By JAMES ANYANZWA
In Summary
- The EastAfrican has learnt that the government is seeking to scrap and reduce some of the charges levied on the M-Akiba bond in order to attract more players. M-Akiba is the first-ever Treasury bond to be issued exclusively via a mobile phones.
- Treasury says telcos must disclose all hidden charges in mobile payments to their customers and that this “disclosure” requirement forms an important part of the government’s ongoing review process.
- The National Treasury said inflated costs, including brokerage commissions, have made the proposed trading of M-Akiba bonds unprofitable to small investors.
Kenya’s National Treasury has launched investigations into
telecommunications companies it accuses of imposing excessively high
rates on mobile money payments.
These rates, according to the Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry
Rotich, have caused the government to suspend its mobile-based bond
trading programme, intended to promote small investors with as low as
Ksh3,000 ($30) to invest.
The EastAfrican has learnt that the government is
seeking to scrap and reduce some of the charges levied on the M-Akiba
bond in order to attract more players. M-Akiba is the first-ever
Treasury bond to be issued exclusively via a mobile phones.
Mr Rotich said that the government postponed the launch of the
mobile-based bond after it learnt that the “cost of trading the debt
instrument would be too high for investors, and would wipe out all their
returns.”
The recent investigation targets mobile payment service
providers Safaricom (M-Pesa), Airtel (Airtel Money), Telkom Kenya
(Orange Money) and Equity Bank (Equitel).
The move comes amid concerns by the Consumer Federation of Kenya
(Cofek) that mobile payment service providers are levying excessive and
undisclosed levies.
Mr Rotich said the probe, expected to be completed in December,
seeks to establish the justification for the amount of fees and
commissions levied on various mobile banking transactions, and the
portion that the telcos and banks exact from each transaction.
He said telcos must disclose all hidden charges in mobile
payments to their customers and that this “disclosure” requirement forms
an important part of the government’s ongoing review process.
“We want to know how much these firms actually charge for each
service and how much each party in the transaction is getting. This
exercise should be concluded in December,” said Mr Rotich.
Disclose hidden charges
The Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) director-general
Kariuki Wang’ombe said they were working to ensure that mobile payment
services are transparent.
“Nothing should be regulated in a market where there are many players,” said Mr Wang’ombe.
Last year, CAK ordered Safaricom to make public its Lipa na
M-Pesa charges for businesses after receiving complaints over the
telco’s failure to disclose the amounts consumers pay for use of the
service in merchant shops.
However, Safaricom said it would need until mid-2017 to start disclosing its hidden charges.
The government is considering offsetting part of the costs of
trading in bonds through mobile phones as part of efforts to empower
small investors and promote a savings culture, which currently is as low
as 11 per cent of GDP
The National Treasury said inflated costs, including brokerage
commissions, have made the proposed trading of M-Akiba bonds
unprofitable to small investors.
“We are working on it with our debt department. We had called
key stakeholders to discuss this issue because high charges will make
M-Akiba unattractive,” said Geoffrey Mwau, director-general at the
Budget, Fiscal and Economic Affairs Department in the National Treasury.
He added: “There are many solutions to this problem because
these charges are at two levels: We have the M-Pesa charges and the
transaction fee. The idea is to eliminate one of them and also consider
lowering the charges by introducing an element of competition, but these
plans are still at the preliminary stage.”
Currently, the transaction fee for a bond trader stands at 0.03 per cent of the value of the transaction.
This consists of a net brokerage commission of 0.024 per cent,
Nairobi Securities Exchange levy of 0.004 per cent and Central
Depository and Settlement Corporation (CDSC) levy of 0.002 per cent.
Money transfer charges through Safaricom’s M-Pesa platform are
effected from a minimum of Ksh100 ($1) to Ksh70,000 ($700) per
transaction.
M-Pesa commission
The mobile money payment service through its Lipa na M-Pesa
platform charges traders one per cent commission for receiving money
through the channel but customers pay different fees for using the
service.
The government plans to implement the mobile-based bond issuance
programme in partnership with M-Pesa in order to deepen access for
retail bond trading, which was previously a reserve of commercial banks
and other traders such as pension funds, fund managers and insurance
companies.
Retail investors account for a paltry two per cent of the
Treasury bond market with institutional investors controlling 98 per
cent.
“Investments are often made in trusted institutions and
commodities. It’s perfectly normal to have a transaction or investment
fee taken at the beginning, or even a tax like a stamp duty, but it
doesn’t stop people investing. As the investment hopefully accumulates,
the costs are recovered as well as the growth over and above the initial
investment,” said the chief executive of Liquid Telecom Kenya, Ben
Robert.
He added: “There must be other factors behind the mobile
investment bond isn’t hitting the right space, and the people that want
to invest in small transaction amounts of a few thousand shillings are
probably investing in areas their investment matures faster, or those
that give them a stronger feeling of security and growth.”
The government lowered the minimum threshold for investment in
Treasury bills and bonds from Ksh50,000 ($500) to Ksh3,000 ($30), with
investors allowed to trade through their mobile phones, with effect from
July 1, 2015.
Uganda has set the threshold for buying a Treasury bill or
Treasury bond at Ush100,000 ($27), though the bond market is still
controlled by commercial banks followed by the national pension fund and
offshore investors.
In Tanzania, primary dealers and direct investors with bids of
Tsh5 million ($2,241) and above are eligible to participate directly in
the Treasury bonds auction while investors with bids below Tsh5 million
($2,241) must channel them through primary dealers.
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