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Credit Bank Repositions for Growth After Cutting Losses and Strengthening Balance Sheet

The lender’s liquidity position emerged as one of the strongest indicators of its turnaround efforts.

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Kenya’s mid-tier lender Credit Bank is betting on caution, capital strength and liquidity buffers as it navigates one of the most difficult operating environments the banking sector has faced in recent years.

The Nairobi-based bank narrowed its pre-tax loss to Sh26.6 million in the first quarter of 2026 from Sh68 million recorded during a similar period last year, signaling early gains from an aggressive balance sheet restructuring strategy aimed at restoring profitability and meeting tougher regulatory capital requirements.  

Rather than chasing rapid loan growth, Credit Bank has deliberately slowed lending and shifted focus toward preserving asset quality, strengthening liquidity and rebuilding investor confidence at a time when rising defaults continue to weigh heavily on Kenya’s banking industry.

Industry data from the Central Bank of Kenya shows the ratio of gross non-performing loans to gross loans rose to 15.6 percent in March from 15.4 percent in December, underscoring growing repayment pressures across the economy.  

The lender’s liquidity position emerged as one of the strongest indicators of its turnaround efforts.

Its liquidity ratio climbed sharply to 22.74 percent from 15.5 percent a year earlier, moving above the statutory minimum and providing a larger cushion against market shocks and funding pressures.  

At the same time, customer confidence appears to be improving. Deposits increased from Sh19.3 billion to Sh22.9 billion over the period, while total assets expanded to Sh28.3 billion from Sh26.3 billion. Analysts view the growth in deposits as a critical vote of confidence for a lender that has spent the last two years navigating a difficult credit environment.  

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The bank’s management says the strategy is designed to prioritize resilience over short-term earnings. Instead of expanding its loan book aggressively, Credit Bank has redirected resources toward government securities, high-yield deposits and loan recovery initiatives while restructuring distressed facilities and increasing provisions against bad debts.  

Leading the restructuring effort is Betty Korir, a veteran banker who has headed the institution since 2017 and built a reputation around risk management and SME-focused banking.

Under her leadership, the lender has emphasized disciplined growth and capital preservation as the sector adjusts to tighter regulation and economic uncertainty.  

The pressure on banks is expected to intensify following the enactment of the Business Laws (Amendment) Act, which raised minimum capital thresholds for lenders.

The law requires banks to gradually increase core capital levels to Sh3 billion before eventually reaching Sh10 billion by 2029, a move expected to trigger fresh fundraising, consolidation and strategic partnerships across the sector.  

Credit Bank currently has paid-up capital of approximately Sh1.48 billion and is seeking to raise an additional Sh4.5 billion through private placements backed by shareholders.

The capital injection is expected to strengthen regulatory compliance, support future growth and position the lender to compete more aggressively once credit conditions improve.  

The lender’s latest results come against the backdrop of global economic turbulence driven by geopolitical tensions, elevated energy prices, supply chain disruptions and persistent inflationary pressures that have dampened borrowing appetite and increased credit risk.

Kenyan banks have increasingly responded by tightening lending standards and focusing on capital preservation rather than aggressive expansion.  

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For Credit Bank, the message is increasingly clear: survival is no longer the primary objective.

The lender is attempting to engineer a controlled return to growth, using stronger liquidity, fresh capital and tighter risk controls as the foundation for a broader turnaround.

Whether that strategy delivers sustained profitability will depend largely on the bank’s ability to keep bad loans under control while unlocking new sources of revenue in an economy still grappling with uncertainty.


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