James Mwangi, Gideon Muriuki and James Ndegwa. PHOTO | FILE
By VICTOR JUMA, vjuma@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Equity Group’s chief executive James Mwangi’s dividend take-home is the largest at Sh466 million or a third of the combined dividends, followed by the Bablas, the Mombasa-based billionaire family, who are taking home Sh204.8 million.
- Cigarette manufacturer BAT is the only NSE firm that pays out its entire profits as dividends, indicating that it does not need extra cash to run its operations.
Equity Group’s
chief executive, James Mwangi, tops the list of 15 individual investors
who are set to pocket Sh1.4 billion in dividends from Nairobi
Securities Exchange-listed banks.
The earnings are based on interim and final dividends — after withholding taxes — that KCB, Equity, Barclays, CfC Stanbic, NIC, DTB and Co-op Banks have announced for 2015.
Mr Mwangi’s dividend take-home is the largest at
Sh466 million or a third of the combined dividends, followed by the
Bablas, the Mombasa-based billionaire family, who are taking home
Sh204.8 million.
The family of the late Philip Ndegwa are third in
the pecking order with Sh196.3 million followed by Andrew Kimani
(Sh166.1 million), former KCB director Sunil Shah (Sh86.9 million) and
Co-op Bank chief executive Gideon Muriuki (Sh76 million).
Mr Mwangi’s dividend payout of Sh466 million is
based on his 6.5 per cent stake in Equity Bank, which reported the
second-largest net profit of Sh17.3 billion in the year ended December
2015. His ownership of the bank includes a 1.6 per cent stake that his
wife Jane Njuguna holds.
Equity raised its dividend payout 11.1 per cent to Sh2 per share compared to the Sh1.8 per share it declared the previous year.
The Bablas’ take-home is mainly from their
interests in KCB and Equity, Kenya’s two largest banks, where they have
been accumulating stocks to stand among the largest individual
investors.
The family, led by billionaire philanthropist
Kanaksinh Karsandas Babla, will get most of their dividend (Sh180.5
million) from KCB in a cash-and-stock payout.
New shares
KCB has announced that it will pay part of the
dividend — which is unchanged at Sh2 per share — by issuing new shares
whose aggregate number and pricing is to be disclosed later.
Payment of dividends through issuing of new shares,
a process technically known as scrip dividend, is seen as representing
the bank’s intention to preserve cash to finance its expansion plans.
The Ndegwa family’s dividend of Sh196.3 million is
derived from their ownership of a 25 per cent stake in NIC Bank, which
raised its total dividend payout to Sh1.25 per share from the previous
Sh1 per share.
NIC has one of the lowest dividend payouts among
publicly traded banks because it relies on the retained profits and
rights issues to fund growth.
“Management does not anticipate coming to the
market for additional capital in the next five years as it focuses on
controlled growth as well as low dividend payout,” Standard Investment
Bank (SIB) said of NIC’s dividend policy.
“NIC Bank’s five-year average dividend payout of 13.5 per cent is one of the lowest in the industry.”
Mr Kimani’s dividend of Sh166.1 million arises from his 2.3
per cent interest in Equity, which has proposed the largest total
dividend payout of Sh7.5 billion.
The earning by individuals of hundreds of millions
of shillings — amounts that dwarf the annual profits of some listed
firms — is testament to the power of concentrated investment in
blue-chip companies.
Most investors who follow this strategy, however,
tend to be founders or directors whose close association and control
gives them the confidence to maintain such concentrated portfolios.
Mr Shah, a former KCB director, is set to earn
Sh86.9 million for his 1.5 per cent stake in the country’s biggest bank
while Mr Muriuki’s dividend of Sh76 million is based on his 2.05 per
cent stake in Co-op Bank.
Mr Muriuki’s portfolio ranks among the most
profitable, his annual dividend income now standing at more than the
original Sh68 million investment he made in acquiring the shares
currently worth Sh2 billion.
Leah Muguku, a relative of the late businessman
Nelson Muguku, will receive Sh62.3 million for the 0.8 per cent stake
she inherited in Equity.
The divestiture
The Mugukus have sold the majority of the shares
the patriarch held in the bank, earning billions of shilling from the
divestiture.
Simon Thuo, another long-term investor in Equity,
is slated to earn Sh49.4 million for his 0.7 per cent interest in the
lender while Franklin Ndii will pocket Sh38 million for his 0.53 per
cent interest ahead of the bank’s chairman Peter Munga who stands to
earn Sh29.2 million for his 0.4 per cent per cent stake.
Mr Munga has also significantly reduced his ownership in the bank, raking in billions of shillings in the process.
Benson Wairegi, the chief executive of insurance firm Britam, is the next big earner, with his take-home of Sh17.2 million for the 0.24 per cent stake he holds in Equity.
He is followed by James Kimani, with Sh16.9 million for his 0.24 per cent stake in the bank.
Billionaire investor Jeremiah Kiereini will earn Sh11.6 million for his 0.5 per cent interest in CFC Stanbic Holdings.
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