Money Markets
By VICTOR JUMA, vjuma@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Shares transferred were valued at Sh425 million based on the NSE’s current share price of Sh20.
- The stock had, however, rallied to a high of Sh28 in the weeks following its listing through an initial public offering (IPO) at Sh9.5, indicating that the brokers may have earned up to a half-a-billion shillings from the trades.
Five stockbrokers have moved 21.25 million of their
Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) stake since the September listing of
the bourse, potentially earning Sh500 million.
Regulatory filings show that AIB Capital, Apex Africa
Capital, Genghis Capital, Standard Investment Bank and Francis Drummond
moved the stock in the period ending October 30.
Shares transferred were valued at Sh425 million
based on the NSE’s current share price of Sh20. The stock had, however,
rallied to a high of Sh28 in the weeks following its listing through an
initial public offering (IPO) at Sh9.5, indicating that the brokers may
have earned up to a half-a-billion shillings from the trades.
Prior to the IPO, the NSE was fully owned by the
government (10.2 per cent) and 22 stockbrokers (89.8 per cent). Each of
the market intermediaries held 5.25 million shares equivalent to a 4.08
per cent stake, which was subsequently diluted 33.91 per cent alongside
that of the government in the IPO.
The brokers are required to significantly reduce
their ownership of the exchange in the medium term. Capital Markets
Authority (CMA) regulations require the brokers to cut their combined
ownership of the bourse to 40 per cent within three years as part of the
demutualisation process.
AIB Capital CEO Paul Mwai said the trades were in
keeping with the ultimate objective of diluting the NSE’s major
shareholders who are also market participants.
“Brokers have been encouraged to sell their shares.
This is different from other IPOs where major shareholders are locked
in for a number of years,” he said, noting that the trades were
profitable having taken place on the back of the share rally. Official
records show that AIB, Apex, Genghis, and SIB disappeared from the list
of the NSE owners in October.
Francis Drummond, however, still held five million shares after trading 250,000 units of the NSE stock.
Dilution of brokers’ ownership in the NSE is meant
to improve the bourse’s corporate governance by diversifying its
ownership base beyond active capital market participants that have in
the past presented a systemic risk in the market.
Francis Thuo collapsed in 2007, setting the stage
for successive brokerage failures including that of Ngenye Kariuki,
Nyagah and Discount Securities. Nyaga and Discount are still under
statutory management. The failures were linked to a mix of weak
corporate governance structures and outright fraud by the brokers.
The NSE said it is working closely with the CMA to
improve corporate governance standards in the intermediaries on whom it
relies to provide trading and capital-raising services.
“Various intermediaries have had challenges in the
past that have adversely impacted the NSE,” the bourse said in its
pre-listing prospectus.
“The NSE has since worked with the CMA, to boost standards of corporate governance among brokers via numerous regulations.”
The brokers have also been forced to boost their paid-up share capital levels, with that of investment banks rising to Sh250 million from the previous Sh30 million.
The brokers have also been forced to boost their paid-up share capital levels, with that of investment banks rising to Sh250 million from the previous Sh30 million.
Stockbrokers must now be capitalized to the tune of
Sh30 million from the previous Sh5 million. Besides improving stability
and transparency in the capital market, squeezing the intermediaries is
intended to give the investing public greater opportunity to buy into
the exchange.
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