Zenith Bank Plc delivered a measured first-quarter performance for 2026, with earnings expansion anchored in strong core banking income and improved funding efficiency, but constrained by a notable rise in credit risk costs and only modest bottom-line growth.
The lender reported a pre-tax profit of N360.92 billion for the period ended March 31, a 2.87% increase from a year earlier, while profit after tax edged up just 0.69% to N314.02 billion. The divergence between top-line strength and net earnings indicates growing pressure points within the operating environment, particularly asset quality deterioration and cost absorption.
Revenue crossed the N1 trillion mark, rising 6.14% year-on-year to N1.01 trillion. This growth was primarily underpinned by interest income, which climbed to N869.10 billion, supported by higher yields on loans and investment securities in a still-elevated interest rate environment. However, the more decisive driver of margin expansion came from the liability side. Interest expenses declined by 4.64% to N235.02 billion, indicating improved funding efficiency and a shift toward lower-cost deposits.
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That dynamic lifted net interest income by 7.24% to N634.08 billion, reinforcing the bank’s ability to extract value from its balance sheet even as macro conditions remain tight. The expansion suggests effective asset-liability management, particularly in pricing deposits and optimizing funding mix.
A standout feature of the quarter was the surge in non-interest income. Net fee and commission income jumped 44.53% to N81.05 billion, reflecting increased transaction volumes and deeper penetration of digital banking channels. This signals a structural shift in earnings composition, as Nigerian banks continue to diversify away from pure interest-based income toward more resilient, fee-driven streams.
However, the operating backdrop remains far from benign. Loan impairment charges rose sharply by 16.53% to N57.57 billion, pointing to a higher cost-of-risk environment. This increase partially eroded gains from core income, with net interest income after impairment growing at a slower pace of 6.42% to N576.51 billion. The trend points to rising stress among borrowers, likely linked to inflationary pressures, currency volatility, and tighter financial conditions.
At the balance sheet level, the bank maintained a broadly stable position. Total assets declined slightly by 1.24% to N32.01 trillion, largely due to adjustments in asset allocation. More telling was the improvement in the funding structure. Total liabilities fell by 4.04% to N26.85 trillion, driven by reduced borrowings, which indicates a deliberate effort to deleverage and rely more on customer deposits.
Customer deposits rose by 7.87% to N24.47 trillion, underscoring sustained depositor confidence and providing a stable, low-cost funding base. At the same time, loans and advances expanded by 13.25% to N11.38 trillion, signaling continued credit growth despite the rising risk environment. This combination points to a careful balancing act: expanding lending activity while managing funding costs and liquidity.
Shareholders’ funds increased by 16.32% to N5.17 trillion, reflecting strong internal capital generation. The capital build-up enhances the bank’s capacity to absorb shocks and positions it for future growth, particularly as regulatory expectations tighten.
Market performance has mirrored the bank’s operational resilience. The stock has rallied significantly in recent weeks, indicating investor confidence in earnings durability and capital strength. After adjusting for its N8.75 final dividend, the share price continued its upward trajectory, closing at N128.50 on April 30. The stock has gained over 100% year-to-date, placing it among the stronger performers on the Nigerian Exchange and lifting its market capitalization to N5.28 trillion.
That rally suggests the market is pricing in not just current performance, but expectations of sustained profitability in a high-rate environment where banks typically benefit from wider margins. However, the modest growth in post-tax profit relative to revenue expansion indicates that cost pressures, particularly impairments and possibly regulatory costs, are becoming more material.
Looking at the broader trajectory, Zenith’s full-year 2025 results provide additional context. The bank reported a pre-tax profit of N1.26 trillion for that year, representing a slight decline, even as interest income surged to N3.6 trillion. This pattern supports a key theme: strong revenue generation is increasingly being offset by rising costs and risk provisions.
Financial analysts believe the Q1 result hints that the bank’s near-term outlook will hinge on three variables. First is the trajectory of interest rates and how effectively it can sustain margin expansion without triggering further credit stress. Second is asset quality, particularly whether impairment charges stabilize or continue to rise. Third is the continued scaling of digital and fee-based income streams, which could provide a buffer against cyclical pressures in lending.
The first-quarter numbers suggest Zenith is navigating these crosscurrents with relative discipline. But the narrow growth at the bottom line signals that the margin for error is shrinking.



