Corporate News
Dr Patrick Ngugi Njoroge, the Central Bank of Kenya governor. CBK hired
Washington D.C.-based FTI Consulting to review troubled Imperial Bank’s
books. PHOTO | FILE
By DAVID HERBLING, hdavid@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Imperial Bank collapsed in October 2015, and the CBK immediately asked FTI, which had been invited by the bank’s board to conduct a forensic audit of the lender, to continue with the job under a wider mandate.
- FTI, a specialised forensic accounting consultancy, is being paid £338,000 per week, broken down as £155,000 (Sh22.7 million) for on-site investigation, £45,000 (Sh6.5 million) in other expenses, a retainer of £100,000 (Sh14.6 million), and £38,000 (Sh5.5 million) for strategic communications.
- FTI is also allowed to levy separate charges for data processing at the rate of £170 (Sh24,909) per gigabyte.
- The auditors have already unearthed about 1.2 terabytes of electronic data at Imperial Bank, according to the CBK.
- All fees quoted by FTI do not include value-added tax or any other relevant levies, which must be borne by their clients — in this case the shareholders.
An American consulting firm that was hired to conduct
a forensic audit into the collapse of Imperial Bank may have earned
more than Sh1 billion so far, according to leaked contract documents
showing the professional charges agreed for the service.
The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) hired Washington D.C.-based
FTI Consulting to review troubled Imperial Bank’s books — a job the
American firm has been doing for the past 32 weeks.
Imperial Bank collapsed in October 2015, and the
CBK immediately asked FTI, which had been invited by the bank’s board to
conduct a forensic audit of the lender, to continue with the job under a
wider mandate.
“Our fees will be charged on the basis of a
combination of time spent conducting the engagement and volumes of
electronic data collected, extracted, analysed, processed, searched and
reviewed,” the contract document says, adding that the fee rates may be
varied from time to time and “we reserve the right to charge for our
time at the amended rates”.
FTI, a specialised forensic accounting consultancy,
is being paid £338,000 per week, broken down as £155,000 (Sh22.7
million) for on-site investigation, £45,000 (Sh6.5 million) in other
expenses, a retainer of £100,000 (Sh14.6 million), and £38,000 (Sh5.5
million) for strategic communications.
FTI is also allowed to levy separate charges for data processing at the rate of £170 (Sh24,909) per gigabyte.
The auditors have already unearthed about 1.2
terabytes of electronic data at Imperial Bank, according to the CBK,
meaning analysing this mountain of information will cost the fallen
lender’s owners £204,000 (Sh29.8 million).
All fees quoted by FTI do not include value-added
tax or any other relevant levies, which must be borne by their clients —
in this case the shareholders.
“We will continue to provide invoices on a weekly
basis which will be payable on delivery. The retainer will be offset
against our final invoice and we will either seek payment of the
outstanding balance or will repay any unused amount,” says the letter
signed by David Morris, a senior managing director at FTI.
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