By GEORGE NGIGI, gngigi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Equity Bank posted a 29.8 per cent growth in core capital last year to Sh65.5 billion making it the 25th largest bank in Africa and position 835 in the world.
- Kenyan lenders have been able to squeeze higher returns from their assets owing to introduction of cost-effective products such as agency and mobile banking.
Equity Bank
has been ranked the fastest-growing large bank in Africa, which has
helped it join the league of 25 largest lenders on the continent.
The lender posted a 29.8 per cent growth in core capital
last year to Sh65.5 billion making it the 25th largest bank in Africa
and position 835 in the world.
Co-operative Bank
was the third highest mover in Africa following a 10.9 per cent growth
which saw it jump to position 961 globally up from 981 last year.
KCB,
the largest bank in the country by asset base and number 808 in the
world, now ranks 24th in Africa following a 2.2 per cent growth in tier 1
capital, which is used as the ranking standard.
“The relative strength of this performance can in
part be attributed to the performance of the Kenyan shilling in 2015,
which declined modestly against the US dollar relative to many other
African currencies,” said The Banker, a publication of Financial Times, which ranks the Top 1,000 banks globally.
Kenyan lenders have been able to squeeze higher
returns from their assets owing to introduction of cost-effective
products such as agency and mobile banking.
Equity offered the second best return on assets in
Africa (eighth globally) of 5.6 per cent while KCB ranked fourth in the
continent at 4.76 per cent.
The two are leading in agency and mobile banking in
the country with both channels doing more transactions than bank clerks
and automated teller machines (ATMs).
The technological gains are yet to translate to
cheaper services to customers, allowing the lenders to book massive
profits and expand the gap between large and small banks in the country.
KCB could acquire Chase Bank underlining the financial muscle of the top banks.
Equity’s management has rule out acquisition of a
bank in the local market arguing that its annual growth was the size of a
mid-sized bank though.
The rise of the Kenyan banks on the continental
scene follows their aggressive geographical expansion as they bid to
protect the East and Central Africa territory from their larger Nigerian
and South African rivals.
Last year KCB opened a representative office in
Ethiopia pushing its regional presence to seven countries including
Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan.
Equity has presence in six States following its
recent entry in the Democratic Republic of Congo through the acquisition
of ProCredit Bank.
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