
Leading Nigerian manufacturers have significantly scaled down bank borrowings due to persistently high lending rates. Combined bank loans for major manufacturers fell 20.3% to N2.014 trillion in the first nine months of 2025 from N2.526 trillion in the same period of 2024.
Key drivers of the shift:
- Companies are increasingly relying on equities, corporate bonds, commercial papers, and retained earnings.
- The reduction in bank borrowing has resulted in a 52.8% decline in aggregate finance costs, dropping to N662 billion from N1.4 trillion.
- Despite the borrowing cut, the combined turnover of the firms rose 37.9% to N10.1 trillion, and the sector swung from a N116 billion loss in 2024 to a N2.5 trillion profit in 2025.
- Cost of sales, however, rose 57.9% to N5.7 trillion, reflecting persistent input inflation.
Examples of borrowing reductions:
- BUA Foods: N1.105 trillion (from N1.559 trillion)
- Nestlé Nigeria: N521.01 billion (from N653.70 billion)
- Nigerian Breweries: N162.17 billion (from N204.17 billion)
- NASCON Allied: N67 million (from N3.3 billion)
Expert commentary:
- David Adonri (HighCap Securities): Companies are moving away from banks due to high interest, which may reduce banks’ income, but lowers finance costs for manufacturers.
- Dr. Muda Yusuf (CPPE): The trend shows cautious business behavior; firms are leveraging cheaper funding options while FX stability and macroeconomic improvements boost profitability.
- Tajudeen Olayinka (Banker/Stockbroker): The 20% drop is prudent financial management and not a threat to the economy.
- Clifford Egbomeade (Public Analyst): The move is a defensive response to the CBN’s 27.5% Monetary Policy Rate, with lending rates above 30%.
Policy implications:
- Banks may face subdued loan growth as manufacturers increasingly bypass high-interest bank credit.
- Experts suggest targeted credit interventions via development banks, the Bank of Industry, or credit guarantees to reconnect banks with industry.
Sector outlook:
- The manufacturing sector shows signs of recovery, but remains fragile due to inflation, energy costs, and infrastructure bottlenecks.
- Continued policy consistency, affordable credit, and investment in productivity are needed to consolidate gains in 2026.


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