ARM plant in Athi River. File photo | nmg
British investment fund CDC Group’s Sh14 billion investment in ARM Cement
has dropped to a market value of Sh2.1 billion as investors continue to
react to the Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed firm’s financial
challenges.
The firm’s share price fell to a new low of Sh6.05 yesterday after a steady decline from highs of Sh90 in August 2014.
This
values the entire company at Sh5.8 billion, a major discount to the
last published book value of Sh26.3 billion, indicating investors’
jitters over its continued losses and additional capital raising plans.
CDC and other long-term shareholders could ride out the current
paper losses but the collapse of ARM’s share price signals that the
institutional investor paid a premium for its 41.6 per cent stake.
The
cement manufacturer was trading at Sh32 in August 2016 when CDC’s
investment was approved, indicating that the development finance
institution paid a premium of 25 per cent at the time.
ARM
has warned investors that its net earnings for the year ended December
will fall by at least 25 per cent from Sh2.8 billion a year earlier. The
deeper losses comes after the company announced asset sales and plans
to raise more funds from selling new shares in what will further dilute
existing shareholders.
The manufacturer is yet to
publish its results for the year ended December, which will give
investors an update on the depth of its capital needs.
ARM
has moved to sell its non-cement businesses including fertiliser
production in transactions projected to raise at least $16 million
(Sh1.6 billion).
The company has not specified how much it is looking to raise from a new shareholder and how far the talks have gone.
ARM’s
challenges can be traced to a heavy reliance on debt to fund its
aggressive expansion in the local and regional market. It used some of
the CDC funds to retire part of its debt but continued losses have
denied it financial flexibility.
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