Corporate News
Eveready East Africa managing director Jackson Mutua when the firm
unveiled its new business model in Nairobi last September. PHOTO | FILE
By MUGAMBI MUTEGI
In Summary
- Eveready East Africa says it has received bids from the potential investors to fund its flagship project through either equity, debt or a mix of both.
Eveready East Africa
is in talks with three institutional investors to fund a
multi-billion-shilling real estate project in Nakuru as part of its
growth and diversification strategy.
The battery distributor says it has received bids from the
potential investors to fund its flagship project through either equity,
debt or a mix of both.
Eveready, which last year shut down its battery
factory in Nakuru, will this month complete the feasibility studies to
determine whether to build a hotel, shopping complex or a housing
project on the 18.5 acre piece of land where the plant sits.
“The board is currently in discussions with three
institutional investors and it will narrow down on the nature of their
partnership as we finalise on which project to undertake,” Jackson
Mutua, Eveready’s managing director told the Business Daily.
“At the annual general meeting scheduled for
mid-May, the board shall be seeking shareholder approval on the final
project, the partnership specifics and also what to do with the idle
factory equipment.”
Product diversification and a maiden venture into
real estate is part of Eveready’s bid to reverse its fortunes after
recording a Sh177.5 million net loss in the year ended September,
reversing the previous year’s net profit of Sh45 million.
The Nakuru-based firm last October announced that
low sales due to illegal imports of cheap batteries and high energy
costs forced it to shut its production factory in favour of importing
batteries from the Energizer Egypt plant.
The battery firm consequently laid off 100 employees at a cost of Sh110 million, further depressing its performance.
The firm’s annual production by the time the
factory shut down was between 40 and 50 million batteries, down from the
180 million batteries it used to manufacture 10 years ago.
The company then announced that it would be delving
into real estate in an effort to direct a business turnaround over and
above expanding its product portfolio beyond batteries.
Eveready’s 18.5 acres of land is worth
approximately Sh370 million while the company has previously said
another two acres of prime land in Milimani, Nairobi – which has an
unoccupied maisonette— could be priced a bit higher according to Mr
Mutua.
“The real estate is part of our strategic plan to
diversify our income. The board is currently focusing on our maiden
project which will be on the factory land but thereafter we shall
discuss the Milimani parcel,” said Mr Mutua.
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