By John Gachiri
In Summary
- The National Council of Churches of Kenya (NCCK) owns nearly three quarters of the Deposit Taking Microfinance (DTM) institution, which it is required to reduce to 25 per cent and below.
Church-owned micro financier SMEP is planning a
second shareholders’ cash call to reduce the majority shareholder’s
stake in the firm to below the Central Bank of Kenya’s maximum
threshold.
The National Council of Churches of Kenya (NCCK)
owns nearly three quarters of the Deposit Taking Microfinance (DTM)
institution, which it is required to reduce to 25 per cent and below.
CBK regulations only allow finance institutions
and the government to own not more than a quarter of shares of lending
institutions.
In late 2012, NCCK floated a rights issue, which
if fully subscribed would have reduced the organisation’s stake to 31.86
per cent but poor uptake resulted in the organisation reducing its
stake only to 73.72 per cent.
In a notice the micro-lender has said that it is
seeking shareholder approval, at the annual general meeting (AGM)
scheduled for June 18, to issue more shares which will reduce NCCK’s
stake to enable SMEP DTM meet the Central Bank if Kenya’s (CBK)
deadline.
“To consider and if approved adopt a special
resolution ‘to approve sale of additional shares to both existing and
new shareholders in order to dilute the shareholding of key shareholders
up to or more than 25 per cent subject to the existing laws,’” said a
notice by SMEP DTM.
The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has given SMEP DTM
up to 2014 to reduce NCCK’s stake to 25 per cent in line with
regulator’s guidelines.
The first SMEP share offer approved by the Capital
Markets Authority sought to raise Sh1.6 billion through the issue of
145.5 million shares at Sh11 each, but the micro-lender only managed to
get Sh266 million equivalent to16.7 per cent subscription.
The money from the share offer was to increase the
micro-lender’s working capital (Sh900 million), revamp the ICT system
(Sh200 million), branch expansion (Sh200 million) and Sh300 million was
to be used to construct a new office block.
Analysts said that the second share offer should attract investors if the shares are priced right.
Johnson Nderi, head of research at Suntra
Investment Bank, said investors will be attracted by a price that will
make it possible to make capital gains on the stock.
“It should not be priced as if it is trading,” said Mr Nderi.
The information memorandum on the first share
offer said that SMEP DTM shares were to trade on the over-the-counter
(OTC) market and would be handled by Standard Investment Bank, the lead
transaction advisor.
Mr Nderi said that interest rates remaining low
and other macroeconomic factors being stable would make it a good time
for SMEP to raise additional equity.
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