Opening a subsidiary in Asia could enable the bank to serve
customers in the region that is the largest non-African trading partner. Per
Semafor, the bank hopes to receive approval from regulators by the end of 2023.
With $26.5 billion in assets under management, Access Bank
Group will join South Africa’s Standard
Bank Group ($161.53 billion AUM) and TymeBank, the South African challenger
fintech to open shop in Asia. Standard Bank has offices in Singapore and Dubai,
while TymeBank recently expanded to the Philippines.
While speaking at the just-concluded Africa Financial
Industry Summit in Lome, the capital of Togo, Hebert Wigwe, chairman of Access
Holdings, the parent company of Access Bank, warned that Africa could be cut
off from the global financial system. “You cannot blame European or American
banks who chose not to be here. We blame ourselves, if we’re not big enough to
support our people.”
“We told ourselves that we’ll keep pushing that wall until
we make sure we are on the global stage. We will be in London, we will be in
the US, we will be in Hong Kong, we will be in all of these markets to make
sure that our people cannot be disintermediated,” the bank chief said. A 2021
report described the company’s goal as “to become an aggregator in Africa,
building a global payment gateway and providing trade finance support and
correspondent banking services.”
In July, the bank announced it had agreed to buy Standard
Chartered’s subsidiaries in Angola, Cameroon, The Gambia, Sierra Leone, as well
as its consumer, private and business banking business in Tanzania. This came
after a series of acquisitions and new subsidiaries that saw the bank open shop
in Angola, South Africa, Botswana, Zambia and Mozambique.
Access Holdings, the parent company of Access Bank currently
has a UK subsidiary and operates representative offices in China, Lebanon, and
India. Its UK subsidiary also operates a branch in Dubai, the UAE. Its current
international operations serve corporations and other banks at the
institutional level, as opposed to the retail banking services it offers in its
African locations. The bank has not disclosed where it plans to set up shop or
whether this new expansion means it will begin offering retail banking services
in its Asian operation.