Ecobank Group Stock Hits Decade High on BRVM as Dividends Return
TLDR
- ETIT shares surge to 53 FCFA on BRVM, marking a 194.12% gain over one year and 117.39% year-to-date.
- Ecobank Group reports impressive financials for 2025, with notable increases in net banking income, profit before tax, and net profit.
- Shareholders approve a dividend payout of 0.006 cents per share in 2025, signaling confidence in the bank's performance and resulting in a significant share price increase.
Ecobank Transnational Incorporated (ETIT) shares now trade at 53 FCFA on the BRVM, a price last seen almost a decade ago. The stock started the year at 22 FCFA and has since gained 194.12% over one year, 117.39% year-to-date, and 61.29% in the past month. Daba Pro, the premium research service at Daba Finance, called ETIT a buy with a price target of 40 FCFA. The market moved past that target in June, and has kept climbing.
Behind the price move sits a bank that has been steadily repairing itself. For 2025, Ecobank Group (BRVM: ETIT) posted net banking income of 1,424 billion FCFA, up 12% from the year before, while profit before tax climbed 16% to 465.8 billion FCFA and net profit rose 15% to 345.5 billion FCFA. The bank also became more efficient, cutting its cost-to-income ratio to 48.3%, its lowest level on record. That improvement continued into the first quarter of 2026, when net banking income rose 11% and net profit rose 4%.
The clearest signal to the market came in June, when shareholders approved a dividend of 0.006 cents or 0.92 FCFA per share, the first payout since 2022, totalling $40 million in distribution for 2025.
A dividend is more than a cash return. It tells investors that management trusts the numbers enough to start paying out again, and that trust showed up almost immediately in the share price, which rose 33.33% in June alone and has added another 25% since the start of July.
For most of the past few years, none of this was visible in the price. ETIT sat flat while the bank quietly rebuilt its balance sheet. Investors who stayed through that period, rather than giving up on the stock, are the ones who caught the move once it came.
Key Takeaways
The Ecobank rally fits into a broader story on the BRVM, where banks remain the main source of dividend income for the exchange. Fitch Ratings recently revised its outlook on Ecobank's long-term issuer rating to positive from stable, a sign that credit analysts see the same improvement showing up in the equity market. Before the rally, ETIT traded at a fraction of its earnings power, cheap even by the standards of other regional banks, which suggested the market had not yet caught up to what was happening inside the business. Banking conditions across West Africa have also turned easier this year, as falling interest rates and slower inflation reduce funding costs for lenders. Set against that backdrop, the dividend was less a surprise than a confirmation of a recovery that had been building in the numbers for some time. Risk costs, which rose 55% in FCFA terms in the first quarter, remain the main thing still worth watching.

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