Banking group I&M Holdings is set to repay its Sh3.6 billion
corporate bond within three months — a move that will further reduce
corporate debt securities listed on the Nairobi Securities Exchange
(NSE).
Corporate bonds, once used widely by companies
to raise funds for expansion, have fallen out of favour following
defaults running into billions of shillings by issuers such as Chase and
Imperial banks.
In December 2013, I&M raised Sh3.4
billion through a bond earning a fixed interest rate of 12.8 per cent
per annum and Sh226 million through another bond earning a floating rate
set at the yield of 182-day T-Bill plus a premium of two per cent.
Both bonds are unsecured and have a five-year tenor ending on March 19, 2019.
The
last corporate bond was a Sh6 billion paper issued by East African
Breweries (EABL) in April 2017 and there have been more redemptions of
the fixed income securities than new offerings.
Insurance
group Britam Holdings, for instance, in November redeemed its Sh6
billion bond nine months ahead of its expected maturity date of July 15,
2019.
Mortgage financier HF Group paid off its Sh7 billion bond in
October 2017 while Centum Investments settled its Sh4.2 billion bond the
previous month.
No comments :
Post a Comment