Corporate News
By DAVID HERBLING, hdavid@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- ECB, which raised Sh500 million in December, has issued a notice to shareholders asking them to approve the injection of another Sh1 billion at an extra-ordinary meeting slated for Tuesday next week.
Equatorial Commercial Bank (ECB) has lined up its
second rights issue in three months in a move that will see teachers
—who acquired the lender in 2014 — dig deeper into their pockets to
raise an extra Sh1 billion.
The lender, which raised Sh500 million in December,
has issued a notice to shareholders asking them to approve the
injection of another Sh1 billion at an extra-ordinary meeting slated for
Tuesday next week.
The ECB said it needs the cash to fund the upgrade
of technology, open new branches country wide and boost capital reserves
which have been eroded by losses.
“The objective of this rights issue is to provide
adequate resources for growth. We want to get a new core banking system
and expand our branch network,” said Tim Gitonga, ECB’s chief executive.
“There were debts in our loan book which went sour,
but we’re now recovering them,” said Mr Gitonga who was appointed in
January to lead the lender.
The ECB plans to sell 200 million shares at Sh5 each to its existing shareholders to raise the Sh1 billion.
Mr Gitonga said the cash call will be closed by end
of June but expects the first tranche of Sh500 million by first week of
April.
According to a shareholders’ notice seen by the Business Daily,
the ECB wants to increase its authorised capital to Sh4.825 billion
from the current Sh3.825 billion by creating the additional 200 million
ordinary shares.
This means that teachers through Mwalimu National
Holdings, the investment arm of Mwalimu National Sacco, will now be
required to contribute Sh750 million to defend their 75 per cent
interest in the bank.
Mwalimu Sacco first invested Sh1.6 billion to
acquire a 51 per cent stake in December 2014, buying out businessman
Naushad Merali who founded the bank.
The giant teachers’ sacco last year pumped in a further Sh1 billion for an additional 24 per cent stake.
ECB’s fresh cash call in a span of three months
raises queries on the financial health of the lender ahead of Mwalimu
Sacco buying into the bank and whether this was priced into the
transaction.
Despite the fresh capital provided by Mwalimu
Sacco, accumulated losses at ECB wiped off more than 60 per cent of the
bank’s capital in 2014.
The teachers’ credit union –ranked the largest
sacco by assets valued at Sh28.6 billion— in December put in Sh375
million into the ECB in a rights issue which raised a total of Sh500
million.
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