KEY POINTS
- Fidelity Bank’s eligible capital reached N564.5 billion, clearing the CBN’s N500 billion threshold for internationally authorized banks
- A N259 billion single-day private placement on Dec. 31, 2025 drew Afreximbank participation and closed the remaining capital gap
- Onyeali-Ikpe, the bank’s first female MD, also led the June 2024 raise of N175.85 billion that first lifted capital to N305.5 billion
Nneka Onyeali-Ikpe secured Fidelity Bank’s recapitalization finish with a N259 billion private placement of ordinary shares on Dec. 31, 2025, pushing the bank’s eligible capital to N564.5 billion and clearing the Central Bank of Nigeria’s N500 billion threshold for internationally authorized lenders.
The transaction opened and closed in a single day with CBN and Securities and Exchange Commission approval. Afreximbank and its subsidiaries also joined as institutional investors, a participation analysts described as a validation of the bank’s governance and growth fundamentals.
Company Secretary Ezinwa Unuigboje confirmed the terms in a Nigerian Exchange Limited filing, disclosing that shareholders had authorized the raise at an extraordinary general meeting on Feb. 6, 2025, which approved the issuance of up to 20 billion ordinary shares through private placement.
A sequential two-raise strategy closes the capital gap
Meanwhile, Onyeali-Ikpe had laid the groundwork in June 2024 with a combined public offer and rights issue that raised N175.85 billion, lifting eligible capital to N305.5 billion. That left a gap of roughly N194.5 billion against the N500 billion minimum, a gap the December placement closed entirely.
Furthermore, the CBN’s March 31, 2026, deadline applied different thresholds by authorization tier: N500 billion for internationally licensed banks, N200 billion for national lenders and N50 billion for regional institutions. Fidelity, which targets international expansion, needed to clear the highest bar.
First female MD drives expansion beyond Nigeria’s borders
Additionally, Onyeali-Ikpe joined Fidelity Bank as managing director and chief executive officer in January 2021, becoming the first woman to hold the top role in the bank’s history. Under her leadership, the bank extended its footprint to the United Kingdom through the acquisition of what is now Fidelity Bank UK Limited.
The bank also said the strengthened capital base will support balance sheet resilience, broaden its capacity to finance key economic sectors and enable more aggressive pursuit of the international business pipeline Onyeali-Ikpe has assembled. Fidelity Bank recapitalization filings show the N564.5 billion figure remains subject to final regulatory approvals.
On the Nigerian Exchange, Fidelity Bank shares closed at N19.50 on April 10, 2026. Moreover, the CBN’s recapitalization program reflects a broader push to equip Nigerian banks for large-scale domestic and cross-border transactions.


