Thursday, March 31, 2016

CMA on the spot as NBK reports Sh1.2bn loss


National Bank CEO Munir Ahmed who was Tuesday suspended along with five other top managers of the bank. PHOTO | FILE  
By HERBLING DAVID, hdavid@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
  • NBK did not warn the public that their full-year profits will drop by more than a quarter at least 24 hours before announcement of the results.
  • The lender managed to continue hoodwinking investors and the public through a series of pronouncements and Press statements.

The Capital Markets Authority (CMA) was Thursday left in a tight spot after the National Bank reported a Sh1.15 billion loss without prior warning to investors as required by law.
The bank, which sent a Press statement announcing its results at midnight on Wednesday, attributed the huge loss to bad loans that rose by Sh3.2 billion towards the end of the year, leading to a seven-fold increase in impairment charges.
Companies listed at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) are required to warn the public if their full-year profits will drop by more than a quarter at least 24 hours before announcement of the results, a rule the National Bank did not adhere to.
The law contemplates that such a warning is issued through publication of notices in local media of national reach, the enforcement of which is the CMA’s mandate.
That National Bank managed to continue hoodwinking investors and the public through a series of pronouncements and Press statements indicating that all was well only to drop the bombshell of a huge loss speaks to the quality of the CMA’s regulation. 
The annual financial results, which were released two days after National Bank sent its chief executive, Munir Sheikh Ahmed, and five top managers on compulsory leave to facilitate an internal audit, only deepened the mystery surrounding the authenticity of the lender’s financial health.
National Bank’s earnings were hit by a seven-fold increase in loan impairment costs that saw provisions to cover for bad loans hit Sh3.7 billion compared to Sh525 million in December 2014.
The bank’s gross toxic loans grew by nearly two-thirds to Sh11.7 billion in the period under review, reflecting the deteriorating quality of its assets.
“Increasing provisions is a prudent practice in accounting. We have further put elaborate structures in place to manage the recovery of this position,” said acting managing director Wilfred Musau.
Reports, however, indicated that the financial sector regulator, the Central Bank of Kenya, had rejected National Bank’s version of its performance, insisting on higher provisions for bad loans and removal of unrealised proceeds of property sales that the lender had booked in leading to a wipe-out of the profits.  
National Bank posted a net profit of Sh2.25 billion in the nine months ended September 2015, in what Mr Ahmed dubbed as “the best annual performances by the bank in its 48 years history”.
Mr Ahmed hailed the “transformation” success and had announced that National Bank planned to venture into South Sudan and even introduced a Chinese department eyeing trade financing with the dragon economy.
National Bank had Sh110.6 billion in customer deposits as at December 2015. The bank’s cost of funds surged 50 per cent to Sh5.8 billion while net interest income declined 5.9 per cent to Sh6.3 billion in the period to December 2015.
But the steep rise in loan impairment costs raises fears that the bank has been suppressing and reclassifying its NPLs before the coming into office of CBK governor Patrick Njoroge who has demanded close scrutiny of lenders’ financial statements.

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