By DAVID HERBLING, hdavid@ke.nationmedia.com
Co-operative Bank
has notified shareholders to expect conservative dividend payouts to
help the lender boost its capital ratios in line with the regulator’s
fresh prudential guidelines.
The Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed bank Tuesday said it
will be retaining a big portion of its profit to avoid making a
shareholders’ cash call even as it keeps within Central Bank’s capital
requirements.
Co-op Bank has maintained an average dividend
payout ratio of 26.1 per cent in the past five years— meaning the lender
has been keeping three-quarters of its net earnings to fund operations.
“We will pursue a progressive conservative dividend
payout arrangement to build a strong core capital base,” said Co-op
Bank group managing director Gideon Muriuki in an interview Tuesday.
The lender froze dividend pay at Sh0.50 per share
or 23 per cent of net earnings in the period to December 2013 and
ploughed back Sh7.01 billion into the business by way of retained
earnings.
In total, Co-op Bank has accumulated retained
profits to the tune of Sh22.1 billion in the past five years. The
financier’s core capital stood at Sh34.5 billion as at June 2014.
It doubled dividend pay to Sh0.40 per share in 2010
and held the payout constant in 2011. The bank paid Sh0.10 a share in
2008, the year it was listed on the NSE.
Co-op Bank that is owned 64.56 per cent by Kenyan
savings and credit societies (saccos), is ranked third in size out of
Kenya’s 44 banks with 4.7 million customer accounts and a market share
of 8.61 per cent.
Kenya’s listed banks paid an average all-time-low
dividend ratio of 31.7 per cent last year as they sought to preserve
cash for growth, according to an analysis by Standard Investment Bank
(SIB) research.
Barclays Bank of Kenya
paid out 56.5 per cent of last year’s profit as dividends despite
cutting shareholders pay by a third to Sh0.70 per share followed by StanChart (49.3 per cent), KCB (45.5 per cent) and Equity (41.8 per cent).
CfC Stanbic
paid the lowest dividend payout ratio of 16.6 per cent among the big
banks even though the bank tripled dividend pay-out to Sh2.15 in the
year to December 2013.
Fresh Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) guidelines
expected to be in force in January 2015 require lenders to maintain a
minimum core capital to total risk weighted assets ratio of 10.5 per
cent from the current 8.5 per cent.
Co-op Bank’s ratio dropped from 15.66 per cent in
December last year to 14.1 per cent as at June—which is 3.6 percentage
points above the statutory minimum set to come into force in about four
months.
“The new CBK regulations have forced banks which
previously had high payouts to cut dividends and keep cash. It makes
sense to raise capital through retained earnings which goes towards core
capital,” said Francis Mwangi, a head of research at SIB.
Co-op Bank’s net profit for the first half of this
year remained flat at Sh4.7 billion while the loan book surged by a
third to Sh165.8 billion from Sh124.9 billion in June last year.
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