Ecobank Nigeria Limited has opened a tender offer for the remaining US$150 million of its US$300 million 7.125% Senior Note Participation Notes due February 2026, giving eligible bondholders the option to exit ahead of maturity.
The offer, which opened on 28 November 2025, allows noteholders to tender their securities at US$1,000 per US$1,000 principal, plus accrued and unpaid interest up to (but excluding) the settlement date. The transaction is expected to settle on or before 31 December 2025.
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In its announcement, Ecobank told Fintechinsights that the move reflects its “proactive approach to liability management”, aimed at strengthening capital-planning flexibility and maintaining a healthy debt mix amid shifting macroeconomic conditions. Participation in the offer is voluntary.
Background: Continued Balance Sheet Cleanup
This tender follows Ecobank Nigeria’s July 2025 redemption of the first US$150 million of the Eurobond through a tender offer and exit consent process, an action that marked a major step in the bank’s ongoing balance sheet overhaul.
That early repayment was supported by improving liquidity, stronger loan recoveries, and early settlement of promissory notes from parent company Ecobank Transnational Incorporated (ETI). At the time, the notes were trading close to par, reflecting steady investor confidence.
The bank also secured bondholder approval to remove a capital adequacy ratio (CAR) covenant, which had been triggered in early 2024 when Ecobank Nigeria’s CAR fell to 7.65%, below the 10% regulatory minimum, largely due to naira depreciation.
Since then, the bank has pursued a recovery plan anchored on profit growth, tighter cost control, and capital support from ETI. Ecobank had originally planned to redeem the remaining US$150 million at maturity in February 2026, but the new tender offer accelerates that timeline by roughly two months.
Market Implications
Analysts view the move as a positive step that may:
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Reduce refinancing risk ahead of 2026
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Signal improved liquidity strength amid elevated borrowing costs
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Offer investors portfolio rebalancing options before year-end
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Help the bank align its debt profile with ongoing capital recovery efforts
The strategy is in line with the broader Group’s deleveraging. ETI reduced its borrowed funds by 15% to N2.83 trillion as of September 2025—representing 6% of total assets, down from 8% in December 2024.
What You Need to Know About ETI’s Financial Position
Ecobank Nigeria remains a core pillar of the Ecobank Transnational Incorporated Group, whose strong performance in 2025 has bolstered stability across its subsidiaries.
Group Results (Q3 2025):
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Pre-tax profit: N394.6 billion (+47% YoY)
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Profit after tax: N268.5 billion (+48% YoY)
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Operating expenses: N446.2 billion (+3% YoY)
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Impairment charges: N129.7 billion (+64% YoY)
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Total assets: N47.97 trillion (+11%)
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Customer deposits: N35.68 trillion (74% of total assets)
For the nine-month period, ETI reported:
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Pre-tax profit: N1.01 trillion (+42% YoY)
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Profit after tax: N702.4 billion (+43% YoY)
These results reflect strong deposit growth, disciplined cost management, and a more conservative risk posture—factors that have helped underpin Ecobank Nigeria’s continued balance sheet restructuring efforts.









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