks based on the ones
that have made most progress over the past 12 months.
UBA
was the first Nigerian bank to make an Initial Public Offering,
following its listing on the NSE in1970. It was also the first Nigerian
bank to issue Global Depository
Receipts. The shares of UBA are publicly traded on the Nigerian Stock
Exchange and the Bank has a well-diversified shareholder base, which
includes foreign and local institutional investors, as well as
individual shareholders.
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