Corporate News
Home Afrika chief executive Njoroge Ng’ang’a. PHOTO | FILE
By VICTOR JUMA, vjuma@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- At 17 per cent, the interest rate is the highest of all the corporate bonds currently listed on the NSE by Kenyan companies.
- This reflects investors’ relatively high risk perception of Home Afrika’s debt instruments.
Buyers of Home Afrika’s corporate bond have re-priced
the interest rate on the securities to 17 per cent, significantly
raising the real estate developer’s finance costs from the initial
coupon rate of 13.5 per cent.
At 17 per cent, the interest rate is the highest of all the
corporate bonds currently listed on the Nairobi Securities Exchange by
Kenyan companies, reflecting investors’ relatively high risk perception
of Home Afrika’s debt instruments.
Centum
recently issued a bond at a coupon rate of 13 per cent, Chase Bank has
one at 13.1 per cent while the highest of all the bonds listed at the
NSE is Consolidated Bank’s 13.6 per cent.
Home Afrika had sought to raise Sh900 million
through a bond sale between November 27 and December 10 last year, but
did not hit the minimum subscription level of Sh500 million for the
issue to be deemed a success.
The company subsequently raised Sh500 million from
bondholders in a private placement, receiving most of the cash from
investors who had subscribed to the first bond issue which was
terminated.
“It was largely the same investors who participated
in the private placement. We gave them a higher interest rate,” said
Home Afrika’s chief executive Njoroge Ng’ang’a in an interview.
The real estate company’s five-year bond is priced
3.9 percentage points above the latest government paper of a similar
tenor, making it the highest spread between a corporate bond and
treasuries. The company says the bond is partially secured by one of its
parcels of land in Kiambu.
Home Afrika is now expected to pay about Sh85
million interest to the bondholders in the first year, compared to about
Sh67.5 million if the rate was at 13.5 per cent.
“Interest on the corporate bond is at 17 per cent
per annum payable semi-annually in arrears,” the company says in its
latest annual report.
The securities, issued in denominations of Sh100,000, are redeemable in part or full after December 2017.
The securities, issued in denominations of Sh100,000, are redeemable in part or full after December 2017.
This means that Home Afrika can retire all or part of the debt before the maturity on December 16, 2019.
The property developer has reviewed its capital
expenditure plans after receiving Sh400 million less than it had earlier
expected.
The Migaa housing project in Kiambu, which was to
be the main beneficiary of the bond money, has been allotted Sh400
million while Sh50 million each goes to Llango Development in Kwale and
Lakeview housing project in Kisumu.
Home Afrika had planned to allocate Sh750 million to Migaa, Sh100 million to Lakeview Heights and Sh50 million to Llango.
The money will be used for infrastructure
development in the various estates. Mr Ng’ang’a said the investments
will generate “significant” returns once they are completed.
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