KCB Chief Executive Officer Joshua Oigara. Kenya Commercial Bank
announced it had received a licence to open a representative office in
Ethiopia. PHOTO | SALATON NJAU | NATION MEDIA GROUP
Kenyan banks have finally found a window of opportunity in Ethiopia’s closed economy.
However,
the lenders seem to have found an entry point with Kenya Commercial
Bank on Thursday announcing it had received a licence to open a
representative office in Ethiopia.
KCB FORAY
This gives the bank a chance to tap Africa’s second largest market by population.
In
2013, Ethiopia locked out Kenyan banks in an agreement that allowed
local companies operating in other sectors to make forays into the
country.
The deal, a special status agreement (SSA), which Kenya penned with Ethiopia, gave Kenyan companies access to the country.
The agreement was however restricted to trade, investment, infrastructure and food security alone.
Ethiopia
heavily restricts foreign investors from venturing into the
telecommunication, banking, media, retail, insurance, and electricity
sectors.
The country seems to be now gradually opening its doors.
Aside from KCB, CfC Stanbic Bank is also set to open a representative office in the country.
“As
required by the authorities, we made an application to the regulator to
open the Rep Office and we were granted the necessary licences and
approvals,” KCB communication manager Peter Mwaura wrote back to Smart Company on email.
“KCB
has been at the epicentre of driving the economic expansion agenda
across the larger East African region for decades and we are glad the
Ethiopian government has given us this chance to facilitate this
transformation.”
IMPRESSIVE ECONOMIC GROWTH
Ethiopia has consistently registered remarkable economic growth, averaging about 10 per cent over the past five years.
Its huge population, which is the second largest on the continent after Nigeria, offers immense opportunities for business.
The
country’s financial services industry is however one of the least
developed in the region. As at October 2013, pan-African financial
service provider Ecobank estimated Ethiopia’s unbanked population to be
around 80 million people. This is the main reason Kenyan banks are
itching to get into the country.
Local lenders are also
experiencing profits shrink as a result of market volatility and
tension after Central Bank’s regulatory action against two banks — Dubai
and Imperial banks — giving them all the more reason to cast their nets
wider in the region.
SUBSIDIARY RETURNS
Last week Kenya Commercial Bank and Equity Bank announced profits supported mainly by subsidiary banks.
Equity
Bank profit rose 14 per cent to Sh12.8 billion after tax between
January and September, boosted by expansion into the regional market and
SME banking.
Deposits from subsidiaries in Uganda,
Rwanda, Tanzania, Burundi and South Sudan, grew by 93 per cent while
profits grew by 92 per cent for the nine months to September.
Equity
Group CEO James Mwangi said the regional subsidiaries will increase
their contribution to the bank’s earnings from the current 10 per cent
to 60 per cent in the next five years.
Kenya Commercial
Bank Group, which reported a Sh13.7 billion in profit after tax, saw
international businesses contribution to the bottom line rise from 7 per
cent in 2014 to 12 per cent.
KCB and Equity, the
biggest bank by asset and client base respectively, are seeking new
markets in Ethiopia and Democratic Republic of Congo.
The two countries have a huge unbanked populations.
“The
Kenyan market is becoming saturated so banks are going after the
regional space where penetration is still very low and there is room for
growth,” said Sterling Capital trader Eric Munyoki.
Equity
Bank acquired 79 per cent stake in DRC bank, Pro-Credit increasing the
number of countries it currently operates in to six. Others are Uganda,
South Sudan, Tanzania, Rwanda and Kenya.
Mr Mwangi says the bank is targeting 10 million clients in the next five years from DRC alone.
No comments :
Post a Comment