NOVA Bank

Nova Commercial Bank has charted a decisive new course in Nigeria’s commercial banking, aiming not to be the largest, but the most efficient and preferred Bank.

At an exclusive media parley in Lagos on Saturday, April 11, 2026, the Bank’s Chairman, Phillips Oduoza, and Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Jude Anele, shared a clear strategic vision. Their vision focuses on superior customer experience, relationship-driven banking, and disciplined corporate governance. This announcement marks the successful completion of Nova’s transition from a merchant to a full-service commercial bank. The shift is supported by a strong recapitalization.

“Our ambition has never been defined by scale alone. Since its inception, Nova Bank’s vision has been to be Africa’s preferred financial solutions provider, and the operative word is ‘preferred.’ Any institution can grow large; very few earn trust. We are building the latter.”

Phillips Oduoza, Chairman, Nova Commercial Bank

The Chairman emphasized Nova’s focus on quality advisory relationships over transaction volume.

Our past merchant banking experience proves that capital is seldom a major constraint for well-run businesses. Enterprises need strategic clarity. They seek partners who look beyond the balance sheet, spot underleveraged opportunities, and co-create value—without more leverage. That ability is rare in commercial banking. We make it our signature.

Phillips Oduoza, Chairman

On corporate governance, Oduoza reaffirmed the Bank’s unwavering commitment to institutional integrity:

“Corporate governance at Nova Bank is our bedrock, not a box-ticking exercise. Institutional failure almost never stems solely from market factors; it happens when governance falters. Our Board committees actively oversee risk, audit, compliance, compensation, nominations, and people—each led by seasoned professionals. Our whistleblowing framework remains fully independent and insulated. We pledge absolute accountability to every stakeholder—customers, regulators, staff, and the public.”

Managing Director/CEO Jude Anele reinforced the Bank’s positioning with a clear customer-first philosophy:

The difference between transactional and relationship-driven banks defines everything we do: how we hire, design products, engage customers, and measure success. Transactional banks count customers; relationship banks understand them. We choose relationships.

Anele outlined Nova Bank’s commercial banking strategy, built on three core pillars:

  • Mass customization for retail customers
  • Deep relationship management for corporate and SME clients
  • A ‘Phygital’ model combining digital-first capabilities with a strong physical presence

The digital vs branch banking debate is outdated. Customers demand convenience and connection through all channels. Our Phygital strategy combines fintech agility with trusted banking to deliver one seamless experience.

He further highlighted the Bank’s evolution from bespoke merchant banking to scalable commercial banking:

We are building mass customization: understanding each customer segment precisely, delivering tailored solutions at scale. This is where relationship banking meets efficiency, which defines our strategic position.

On SME banking, which Nova Bank views as critical to Nigeria’s economic development, the institution announced plans to expand its physical presence by opening 9 additional branches by the end of 2026. The Bank’s SME strategy prioritizes providing tailored financial solutions, advisory services, and relationship support to help small and medium-sized enterprises grow sustainably.

“Our branch expansion is deliberate and based on relationships. Every new branch deepens existing engagements. We do not pursue opportunistic expansion.”

Anele also addressed the Bank’s broader economic perspective:

“Nigeria’s growth story has focused on large enterprises whose value may not stay local. SMEs enable real economic empowerment. Supporting this segment is not just a positioning tool for us; it is our institutional responsibility.

Nova Bank met the Central Bank of Nigeria’s recapitalization requirement ahead of the March 31, 2026, deadline. The Bank now operates in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, and Owerri. It is on track to nearly double its branch network by year-end.

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