Banking
stocks: The last two days of last week’s trading were a blood bath for
banking stocks on the Nairobi Securities Exchange. On Thursday, Diamond
Trust Bank led the losing pack after shedding 10.69 per cent to settle
at an average trading price of 142 per share.
I&M
bank was the second biggest banking loser with a fall of 9.81 per cent
at Sh96.50 per share while Co-operative Bank and Equity Bank completed
the day’s top losers after shedding 9.81 per cent and 9.03 per cent to
settle at Sh11.95 and Sh32.75 per share respectively.
Strikingly,
Equity Bank had a market supply of up to 54.8 million shares against a
demand of only 3,000 shares. During the day, the NSE All Share Index
(NASI) fell by 5.01 per cent to 139.14 points while the NSE 20 Share
Index fell by 4.41 per cent to 3,309.76 points. The NSE 25 Share Index
settled at 3,704.68 points.
Strikingly, the mega fall
on Thursday by DTB came shortly after the bank announced its half year
net results. The results showed that the bank had posted a net profit of
Sh3.62 billion compared to Sh3.25 billion posted in the same period the
previous year.
This was a jump of 21.9 per cent. At
the close of market on Thursday, investors had lost Sh106 billion, with
the banking sector registering a loss of up to Sh47 billion in market
value.
The vicious blood bath continued on Friday with
the NSE 20 Share Index falling further to 3,216.62 points while the NSE
All Share Index fell to 134.97 points. The NSE 25 Share Index crashed
to 3,551.80 points which was a loss of 152.88 points.
In
the banking segment, though, DTB appeared to bottom out and only lost
an average of 1.41 per cent to close the day at Sh140 per share from
Thursday’s Sh142 per share price.
KCB popped to the top
However,
KCB popped to the top of the day’s losers after shedding 10 per cent to
close the day at Sh27 per share from the previous day’s Sh30 per share.
Equity Bank lost Sh3.25 per share to close the week at a discounted
Sh29.50 per share. This was loss of 9.92 per cent.
I&M
continued its losing streak after cutting off 9.84 per cent to stand at
Sh87 per share. Between Thursday and Friday, the counter lost 19.65 per
cent in market value, with Sh9.50 lost during Friday’s session alone.
HF Group and Co-op Bank lost 9.71 per cent and 9.62 per cent to trade at
Sh13.95 per share and Sh10.80 per share respectively.
Strikingly,
on Friday, CFC Stanbic and National Bank of Kenya (NBK) were the only
stocks that gained on Friday. CFC rose by 2.04 per cent to trade at Sh75
per share from 73.50 recorded on Thursday. NBK climbed by 1.43 per cent
to settle at Sh7.10 per share from the previous day’s Sh7 per share
price.
Despite the large supply volumes, the current
major fall in banking stocks will be temporary. According to investment
analyst Robert Ochieng’, investors of fundamentally strong banking
counters should not panic.
“Any bank that is trading below its book value is a buy. Nothing has fundamentally changed,” he says.
Britam:
Insurance firm Britam announced a return to profitability last week for
the first six months of the year. The bank’s net profit increased by
184 per cent to Sh1.8 billion from the Sh624.6 million recorded in the
same period the previous year.
The group’s gross
written premium income grew by 3 per cent to Sh10.5 billion while
investment income increased by 16 per cent to Sh2.7 billion from Sh2.4
billion.
Asset management revenue jumped by 21 per
cent from Sh439.4 million to Sh529.4 million while net claims declined
by 29 per cent to Sh3.6 billion from Sh5.1 billion. With the share
trading on Friday at Sh11.55 per share, Nairobi-based investment analyst
Edward Kuromba reckons that the stock is still largely discounted.
“However,
investors should note that the profit came about following a change in
the firm’s accounting methodology, failure to which it would still fall
behind in profitability,” he says.
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