The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) has posted robust first-quarter results for 2026, highlighting its resilience and strategic role in financing trade across Africa and the Caribbean. Despite a challenging global environment marked by geopolitical risks and tight financial conditions, the Bank recorded a 25% year-on-year increase in net income, rising to US$268.9 million from US$215.4 million in Q1 2025.
The strong performance was driven by disciplined balance sheet management and growth in lending activities. Afreximbank’s total credit exposure expanded by 2% to US$42 billion, while average loans and advances rose 8% year-on-year to US$32 billion, fueling higher interest income. Gross income climbed to US$874.1 million, compared to US$784.9 million in the same period last year, while net interest income surged 24% to US$510 million.
Afrexim’s Capital Strength and Strategic Initiatives
Liquidity and asset quality remained solid. The Bank reported US$5.6 billion in cash and cash equivalents, representing 14% of total assets, consistent with its strategic minimum. The non-performing loan ratio stood at 2.40%, broadly in line with FY2025 and below industry averages, underscoring the strength of Afreximbank’s portfolio. Shareholders’ funds increased to US$8.6 billion, supported by internally generated capital and new equity investments, while the capital adequacy ratio was maintained at a healthy 23%.
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Beyond financial metrics, Afreximbank reinforced its counter-cyclical mandate. In March 2026, the Bank unveiled a US$10 billion Gulf Crisis Response Programme to help member countries mitigate spillover effects from the Gulf crisis. The facility is designed to stabilize trade flows, support liquidity, and address supply-side disruptions in critical sectors such as energy, tourism, aviation, fertilizers, and food imports.
Regional integration also gained momentum with South Africa’s ratification of Afreximbank’s Establishment Agreement in February 2026, granting the Bank full continental coverage and strengthening its role as a pan-African development finance institution.
Denys Denya, Afreximbank’s Senior Executive Vice President, emphasized the Bank’s resilience and strategic focus: “Against a backdrop of continued global uncertainty, heightened geopolitical risks and tight financial conditions, the Group delivered a resilient first-quarter performance, underpinned by disciplined balance sheet management, sound asset quality and strong capital and liquidity buffers.”
Afreximbank’s Q1 2026 results reaffirm its position as a leading financier of trade and trade-enabling infrastructure, while its swift crisis response initiatives highlight its commitment to stabilizing economies and advancing industrial transformation across Africa and the Caribbean.
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