KEY POINTS
- Jim Ovia Zenith Bank growth began with $5 million in 1990.
- Zenith Bank now holds over $3.3 billion in shareholders’ funds.
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Capital raises are funding Zenith’s pan-African expansion.
When Jim Ovia reflects on the origins of Zenith Bank, the numbers still surprise him. In 1990, he raised N20 million about $5 million at an exchange rate of N4 to the dollar to launch a bank in a Nigerian market already crowded with entrenched competitors.
More than three decades later, that decision underpins Nigeria’s most profitable lender. As of September 2025, Zenith Bank reported shareholders’ funds of over $3.3 billion and a market capitalisation of about $1.9 billion, ranking it among the country’s most valuable publicly listed companies.
Ovia, now 74, has consistently framed the story as one of restraint rather than rapid expansion. Speaking recently about the bank’s early years, he described the transformation from a modest start-up into a financial heavyweight as the product of patience and long term thinking, not speed.
Jim Ovia Zenith Bank growth story
Nigeria’s banking environment in the early 1990s offered limited capital, evolving regulation and significant macroeconomic risk. Against that backdrop, Zenith Bank pursued conservative lending, strong capital buffers and tight cost controls, strategies that helped it navigate currency swings, regulatory changes and repeated economic downturns.
By Sept. 30, 2025, the bank reported shareholders’ equity of N4.73 trillion ($3.31 billion), total assets of N31.17 trillion ($21.9 billion) and retained earnings of N2.56 trillion ($1.8 billion). While on the Nigerian Exchange, it stands as the country’s most profitable lender and the second-largest financial services group by market value.
Furthermore in 2024, Zenith Bank posted a record profit of N1.032 trillion ($670.7 million), up 52.5 percent from the prior year. Profit reached N764.2 billion ($536.1 million) in the first nine months of 2025, underscoring the compounding effect of its long-term strategy.
Bank’s growth and expansion
Zenith Bank’s steady balance sheet has enabled a broader geographic push. The lender operates across West Africa and the U.K., and opened a Paris branch in 2024 to target Francophone Africa and parts of Europe.
Expansion has also been reinforced by capital. A N350.4 billion ($229.7 million) rights issue and public offer lifted share capital to N614.65 billion ($402.7 million), exceeding the Central Bank of Nigeria’s N500 billion requirement for banks with international ambitions.
With that threshold cleared, Zenith plans to further open in Côte d’Ivoire and Cameroon and has applied for approval to acquire Kenya’s Paramount Bank, a move that would mark its entry into East Africa.
According to Billionaires Africa, for Ovia, who owns 16.2 percent of the bank and serves as chairman, the lesson remains consistent: Nigeria offers outsized returns for those willing to endure volatility. “These kinds of returns,” he has said, “come from patience.”


