The top 15
Kenyan investors at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) went through
another tough year with their equities’ portfolio shrinking by an
additional Sh13.8 billion as the bear run closes its second year.
The
investors, including four who have since lost their stock market
billionaire titles, booked a combined paper loss of Sh27.3 billion in
2015 when the market started falling after a three-year bull run.
Cumulatively,
the capital loss of the investors now tops the Sh41 billion mark,
ranking them among the major victims of the bear market alongside
institutional investors including pension funds.
Billionaire
investor John Kibunga Kimani — who bucked the trend last year with an
overall portfolio gain of Sh463 million boosted by a rally in his Kakuzi
holdings — has entered the losers’ list after the agricultural firm’s
stock was swept by the bear avalanche.
He joins James Mwangi (Equity Group
CEO), Chris Kirubi (Centum director), Pradeep Paunrana (ARM Cement
CEO), Baloobhai Patel, Peter Munga (Equity Group chairman) and nine
others whose capital loss in this year alone ranges from Sh215 million
to Sh2.3 billion.
The stock market rout can be seen
from the 39.2 per cent drop in the benchmark NSE20 Share Index from
5,117.4 at the beginning of 2015 to 3,106.9 on Thursday. That fall is
enough to wipe out an investor’s previous 78.5 per cent capital gain,
with actual losses depending on the portfolio mix.
While
the big investors have traditionally rode out market cycles to avoid
realising the losses, this bear market has partly been driven by unique
factors that may make some of the losses permanent.
The capping of interest rates effective September is set to significantly cut profit margins in the banking industry’s mainstay lending business, with smaller lenders suffering the most from the new normal.
The capping of interest rates effective September is set to significantly cut profit margins in the banking industry’s mainstay lending business, with smaller lenders suffering the most from the new normal.
Corporate scandals
Investors
have priced in the new regulatory environment, erasing tens of billions
of shillings from banking stocks. Several listed firms have also been
punished by the market in the wake of corporate scandals involving
executives, directors and major shareholders.
Mr Mwangi has the biggest paper loss this year, with his holdings of Britam and Equity shares down Sh2.3 billion or 26.5 per cent since the beginning of the year.
Shares
of the two companies moved south by nearly the same margin but Mr
Mwangi has a higher absolute paper loss of Sh1.9 billion in the bank,
thanks to the controlled interest rate spread currently at seven per
cent.
The Banking (Amendment) Act 2015 sets the floor
for deposit rates at 70 per cent of the Central Bank Rate and a ceiling
for lending rates at four percentage points above the benchmark rate.
This
places the current interest rate on interest-bearing accounts at a
minimum of seven per cent and the lending rate at a maximum of 14 per
cent, with the CBR at 10 per cent.
Mr Kirubi’s
ownership of a 30 per cent stake in Centum generated the second biggest
paper loss this year of Sh2 billion as the stock cooled off having
rallied on news of planned mega projects including a coal-fired power
plant in Lamu.
Mr Paunrana’s portfolio of ARM Cement’s
shares is down by Sh1.5 billion besides being diluted 40 per cent
alongside other investors with the entry of UK sovereign wealth fund CDC
Group which provided Sh14 billion to save the company from creditors,
including banks.
Mr Patel, the most diversified
high-net-worth investor, took a Sh1.41 billion hit from his shareholding
in Sanlam Kenya, Diamond Trust Bank, Barclays Bank of Kenya and Bamburi
Cement, among others.
Paper loss
Mr
Munga’s interests in Equity and Britam have generated a Sh1.4 billion
paper loss, with most of the decline in the insurer where he recently
acquired an additional 23.3 per cent stake for an undisclosed price.
The
extra shares, which he intends to sell in the short term, were acquired
from the government of Mauritius which seized them from its citizen
Dawood Rawat who has been accused of running a ponzi scheme in the
island nation.
Mr Mbaru has a Sh751.1 million paper
loss from his Britam shares whose price has receded to Sh9.9 or just 10
per cent above the 2011 initial public offering price of Sh9.
Mr
Kimani is ending the year with a capital loss of Sh741.1 million after
taking a Sh268.8 million hit from Kakuzi which had last year rallied
amid a general slide in his portfolio that includes East African
Breweries, Nation Media Group and Centum.
He is followed by Mr Muriuki who is down by Sh719 million from his stakes at Co-op Bank and CIC Insurance.
Other
top investors who have hundreds of millions of shillings in paper
losses include WPP Scangroup CEO Bharat Thakrar, Leah Muguku, Simon Thuo
and Franklin Ndii whose portfolios have been relegated below the Sh1
billion mark.
The portfolios of Jane Njuguna and city
lawyer Jane Michuki stood above the Sh1.7 billion mark each despite the
investors’ paper losses of Sh360.2 million and Sh673.8 million
respectively.
vjuma@ke.nationmedia.com
No comments :
Post a Comment