Bank of Africa Benin Grows Income as Deposits, Commissions Rise
TLDR
- Bank of Africa Benin (BRVM: BOAB) reports solid performance, with 11% growth in net banking income driven by fee and commission income and net interest margin increase.
- Customer deposits exceed 753.7 billion FCFA ($1.35bn), with notable growth in non-remunerated deposits.
- Despite income growth, profit edged up only 1%, indicating potential rising costs, possibly related to provisioning or operating expenses.
Bank of Africa Benin (BRVM: BOAB) opened 2026 on solid ground, growing its net banking income 11% in the year to March compared to the same period a year earlier, driven by a near-19% jump in fee and commission income and an 8.5% rise in net interest margin. Net profit edged up 1% over the same period.
Customer deposits crossed 753.7 billion FCFA ($1.35bn), with non-remunerated deposits — essentially free funding — growing 3.5%. Outstanding loans held broadly flat at 386.5 billion FCFA ($690.7m), suggesting the bank is being selective about new credit rather than chasing growth on both sides of the balance sheet at once.
The gap between the 11% income growth and the 1% profit growth points to rising costs somewhere in the chain — likely provisioning or operating expenses — though the bank did not detail this in its quarterly filing. The numbers are unaudited.
Key Takeaways
Bank of Africa Benin is a subsidiary of BMCE Bank of Africa. This Moroccan banking group has built one of the most extensive branch networks in sub-Saharan Africa over the past two decades. The Benin entity operates in one of West Africa's smaller but faster-growing economies — the country posted 8.3% GDP growth in the fourth quarter of 2025. The shift in income composition toward fees and commissions rather than pure interest income is a pattern seen across better-managed African banks as they expand into payments, trade finance and mobile banking services that generate fee revenue without consuming capital. That commission income grew nearly 19% in a single quarter is notable and likely reflects both organic volume growth and a deliberate push into transaction banking. The flat loan book, by contrast, may reflect caution around credit quality in an environment where many West African banks are still digesting non-performing loans accumulated during the post-pandemic slowdown.

Next Frontier
Stay up to date on major news and events in African markets. Delivered weekly.
Pulse54
UDeep-dives into what’s old and new in Africa’s investment landscape. Delivered twice monthly.
Events
Sign up to stay informed about our regular webinars, product launches, and exhibitions.


