Corporate News
Chase Bank deputy CEO Paul Njaga during a function last year. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
By DAVID HERBLING
In Summary
- The capital injection comes after Chase Bank in October secured a Sh4 billion ($45.2 million) long-term loan from Dutch development finance institution FMO for onward lending to SMEs, highlighting increased fundraising by the lender.
Chase Bank has raised Sh1.3 billion through a rights
issue to shore up its capital base and increase lending to small and
medium enterprises (SMEs). The mid-sized lender received the funds from
existing shareholders, making it the second such cash call in two years
after it raised Sh400 million in 2012.
The capital injection comes after Chase Bank in October
secured a Sh4 billion ($45.2 million) long-term loan from Dutch
development finance institution FMO for onward lending to SMEs,
highlighting increased fundraising by the lender.
“The new capital will ensure compliance with
capital requirements and with a stronger balance sheet, support future
growth,” said Paul Njaga, Chase Bank’s deputy CEO.
Chase Bank’s institutional shareholders include
Amethis Finance, German fund DEG, European Investment Bank (EIB) and
Zurich-based asset management firm Responsibility Participations AG.
The Central Bank of Kenya has set higher capital
levels for banks in a move aimed at expanding their ability to absorb
shocks. The ratio of total capital to total risk-weighted assets, for
instance, was raised by an extra 2.5 percentage points to 14.5 per cent.
Chase Bank’s latest financials for the nine months
ended September shows that the lender has beaten this minimum ratio by
2.3 percentage points. The statutory limits are to be complied with by
December, a move that has seen more lenders opt to raise their capital
through rights issues or debt.
Analysts estimate the entire banking industry needs
to raise up to Sh70 billion to comply with the new capital rules.
Falling short of the set capital levels means a bank’s ability to take
up deposits or lend will be constrained, besides attracting regulatory
action from CBK.
Chase Bank’s need for a larger headroom, for
instance, is informed by its growth lending which expanded by a third to
Sh49.4 billion in the period from Sh37.5 billion a year earlier. The
lender posted a 59.3 per cent growth in net profit in the period, driven
by higher interest income.
The recent rights issue signals a change in
strategy for the bank which has relied heavily on long-term funding from
Europe-based DFIs. The private bank in September received Sh1.6 billion
($18.4 million) from Microfinance Enhancement Facility SA to support
lending to SMEs in Kenya.
Last year, Chase Bank received Sh900 million from
Paris-based Amethis Finance and another Sh500 million from a European
private equity fund whose identity was not disclosed. The lender
signalled its intention to raise more funds to fuel its growth plans.
“The bank also continues to focus on long term
sustainable growth by focusing on investing, and growing future income
earning platforms through investments in IT, the branch expansion
programme and raising more capital to support future growth in SME,
agribusiness, youth and women,” the firm said in a statement.
More lenders are raising funds through rights
issues or debt to meet the higher capital adequacy ratios and expand
their capacity to lend more.
Chase Bank is ranked 12th in size out of Kenya’s 44
banks, with 35,000 deposit accounts and about 25,000 loans accounts,
giving the mid-tier lender a cumulative market share of 2.4 per cent in
2013 according to CBK data.
The firm owns Rafiki, a deposit taking
microfinance, stockbrokerage Genghis Capital, Orchid Capital, an
investment advisory firm, Chase Assurance, real estate firm Light House
Properties and Tulip Healthcare.
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