Britam managing director Benson Wairegi. PHOTO | SALATON NJAU | NMG
Private equity firm AfricInvest has lost more than Sh2.6 billion
in paper wealth due to a fall in the share price of Nairobi Securities
Exchange
(NSE)-listed insurer Britam.
This
comes just less than a year after the equity firm bought into the
insurer for Sh5.7 billion -- amounting to a 14.3 percent stake on May
18, 2018. The market value of the equity holding has since shrunk to
Sh3.07 billion, a decline of Sh2.64 billion in about 11 months.
As
of Monday this week, Britam’s share price declined to the lowest level
in 12 months to stand at Sh8.48 as investors digested the Sh2.2 billion
loss the company suffered in the year ended December 2018.
No dividend
And in what may be
even more dire for investors in Britam, the insurers board of directors
have not proposed a dividend pay for this year — the first time in more
than five years.
Analysts at Nairobi-based Dyer and
Blair Investment Bank recommended that the company should freeze
dividend pay for the next three years to allow it recover from the 2018
financial loss.
“Assuming that Britam performs at the
financial year 2017 level moving forward, we think that the group will
need about three years without a dividend payout to recover,” said Dyer
& Blair analysts.
“We think that divestments from
struggling entities like HF could cut that timeline (to fewer than three
years),” they further said.
Huge slump
In 2018, Britam suffered from a huge slump in the equities market with unrealised loss standing at Sh3.2 billion.
“The
recovery of listed equities at the bourse in quarter one of 2019
translates to a reversal of the loss, pointing to improved earnings if
the equities market sustains the performance,” said ApexAfrica Capital,
another brokerage house in Nairobi.
ApexAfrica further
noted that Britam’s attempt to diversify into real estate from equities
and fixed-income assets had not been successful.
“The
group has tried to diversify from equities and fixed income into real
estate. This has however proven counter-productive with the lower
investment income,” said ApexAfrica.
Britam
shareholders approved the acquisition of the stake by AfricInvest in
November 2017 and the PE fund completed the transaction last May.
The
company subsequently took a board seat with AfricInvest East Africa
managing director George Odo getting appointed director of Britam
Holdings Plc.
Govt securities
The new funds Britam received were directed to accumulating government securities ahead of being invested in other areas.
One
of those areas into which the insurer is seeking to invest currently is
in acquisition of some undisclosed stake in a PE fund, Tiserin Capital.
The board has approved the investment in the PE and the insurer will become the anchor shareholder.
Leonard
Lekishom, a research analyst with Sterling Capital, said Britam remain
solid but the company has been let down by investments in subsidiaries.
“The way out for the firm is to diversify further,” he said.
The
loss in Britam mirrored the declining fortunes of the insurance
industry, which underwent an underwriting loss of Sh1.65 billion last
year, the largest in 11 years.
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