Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed banks
increased their directors’ pay by 3.6 per cent last year despite the
fall in industry earnings, reversing the previous year’s effort to keep
board spending in check.
The total remuneration of bank
directors hit Sh1.15 billion after seven out of the 11 publicly traded
lenders — led by troubled National Bank
— increased their boards’ pay.
National Bank nearly doubled its fees to directors to Sh43.37 million last year from the Sh24.88 million it paid out in 2015.
I&M Bank Kenya
directors’ take-home grew at the second-fastest rate of 61 per cent to
Sh92.99 million, followed by StanChart’s #ticker:SCBK 23 per cent to
Sh162.49 million, DTB’s #ticker:DTK 17 per cent and Co-op Bank’s
#ticker:COOP 8.1 per cent to Sh115.86 million in the review period.
The
director’s earnings had in 2015 dropped 5.6 per cent to Sh1.11 billion
as most lenders effected strong cost-cutting measures to improve
profitability.
Bank directors earn hefty monthly
retainers, sitting allowances for every board meeting or board committee
meeting attended, travel allowances, and per diem while away on
official duty.
The directors’ pay has been seen to be
out of tune with the industry’s performance in a turbulent year in which
lending to small and mid-sized enterprises significantly dropped in
favour of government securities.
The shift in the lending mix has been mainly attributed
to the coming into force of a law capping interest on loans at four per
cent above the policy rate — currently at standing 10 per cent — last
September.
The earnings have put the directors in the
league of top bank owners who reaped a 13 per cent rise in total
dividend payout to Sh34.7 billion compared to Sh30.8 billion in 2015.
The
higher paychecks for bank directors also come in the year in which the
lenders shed more than 1,000 jobs through massive retrenchment of staff
to cut costs.
Both directors’ fees and staff costs are
treated as operating expenses in the profit and loss accounts, and have a
bearing on earnings.
Barclays Kenya
attributed last year’s 5.9 per cent growth in its directors’ pay to an increase in emoluments to board members.
“The
basic rates of fees paid to non-executive directors were increased by
10 per cent in Quarter 2 of 2016,” Barclays said in its latest annual
report, which indicates that the directors earned Sh107 million.
The
lender, which is 68.5 per cent controlled by Barclays plc, said the
basic rates for fees paid to non-executive directors had remained
unchanged since 2014.
The four banks, which cut payments to directors, were Equity
(30.8 per cent), KCB #ticker:KCB (12.3 per cent), Stanbic Kenya
#ticker:CFC (10.4 per cent) and NIC Bank’s #ticker:NIC 8.9 per cent.
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