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Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Regulator gives NSE nod to sell shares to public

Money Markets

Mr Paul Muthaura, the Capital Markets Authority acting CEO, has approved the Nairobi Securities Exchange’s demutualisation. Photo/FILE
Mr Paul Muthaura, the Capital Markets Authority acting CEO, has approved the Nairobi Securities Exchange’s demutualisation. Photo/FILE 
By John Gachiri, jgachiri@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
  • The Capital Markets Authority (CMA) has approved the NSE demutualisation and the self-listing of its shares.
  • The approval by the CMA means that the NSE is on course to be listed within this financial year as earlier planned.
  • The NSE is supposed to list the shares in an initial public offering that will see the founder members reduce their shareholding.

The Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) could list in the coming weeks after it got regulatory approval, signalling possible conclusion of a long-winding and often acrimonious process.

 

The Capital Markets Authority (CMA), the industry regulator, has approved the NSE demutualisation – or conversion from a firm that is owned by members to a publicly-owned company – and the self-listing of its shares.
“The Board of the Authority approved the Demutualisation of the Nairobi Securities Exchange in line with the Demutualisation Regulations at its board meeting on June 26, 2014,” CMA acting chief executive Paul Muthaura confirmed to the Business Daily on Tuesday.
Last week’s approval by the CMA means that the NSE is on course to be listed within this financial year as earlier planned.
“Further to the CMA approval of our self-listing process, we wish to inform you that the transaction advisors and the NSE management and board of directors are finalising the modalities for the self-listing, which we intend to launch during the month of July 2014. Please brief your members accordingly,” said NSE chief executive Peter Mwangi in a letter to the Kenya Association of Stockbrokers and Investment Banks (Kasib).
The industry lobby said the listing should also give confidence to other companies wishing to list.
“We will have more convincing arguments when we tell other companies to list,” said Kasib chief executive Willie Njoroge.
The NSE is supposed to list the shares in an initial public offering that will see the founder members reduce their shareholding.
The bourse is owned by 22 member firms that control 90 per cent of the shareholding, while the Treasury and the Investor Compensation Fund jointly own the remaining 10 per cent.
The stake held by the 22 shareholders is expected to be reduced by 40 per cent within three years after listing.
Shareholders had earlier agreed to increase the number of shares to 850 million with Sh1 par value each from 25 million at the bourse’s annual general meeting (AGM) held in April.
The shares will be consolidated into 215 million shares of Sh4 par value which is meant to avoid the price being too low upon listing. Another 2.5 million shares were reserved for NSE and Kasib employees.
Shareholders had also agreed to set aside Sh500 million for the setting up of a futures exchange. Standard Investment Bank, Renaissance Capital, and Dyer & Blair Investment Bank are transaction advisors on the self-listing.
Demutualisation and self-listing have been dogged by disputes over what share should go to the government, with brokers disputing the State entitlement arising from contribution to development of a market where privatisation issues and Treasury bills and bonds have been crucial.

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