Corporate News
By GEORGE NGIGI, gngigi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The Business Daily has confirmed that the businessman, commonly known as TSS, has defaulted loans in excess of Sh2.7 billion associated with TSS Unga Millers.
- NIC Bank is said to have advanced the loans to TSS late last year, and had acquired part of the loans from another listed lender. The bank’s bad book more than doubled in the six months to March to Sh12.8 billion from Sh6.1 billion in September.
- KCB recorded a Sh7 billion jump in non-performing loans to Sh26.1 billion in March from 19.2 billion in December, underlining the impact of TSS’s default on its books while National Bank’s bad book shot up by Sh5.2 billion over the three months to Sh16.9 billion.
Kenya’s biggest bank by capitalisation, KCB, has
taken over a milling company owned by Mombasa tycoon Tahir Sheikh Said
citing its default on a Sh1 billion loan.
KCB, which has in excess of Sh1 billion non-performing loans
with Tahir Sheikh Said (TSS) Unga Millers, issued a notice in May
indicating that it had taken over management of the miller.
“Notice is hereby given that the above company was
placed under administration by Kenya Commercial Bank Limited on May 30,
2016,” the bank said in a recent statement.
“None of the directors, shareholders, employees and
no other person is authorised to transact any business on behalf of the
company without express written consent from the Administrator.”
The Business Daily has confirmed that the
businessman, commonly known as TSS, has defaulted loans in excess of
Sh2.7 billion associated with TSS Unga Millers.
The businessman is said to have Sh8 billion in
total non-performing loans with a number of banks booked under other
subsidiaries in his business empire.
KCB declined to comment on this matter citing
customer confidentiality but sources within the bank told the Business
Daily that the bank was in the process of disposing of a prime piece of
land in Mombasa that the billionaire had charged as security for the
loan.
Wealth in Kenya report of 2014 listed Mr Tahir as one of the largest land owners in the country.
His fortunes, however, seem to have taken a turn
after the government cancelled title deeds to large tracts of land in
Lamu that were associated with him.
Some of the land is said to have been used to secure loans in excess of Sh5 billion from two public listed banks.
The businessman is known to have defaulted on at least Sh1.4 billion with NIC Bank and Sh300 million with National Bank.
KCB-appointed administrator, P.V.R Rao, has called all creditors of the company to register with him in an effort to gauge TSS’s financial status.
KCB-appointed administrator, P.V.R Rao, has called all creditors of the company to register with him in an effort to gauge TSS’s financial status.
By close of last week, the tycoon was yet to
provide the administrator with his financial statement, prompting the
call to creditors ahead of a meeting that was to be held in Mombasa
Tuesday.
“As the directors of the company have not availed
statement of the company affairs to the administrator, it is important
that the creditors, who wish to attend the meeting shall come with proof
of debt along with copies of all documents to support their claim,” the
administrator said in a statement released one week ago.
Jump in non-performing loans
KCB recorded a Sh7 billion jump in non-performing
loans to Sh26.1 billion in March from 19.2 billion in December,
underlining the impact of TSS’s default on its books while National
Bank’s bad book shot up by Sh5.2 billion over the three months to Sh16.9
billion
NIC Bank is said to have advanced the loans to TSS late last
year, and had acquired part of the loans from another listed lender. The
bank’s bad book more than doubled in the six months to March to Sh12.8
billion from Sh6.1 billion in September.
TSS has been entangled in several court cases, most of them involving land ownership.
Mr Tahir also has multi-billion shilling investments in transport and petroleum.
Mr Tahir also has multi-billion shilling investments in transport and petroleum.
TSS Transporters, a passenger bus service that
plies the Nairobi Mombasa route, and TSS service stations also fall
under the businessman’s empire.
The National Transport and Safety Authority (NTSA)
in March suspended TSS Transporters’ night operating licence over the
involvement of its buses in road accidents.
The volume of bad loans in Kenya’s banking sector
shot to a decade-high of Sh170 billion in the past one year following
stringent enforcement of regulations by the Central Bank of Kenya under
governor Patrick Njoroge, who took charge mid last year.
Large customers, such as TSS, have been cited as the main source of the bad loans pile up.
Large customers, such as TSS, have been cited as the main source of the bad loans pile up.
TSS whose total non-performing loans are estimated to be over Sh8 billion is carrying five per cent of the industry’s bad book.
Banks usually treat corporate customers with kid gloves — often bending over backwards to accommodate their needs.
Banks usually treat corporate customers with kid gloves — often bending over backwards to accommodate their needs.
Most lenders are willing to disburse quick loans to
the wealthy on friendlier terms in an effort to entice them to bring
more business — a strategy that has, however, left many exposed.
A survey by the not-for-profit financial research
firm, FSD Kenya showed that rich Kenyans are likely to refinance a loan
through borrowing while the poor have to sell their assets to repay.
Equity Bank chief executive James Mwangi in an
investor briefing earlier in the year said the bank was forced to write
off a Sh2 billion loan last year after carrying it for some years in its
books.
Bank of Africa’s non-performing loan book
quadrupled last year to Sh9.7 billion — a development it attributed to
15 large customers that accounted for more than half of the bad debts.
FSD found that 32.6 per cent of the rich surveyed
had taken another loan over the last year to repay an existing one
compared to 22.9 per cent who had sold an asset to pay debt, underlining
the banks’ willingness to fund the rich.
Meanwhile 28 per cent of the poor had sold their assets, with 19.5 per cent getting refinancing to settle debt obligations.
gngigi@ke.nationmedia.com
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