Money Markets
By GEOFFREY IRUNGU, girungu@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Several brokers and investment banks were also penalised in various ways including fines and ordered to report more frequently.
A number of listed companies and brokers were
penalised or reprimanded for breaching licensing rules, the latest
Capital Markets Authority (CMA) annual report shows.
The regulator fined Kenya Power
about Sh160,000 in January 2014 for late submission of quarterly report
for the period ending September 30, 2013 as well as the half year. The
date for the half year was, however, not specified in the CMA report
covering up to June 2014.
Kapchorua Tea
was issued with a cautionary note for late submission of shareholder
returns for July 2013 contrary to the Capital Markets (foreign
investors) Regulations.
TPS East Africa was
reprimanded for delaying notifying the authority of the appointment of a
director, which is against the Capital Markets Securities (Public
Offers, Listing and Disclosures) Regulations 2002.
Express Kenya
received a “public reprimand” for failing to publicise a profit warning
24 hours before announcing a significant fall in profit.
The monitoring of the market participants has been
made easier by the fact that the CMA is now using an online reporting
system and is promptly alerted when a market participant does not take
specified actions within a given time frame.
“With the introduction of the on-line reporting
through Risk-Based Supervision System, the authority has continued to
engage the market to ensure that all reporting obligations are met on
timely basis,” said the CMA annual report.
Many of the market participants escaped with a reprimand, which the CMA said is a legitimate sanction under the law.
“A reprimand is one of the sanctions the CMA can
take. But the form such a reprimand takes is not defined in law, so they
are mostly sent to the intended party,” said Antony Mwangi, head of
corporate communications at the CMA when asked where the public
reprimand was made.
The regulator said it carried out surveillance in
the course of the year in line with best practices. It also conducted an
annual and a mid-year inspection of the intermediaries on the basis of
risk posed by each.
Several brokers and investment banks were penalised
in various ways including fines and ordered to report more frequently.
Renaissance Capital was accused of failure to comply with corporate
governance requirements and ordered to ensure that the contraventions
were fully redressed by last May.
Dyer and Blair Investment Bank was accused of
unauthorised sale of shares belonging to Naftali Kairu Ngure. The CMA
said it reprimanded the firm and told them to deposit Sh121,475 in the
client’s account no later than May 20, 2014.
The company was also found to have a deficit in
liquid capital and directed to submit reports for three months providing
an update of the actions it had taken to prevent a recurrence.
NIC Capital was accused of having a capital deficit
contrary to legal requirements and ordered to remedy the situation. The
amount of the deficit was, however, not disclosed.
African Alliance Investment Bank faced three
charges: that it had failed to appoint a risk management officer and a
compliance officer as well as allowed a liquid capital deficit.
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