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Access Bank Takes Over Standard Chartered Bank After 130 Years of Operations

Published 1 day ago3 minute read

Legit.ng’s Pascal Oparada has reported on tech, energy, stocks, investment and the economy for over a decade.

Nigeria’s banking giant, Access Bank, has completed the takeover of Standard Chartered Bank in The Gambia.

The takeover on June 13, 2025, will see Standard Bank cease to operate in The Gambia after 130 years.

Access Bank completes the takeover of Standard Chartered Bank
Access Bank takes over a 130-year-old bank in The Gambia Credit: Access Bank
Source: UGC

The governor of the Central Bank of The Gambia, Buah Saidy, disclosed this recently during a press conference at The Gambia’s apex bank’s headquarters in Banjul.

Saidy said that the process was smooth, very prudent and transparent, stating that Access Bank bought the 130-year-old financial institution.

He disclosed that as of Friday, June 13, 2025, Standard Chartered Bank will cease to operate and that the central bank will request the return of Standard Chartered Bank’s license.

Regarding the employees, Saidy said the central bank is working with Standard Chartered and Access Bank to ensure the staff can transition smoothly into Access Bank to provide stability in the industry

According to The Standard, a Gambian tabloid, the apex bank boss said Access Bank will be another big bank with strong financial muscles to help finance the economic activities in The Gambia.

He stated that the transition has been smooth and the regulatory authorities worked with the financial institutions, their senior management, and their board.

Said expressed appreciation to the staff, management, shareholders and customers of Standard Chartered Bank, reassuring them that they will be in good hands with Access Bank.

Access Bank, alongside Zenith Bank, are the only two Nigerian banks that have met and exceeded the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) N500 billion recapitalisation requirement of the Central Bank of Nigeria.

Two Nigerian banks meet CBN N500 billion recapitalisation requirements
Zenith Bank and Access Bank meet the N500 billion minimum capital requirement. Credit: Zenith Bank
Source: Getty Images

Legit.ng reported that Access Bank and Zenith Bank exceeded the capital requirement after the N500 billion threshold and share premium ceiling set by the apex bank.

Other tier-1 banks, including Ecobank and Guarantee Trust Bank, are trailing closely behind with N353.51 billion and N345.30 billion, respectively.

Proshare disclosed that a shift in dynamics in the banking hierarchy is taking place, with Ecobank displacing Zenith Bank from the top tier-1 list, due to its 67.11% asset rally and its francophone West African operations.

The report noted that Fidelity Bank is on track to return to the tier-1 group by the end of 2025.

This is despite Fidelity Bank’s recent N225 billion Supreme Court judgement tied to its legacy acquisition of FSB International Bank.

Legit.ng earlier reported that National Bank of Kenya Limited (NBK) has been fully acquired by Access Bank Plc from KCB Group PLC (KCB Group).

The bank said in a statement on Friday that the development signifies the conclusion of a transaction that began in March 2024 and that all regulatory approvals typically required for such a transaction have been obtained.

As a result, Access Bank Plc now owns all of NBK, which was formerly controlled by the KCB Group. Until all merger procedures are completed, NBK and Access Bank Kenya will continue to operate independently.

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Source: Legit.ng

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