Wema Bank and EIB Global have signed a €50m agreement, worth about N78.5bn, to expand credit for small businesses owned by young people and women across Nigeria. The Wema Bank EIB deal marks the first transaction between the lender and the development arm of the European Investment Bank.

Inside the Wema Bank EIB agreement
The facility was signed on 19 June 2026 at the bank’s headquarters in Lagos. It targets small and medium-sized enterprises that often struggle to access affordable finance through conventional channels. By channelling funds through an established Nigerian lender, the partners aim to reach businesses in sectors that drive jobs and local growth.
Under the terms, at least half of the loans are earmarked for youth-owned enterprises to encourage entrepreneurship and job creation. The remaining share is set aside for businesses owned, managed, employing or primarily serving women. The structure is designed to push capital toward groups that are frequently underserved by the banking system.
Support beyond the cash
The agreement is not limited to lending. EIB Global will provide technical assistance to the bank through its Greening the Financial Sector programme, intended to strengthen climate-related lending and encourage environmentally sustainable investment. The aim is to help the lender build the skills to assess and fund greener projects over time.
That advisory layer matters because many small firms lack the documentation and planning support needed to qualify for credit. Pairing money with guidance can improve the quality of loan applications and reduce default risk, making the programme more durable than a one-off injection of funds.
Why it matters for Nigeria
Small and medium-sized enterprises are the backbone of Nigeria’s economy, accounting for a large share of employment and output. Yet a persistent credit gap holds many back, with founders citing high interest rates and tough collateral demands as barriers to expansion. A facility aimed squarely at women and young entrepreneurs speaks to two groups that have long reported the steepest hurdles.
The initiative is backed by the European Union’s Global Gateway programme and aligns with Nigeria’s Financial Inclusion Strategy. Both frameworks prioritise broadening access to finance and supporting inclusive growth, and the partners say the agreement fits that wider push to bring more people into the formal economy.
A first step with room to grow
As the first deal between the two institutions, the agreement could open the door to further cooperation if it delivers results. Development lenders often start with a measured commitment, then scale up where repayment and impact are strong. Nigerian entrepreneurs will be watching to see how quickly the funds reach the ground and how easy the loans are to access.
For now, the headline is a fresh pool of capital aimed at the businesses that need it most. If the money translates into new ventures, expanded firms and jobs, the partnership could become a template for future financing across the country.
Wema Bank has positioned itself in recent years as a lender focused on digital banking and small-business growth, and the tie-up with a major European development institution adds international weight to that strategy. For EIB Global, the deal extends its footprint in West Africa and deepens its support for inclusive finance. Both sides framed the agreement as the start of a longer relationship rather than a single transaction, with hopes that early success will justify a larger commitment down the line.