A Consolidated Bank branch in Nairobi. Bid to dispose of the bank began
in 2010 but stalled along with other deals due to a lack of
privatisation board. FILE
By GEORGE NGIGI
In Summary
- Finance Secretary Henry Rotich said in an interview on Monday that the sale could involve an initial public offering (IPO), strategic investor(s) or both.
- Consolidated Bank board of directors has in the past stated its preference for an initial listing at the Nairobi Securities Exchange.
The Treasury is set to table before the Cabinet
plans to sell Consolidated Bank after receiving a report on the proposed
transaction from the Privatisation Commission.
Finance Secretary Henry Rotich said in an
interview on Monday that the sale could involve an initial public
offering (IPO), strategic investor(s) or both.
“We are preparing a cabinet memo to implement the advice of the privatisation committee,” said Mr Rotich.
The invitation of strategic investors would be
important to inject new capital into the bank which has been operating
on thin capital adequacy ratios for the past two years.
As at September last year the bank’s headroom for
taking new customer deposits had shrunk to within one percentage point
of the legally allowed limit.
Promises of new capital from the Treasury, which
is the main shareholder in the bank, have remained outstanding forcing
the lender to issue a corporate bond last year as a stop-gap measure for
its capital needs.
Consolidated Bank board of directors has in the
past stated its preference for an initial listing at the Nairobi
Securities Exchange.
Listing, however, does not amount to injection of new capital needed by the bank.
In 2010, the privatisation process had been
initiated with transaction advisers led by PricewaterhouseCoopers
conducting due diligence and review of the bank. It, however, stalled
along with other government privatisation deals due to a lack of a
substantive privatisation board.
Inadequate capital has seen the bank’s profit drop
for three years in a row. The government had agreed to inject Sh500
million in 2012, but the sum was never disbursed.
To cover its capital deficit, Consolidated Bank
issued a Sh2 billion corporate bond with an equal tranche held off for a
later date. The first tranche raised Sh1.7 billion.
The dip in profits is expected to negatively influence the bank’s going price as the government prepares to sell it.
Consolidated Bank was formed in 1989 by merging
the operations of nine insolvent banks for government to save public
savings held by the lenders.
The bank completed its turnaround in 2010 when it
cleared its accumulated losses without capital input from the
government, but its growth has been slow without financial muscle
No comments :
Post a Comment