A sisal estate in Kilifi County. Rea Vipingo runs two sisal estates
in Kenya, with an annual production capacity of about 12,000 tonnes. It
also operates three estates in Tanzania, producing more than 7,500
tonnes a year. PHOTO | FILE
NATION MEDIA GROUP
Failure by the National Treasury Cabinet
Secretary Henry Rotich to appoint a secretary to the Capital Markets
Tribunal has delayed hearing of an appeal by Centum on the intended
takeover of Rea Vipingo.
The investment firm, which is
opposed to the buying of the sisal producer by two brothers under Rea
Trading, moved to the High Court seeking to compel Mr Rotich to nominate
officials to the tribunal so that their appeal over approval by Capital
Market Authority okaying the takeover, case can be heard.
The minister nominated two additional members in a gazette notice dated July 11, 2014 but did not appoint a secretary.
In
a letter addressed to the Attorney General and filed in court on
Thursday last week, Centum notes that although the CS appointed two more
members to the tribunal raising the quorum, lack of a substantive
secretary leaves the tribunal ineffective.
Section 35A
(1) of the Capital Markets Act provides that the tribunal shall consist
of the members and a secretary appointed by the minister.
“It,
therefore, follows that unless a secretary is appointed under Section
35A (1) (e) of the Act, the tribunal is improperly constituted for
purposes of hearing the appeals currently pending before it,” Centum
said.
CONDITIONAL BONUS
In
its application which has been pending before the Capital Markets
Tribunal, Centum is opposed to Richard and Jeremy Robinow bid to
takeover Rea Vipingo. The pair already controls 57.04 per cent of the
listed sisal firm.
The brothers have offered to buy out
other shareholders of the Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed company at
Sh70 per share plus a conditional bonus of up to Sh15 apiece from
future disposal of the firm’s land.
However, Centum
which moved to the Capital Markets Tribunal, is seeking a declaration
that the offer by Rea Trading violates Kenya’s takeover rules
No comments :
Post a Comment