Not every earnings decline is a warning sign. Sometimes it’s a strategy — and UBA is betting that investors understand the difference.
The United Bank for Africa posted a 22.8% drop in profit after tax for the first quarter of 2026, closing the period at ₦146.6 billion, down from the same quarter a year prior. Profit before tax fell 21.4% to ₦160.7 billion. On the surface, those are the kinds of numbers that make shareholders nervous. But UBA’s leadership has been signalling this outcome for months, framing it not as underperformance but as a deliberate reset — what the bank calls “earnings normalisation” following its recapitalisation.
The distinction matters. And the rest of the numbers make a reasonable case for it.
Gross earnings grew 5% to ₦801.5 billion. Interest income rose 6.9% to ₦641.1 billion. Non-interest income — the revenue stream that reflects how well a bank is monetising everything beyond traditional lending — climbed 17.3% to ₦137.1 billion, a figure that points to a genuinely diversifying revenue base rather than one propped up by a single line. Net interest income advanced 10.5% to ₦383.7 billion, supporting a 12.2% jump in operating income to ₦520.8 billion. These are not the numbers of a bank losing momentum. They are the numbers of a bank investing heavily while its top line continues to grow.
The efficiency and risk metrics tell a similar story. Return on average equity rose to 13.7%. Return on assets improved to 1.77%. Cost of risk — a measure of how much a bank is setting aside to cover potential loan losses relative to its lending — declined sharply to 2.02%, signalling improved asset quality and tighter credit discipline. Cost of funds also moderated, easing from 3.83% at the end of 2025 to 3.73%, which means UBA is paying slightly less to fund its operations — a meaningful improvement in a still-elevated interest rate environment.
The balance sheet, meanwhile, remains formidable. Total assets stand at ₦33.1 trillion. Customer deposits hit ₦26.2 trillion — a funding base that gives the bank both scale and stability as it continues expanding across the continent.
Group Managing Director Oliver Alawuba was direct in his framing: “While profitability has moderated in line with our expectations for a transition year, we are seeing strong underlying momentum across our markets, supported by improved earnings quality and disciplined risk management.”
The phrase “transition year” is doing significant work in that sentence. UBA completed a major recapitalisation cycle and is now channelling resources into digital infrastructure and regional expansion across its 20-country African footprint. Those investments compress near-term profits. They are also, if the strategy holds, what positions the bank for the next phase of growth.
Executive Director of Finance and Risk Management Ugo Nwaghodoh reinforced that framing, pointing to the improvement in return on equity and return on assets as evidence that the underlying earnings quality is strengthening even as headline profit numbers moderate. “Our balance sheet remains robust, supported by a diversified funding base and disciplined loan growth,” he said. “With stable funding costs and improving asset quality, we are well positioned to drive operating leverage and long-term value creation.”
UBA serves over 45 million customers across 1,000 business offices in Africa, with additional operations in New York, London, Paris, and Dubai. At that scale, a quarter of moderated profit while core revenue lines grow and risk metrics improve is a very different thing from a quarter of genuine deterioration.
The bank is spending to build. The question 2026 will answer is whether what it’s building justifies the bill.
