Fitch Ratings has downgraded the African Export Import Bank’s long term issuer credit rating to BB plus from BBB minus, placing the Cairo headquartered institution below investment grade shortly before the ratings agency ended its coverage of the bank altogether.
This move followed Afreximbank’s decision to terminate its longstanding relationship with Fitch, citing fundamental concerns with the rating methodology employed. According to the bank, the agency’s approach failed to adequately account for its foundational legal framework, treaty backed immunities, and development focused mandate. Fitch confirmed the cessation of analytical coverage, stating the decision was made for commercial reasons following the termination of the engagement by the bank.
The downgrade, announced on 29 January, came days after Fitch revised several risk assessments related to the bank’s operations and exposure. In particular, Fitch raised the institution’s business profile risk from medium to high, referencing the bank’s active lending across higher risk jurisdictions and the uneven credit quality of its sovereign clients. The agency also elevated Afreximbank’s policy importance risk from low to medium, citing the bank’s involvement in a USD750 million loan to Ghana that was included in ongoing sovereign debt restructuring efforts.
Fitch interpreted the inclusion of the bank’s exposure in the restructuring agreement as evidence that Afreximbank was not receiving de facto preferred creditor treatment, a factor that has historically underpinned higher credit assessments for multilateral lenders. As a result, Fitch expressed concerns over the bank’s strategic and governance profile in the current geopolitical and financial environment, particularly in the context of rising political and sovereign risk across its member states.
Despite the downgrade, Fitch acknowledged the bank’s resilient standalone credit fundamentals. The institution’s solvency was assessed at BBB plus and its liquidity at A, supported by over USD2 billion in available credit lines and diversified funding sources. The bank’s capitalisation remains robust, underpinned by consistent shareholder support including capital injections, dividend reinvestment and callable capital pledges from key African economies such as Egypt and Nigeria. These elements led to a standalone credit profile rating of BB plus, aligning with the new long term issuer default rating.
The development leaves investors and observers in the position of seeking alternative assessments to evaluate Afreximbank’s risk profile in the absence of Fitch’s analytical coverage. While other agencies including Moody’s and S&P continue to provide ratings, the episode raises broader questions about the frameworks through which African development finance institutions are evaluated by global agencies whose methodologies may not fully reflect the unique legal and developmental constructs under which such institutions operate.
This decision also reignites long standing debates over the global credit rating architecture and its adequacy in assessing multilateral institutions that serve developmental purposes within emerging and frontier markets. Critics have argued that the dominant methodologies often overlook treaty protections, miss the significance of intra African solidarity and cooperation mechanisms, and apply assumptions derived from Global North financial paradigms to contexts that require alternative evaluative lenses.
The move by Afreximbank can also be viewed within a broader reassertion of financial sovereignty by African institutions seeking to reshape how they are perceived and assessed within the global financial system. As Afreximbank continues to play a key role in trade finance, pandemic recovery and debt resolution mechanisms across the continent, questions around how multilateralism in Africa is interpreted and rated will likely remain salient.
While Fitch has now exited its relationship with Afreximbank, the implications of this decision resonate beyond a single downgrade. They touch on deeper tensions in the international financial system, the perceived impartiality of rating agencies, and the evolving dynamics of African led development finance in an era of global recalibration.







