Onome Amuge
The decision by Fitch Ratings to downgrade African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) to junk status and subsequently withdraw its ratings altogether has triggered more than a dispute between a lender and a ratings agency. It has exposed deeper structural tensions in Africa’s development finance architecture, raising questions about how multilateral lenders are assessed, how sovereign debt crises are managed, and what this means for countries such as Nigeria that rely heavily on Afreximbank for trade finance and balance-of-payments support.
On January 23, 2026, Fitch cut Afreximbank’s long-term Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to BB+ from BBB-, moving the Cairo-based lender out of investment-grade territory. The agency also downgraded its short-term IDR to ‘B’ from ‘F3’ and lowered the ratings on the bank’s global medium-term note programme and other debt instruments. Shortly after, Fitch withdrew all ratings, citing “commercial reasons.”
Prior to the downgrade, Afreximbank had terminated its relationship with Fitch, noting that the agency misunderstood its legal status and mandate as a treaty-based multilateral institution.
While the public exchange has focused on Ghana’s debt restructuring and the question of preferred creditor status, the episode highlights a worrisome concern about how traditional credit rating frameworks are increasingly colliding with the operational realities of development finance in Africa.
On its part, Fitch explained that its downgrade was triggered by Ghana’s December 2025 agreement to restructure a $750 million sovereign loan owed to Afreximbank. The agency interpreted the restructuring, conducted under the IMF-supported debt framework, as evidence that Afreximbank did not enjoy de facto preferred creditor status (PCS), a protection typically assumed for multilateral development banks.
“This has led us to revise Afreximbank’s policy importance risk to ‘medium’ from ‘low’,” Fitch said, adding that the bank’s business profile had shifted to “high risk.”
For Afreximbank, this interpretation cuts to the heart of its identity. Established by treaty and owned by 53 African states alongside private and institutional shareholders, the bank argues that its quasi-sovereign legal protections fundamentally distinguish it from commercial lenders.
The African Peer Review Mechanism echoed this view, criticising Fitch for overlooking legal safeguards embedded in Afreximbank’s founding instruments.
Yet the Ghana case has set a precedent that rating agencies and investors cannot ignore. If a multilateral lender can be drawn into a sovereign restructuring, even under exceptional circumstances, the perceived risk profile of its loan book changes.
Implications for Nigeria’s trade finance lifeline
For Nigeria, one of Afreximbank’s largest shareholders alongside Egypt, the downgrade carries strategic significance. Over the past decade, Afreximbank has emerged as a critical pillar of Nigeria’s external financing architecture, supporting oil trade, non-oil exports, intra-African commerce and balance-of-payments stability.
The bank has provided billions of dollars in trade finance facilities, oil-backed loans and COVID-era liquidity support. Its role has expanded further under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), where it acts as a key financier of cross-border trade settlement and export development.
Any increase in Afreximbank’s funding costs, or a shift in investor perception, could indirectly affect Nigerian corporates and sovereign-linked borrowers that depend on its facilities.
Although Afreximbank maintains that the downgrade will not impair its operations, pointing to strong capitalisation, diversified funding and continued access to markets, the loss of an investment-grade rating from Fitch narrows the pool of conservative institutional investors willing to hold its debt.
This matters at a time when African economies are dealing with tight global financial conditions and reduced appetite for frontier-market risk.
According to Fitch, its methodology prioritises sovereign exposure, governance risk and operating environment, factors that weigh heavily against institutions lending in high-risk jurisdictions.
In its assessment, Fitch flagged Afreximbank’s exposure to debt-distressed countries such as Ghana, Zambia and South Sudan, weak risk management policies, and a challenging operating environment characterised by low income levels and high political risk.
Afreximbank counters that its precise mandate is to lend counter-cyclically when private capital retreats, and to support African economies during periods of stress.
This tension is not unique to Afreximbank. Development lenders across emerging markets increasingly face scrutiny from rating agencies applying frameworks designed primarily for commercial banks and sovereign issuers.
The result is a growing mismatch between developmental objectives and market-based risk assessments.
Investor sentiment and funding costs
From an investor perspective, the downgrade introduces uncertainty rather than immediate crisis. Fitch itself acknowledged Afreximbank’s “strong” capitalisation, “excellent” internal capital generation and solid liquidity buffers, with liquid assets covering 95 per cent of short-term debt.
The agency also highlighted shareholder support, noting that sovereign upgrades for Nigeria and Egypt in 2025 improved the average rating of key shareholders.
However, ratings still shape pricing. A BB+ classification places Afreximbank in high-yield territory, potentially increasing borrowing costs for future bond issuances and complicating refinancing strategies. While Moody’s continues to rate the bank, reliance on fewer agencies reduces transparency for some investors.








