Nedbank has moved to accelerate its expansion beyond South Africa with an offer valued at nearly R14bn for a controlling stake in Kenya-based NCBA, positioning the transaction as a strategic entry point into East Africa’s fastest-growing banking markets. The proposed acquisition would give Nedbank a 66% holding in the lender, which has also attracted interest from rivals, including Standard Bank.
The bid reflects a decisive shift in Nedbank’s geographic strategy. Around 80% of the group’s earnings are still generated in South Africa, leaving it more exposed than its major peers to slow domestic growth, weak credit demand and rising operating costs. East Africa, by contrast, continues to post above-average economic growth, supported by population expansion, urbanisation and increasing adoption of digital financial services. Kenya alone is forecast by the IMF to grow at more than 5% annually over the medium term, outpacing South Africa by a wide margin.
The proposed price of R13.9bn is significant in relative terms. It represents more than 80% of Nedbank’s 2024 profit and exceeds 10% of its market capitalisation on the JSE, underlining the scale of the bet being made. According to Business Day, the transaction would be Nedbank’s clearest statement yet that it intends to rebalance its earnings base away from South Africa after years of limited offshore growth.
NCBA brings both scale and regional reach. The bank has a reported client base of about 60 million, driven largely by its digital lending platforms, and operates across Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Rwanda, with additional digital services in Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire. Its shareholder register includes prominent Kenyan business interests, notably the Kenyatta family and the family of former Central Bank of Kenya governor Philip Ndegwa, giving it deep local roots in a competitive market.
From a financial perspective, NCBA offers strong profitability metrics by African banking standards. Nedbank has indicated that the group manages about R84.4bn in assets and disburses more than R126bn in digital loans each year, while delivering an average return on equity of roughly 19% over the past six years. These figures compare favourably with many South African peers, where returns have been compressed by sluggish loan growth and higher capital requirements.
The structure of the transaction is designed to preserve NCBA’s local identity. The bank would remain listed on the Nairobi Securities Exchange, with 34% of its shares continuing to trade publicly. This approach may help mitigate regulatory and political sensitivities in Kenya, where foreign control of strategic financial institutions is often closely scrutinised.
Competition for NCBA has been building for some time. As reported by Bloomberg, Standard Bank, which already generates more than 40% of its earnings outside South Africa, had previously explored an acquisition of the Kenyan lender. Standard Bank’s broader African footprint, spanning 20 countries outside South Africa, has delivered tangible results, particularly in West Africa, where recent earnings growth has been strong.
For Nedbank, the urgency behind the deal is sharpened by past missteps elsewhere on the continent. The group’s earlier expansion into West Africa ended in a costly retreat after its investment in Ecobank Transnational failed to meet expectations. The eventual disposal of that stake crystallised large unrealised losses, highlighting the risks of minority positions in volatile and politically complex markets. Securing control of NCBA would give Nedbank far greater strategic influence and operational oversight than it had in that earlier venture, a point analysts view as critical to improving execution.
The acquisition would also mark the largest transaction under chief executive Jason Quinn, aside from the R1.65bn purchase of fintech firm iKhokha. Since taking over in 2024, Quinn has moved quickly to restructure the group, reshaping its retail and business banking operations and creating a new business and commercial banking unit focused on SMEs and juristic clients. The NCBA deal fits squarely within that reset, offering access to fast-growing small-business and retail segments across multiple East African markets.
The contrast with competitors is stark. Standard Bank’s African operations delivered a sharp rise in headline earnings in its most recent reporting period, particularly in West Africa, while Absa, which already has a meaningful presence in Kenya, continues to signal its intention to reduce reliance on South Africa, where about 65% of its earnings are still generated. According to IMF regional banking data, cross-border African banks with diversified income streams have generally outperformed domestically focused peers over the past five years, both in earnings growth and returns on equity.
If successful, Nedbank’s NCBA bid would represent a pivotal step in repositioning the group within the African banking landscape. It would provide immediate scale in East Africa, exposure to high-growth digital lending markets and a platform to pursue further expansion in frontier economies such as Ethiopia and the Democratic Republic of Congo. At the same time, the size of the investment ensures that execution risk will remain firmly in focus for shareholders and regulators alike.

