Otiato Guguyu
With a bonus of Sh50,000 in the bank earning no interest, Ouma was
unsure of what to do at the stock market, opting to call this writer
with a belief that a financial journalist will know where to place his
bet.
He is not alone. Job Kimani, a mid-level employee has also sought to
know how to get into the game, which stocks to buy, where to start or
how to trade.
The information on their fingertips is that half of the companies listed
on the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) are trading at less than Sh10,
and even at that low price, they are not getting many buyers.
SEE ALSO :NSE share index down by 9.56 points
Out
of the 64 listed counters, 27 are trading below Sh10, while four are
suspended from trading including Atlas, Deacons, Athi River Mining and
KenolKobil, which has been acquired by a French firm, Rubis Energy.
Atlas has since been delisted from the bourse.
“Information is really challenging, it is like they do not want you in.
What I have learned is to avoid government stocks, Kenya Power, Uchumi,
Mumias, Kenya Airways,” said 29-year-old Job Kimani.
Some don’t care for as long as the shares are trading. The cheaper they
are, the more they trade and are dubbed ‘penny stocks’ which in the US
was a share traded for less than one dollar and later five dollars and
in the UK, less than a pound.
Penny stocks are usually treated with scepticism as a field for
speculators since they are cheap, and the company’s prospects are
doubtful.
Currently, in the bourse, some stocks are trading at less than a shilling and do not inspire confidence.
SEE ALSO :M-Akiba raises Sh197 million against Sh250 million target
They
include Uchumi supermarkets at 44 cents, which has not released its
results, while Mumias whose sugar brand has not seen the shelf of a
retail shop in years trades at 40 cents.
HomeAfrika is trading at 53 cents and has continuously bled losses -
unable to complete real estate projects. It even pulled out of two
ventures in Kisumu and Kwale. Nairobi Business Venture called K Shoe has
not shown how it would succeed in the deluge of imported shoes racking
up losses for as long as it has been listed.
Deacons at 45 cents a share, was put under receivership after losing its
mainstay business Mr Price, while Atlas which trade at Sh1.05 a share
has had its trading suspended in 2017 and was delisted last week.
However, not all penny stocks are doubtful investments.
Out of the 27 firms on the Nairobi bourse trading below Sh10 are a
number of companies that have been trading at multiple times their worth
less than ten years ago.
SEE ALSO :M-Akiba bond lists on NSE as it misses Sh250 million target
While
Housing Finance (HF) will cost you Sh4 per share and National Bank of
Kenya (NBK) which is being acquired by Kenya Commercial Bank would only
cost you Sh5.1 each share, in September 2014, HF was trading at Sh37.78
and National Bank traded at a high Sh42.7 in February 2011, almost a
decade ago.
Kenya Power currently going for Sh4.15 a share had run in September 2010
when it was trading at Sh24.3 a share while KenGen had a decorated
decade to register a high of Sh17.5 a share in October 2010 but trades
at Sh6.1.
Investment firm Britam once traded at a historical high of Sh37 in
September five years ago and has since dropped to Sh8.6, rocked by the
controversy surrounding Dawood Rawat, then a major shareholder of the
firm who was accused of Ponzi scheme by Mauritius state officials and a
series of poor portfolio performance.
Some stock prices are also driven down by share splits and bonus issue,
where expensive stock is split to make them available and liquid on the
trading floor. Kenya has seen at least 15 such splits over the last
decade or so.
Equity Bank split shares in 2009, while Barclays split shares in 2011 to
benefit from retail investors speculating on these counters based on
impending announcements such as share splits, dividend payments, and
company announcements.
SEE ALSO : Standard Chartered records Sh8 billion after-tax profit
Limuru
Tea split shares in 2015, Crown Paints did a two-for-one bonus, while
Carbacid split its stock five-to-one in 2013. ARM split five to one in
2012, while Longhorn Publishers did a three-to-two bonus issue in 2014.
Kenya Airways which traded at over Sh100 in March 2010 and has swung to a
low of Sh4.95 dogged by a streak of monumental losses. In the most
recent, KQ shares were split at the ratio of 20 for one to dilute
current shareholders to accommodate banks under the banner of KQ Lenders
Company 2017 Ltd.
Conventional wisdom in stocks trading usually encourages buying when
such companies trade at a low price so as to ride the wave and sell when
the stock swing back to shake off cyclical dips.
But Kenyan firms are not getting as much interest and attention from
buyers, probably because the average investor is sitting in a London or
New York office and has a whole globe of choices to pick stocks from.
In 2018, on average, 75.84 per cent of the total turnover at the bourse was being traded by foreign investors.
And that has its risks, according to the Capital Markets Authority (CMA)
Soundness Report. At the end of December 2018, there was an outflow of
Sh27.8 billion at the NSE, mainly attributed to the prolonged interest
rate hikes observed in the US since December 2015 that depressed
performance at the bourse.
“The Federal Reserve has continued to hike interest rates from lows of
0.5 per cent in 2016 to 2.5 per cent in 2019. This means more foreign
investors holding Kenyan stocks are finding it increasingly lucrative to
hold US securities, which are generally considered to be less risky,” a
research analyst at Sterling Capital explained.
This has seen many foreign investors selling their local stakes leading
to a surge in net sales – capital flight. Given that foreign investors
control a significant chunk of the Kenyan securities market, this has
driven stock prices down despite the current positive economic prospects
and good business sentiment.
Renaldo D’souza a research analyst at Sterling Capital says foreign
investors were also scared by the strong shilling, which they believe is
overvalued.
“The strength of the Shilling has had an adverse impact on the NSE as an
attractive investment option for foreigners. A considerable number of
foreign investors believe that the Shilling is trading well above its
fair value thus making investing in local stocks comparatively
expensive,” he said.
Investments are also plagued by debt sustainability concerns, with a
good number of foreigners concerned about the debt sustainability levels
of the country.
“If the government defaults on its payments, debt deflation may lead to a
currency crisis which will certainly erode the value of the shilling,
especially in relation to major world currencies.
This will equally erode all the capital gains made by investors since
the exchange rate will eat into all the realised gains,” a Sterling
Capital researcher said.
CMA, however, notes that it is targeting initiatives aimed at increasing
local investor participation at the bourse through strategic investor
education initiatives. It is also luring Kenyans in the diaspora who are
sending back an average of Sh247 billion a year to counter the
increased outflow of foreign capital.
In practice, however, the capital markets regulator seems to be caught
up in new fancy products such as the Derivatives Market, Assets Backed
Securities, Gold Exchange Traded Funds and even Short selling where you
are able to sell shares of a company which you do not directly own.
This seems to attract sophisticated investors rather than the ordinary
man on the street. Even so, Deepak Dave says sophisticated local
investors are avoiding the bourse because of huge State borrowing from
the private sector which offers better returns.
“Mobilising capital becomes more difficult when investments in the
market cannot compete with lucrative Government paper returns, some of
which are tax-free. Where we have the public sector crowding out the
private sector for growth, dividend yield or safety, we can hardly
expect stocks to be seen as attractive,” he said.
Deepak observes that bringing back small investors will not be easy,
especially given that the Chama craze has receded, and leveraged stock
loans are a dangerous route to go.
Disposable income is also low over the last 10 years as inflation and a
slowing economy mean wage growth has flattened in real terms. “Where
will Wanjiku find the money, the mechanism or the methods to go play
stocks? That said, its time for NSE and CMA to foster the growth of
lower risk, more diversified investments that genuinely can compete for
growth and earn returns,” reckons Deepak.
He said brokers making their fees and commissions more palatable would
be a huge step forward, as this would lower management fees. “And this
does not include ridiculous proposals such as making gambling-style
products a new entrant at NSE,” he said.
Analysts say the regulator has been barking on the wrong tree. And
recently, in a show of desperation, it even hinted at including
gambling-style products to compete with the likes of SportsPesa, Betin
and Betway which have managed to attract droves of youth into gambling.
The other option has been crypto-currency and online currency trade,
which have created an easy mobile based interphase to buy and sell
bitcoins, euros and dollars over a mobile phone with a fair share of
youths playing the game.
“With all the fintech and digital banking mania, why is the stock
trading not on e-platforms available to the common man? Why hasn’t a
single bank provided a one-stop link between trading, custodial and bank
accounts to be seamless?” Mr Deepak posed.
Kimani says he gets information from his personal stockbroker, financial
advisor, the NSE handbook 2018 and a Facebook page called ‘Young Stock
Brokers of Kenya’ underscoring a missed opportunity to capture new
markets. However, besides demand and supply at the Kenyan counters, the
low prices are being driven by poor performance in the companies
themselves.
Kenya’s economy is expected to grow by 5.8 per cent, according to the
World Bank and six per cent based on African Development Bank
statistics, which are not reflecting on the performance at the bourse.
“This positive projection is supported by a stable macro-economic
outlook, low oil prices, recovery of the tourism sector and strong
remittance inflows into the country,” said D’souza.
“However, despite positive growth projections in the year 2019, all the
major indices in the NSE have continued to shed weight as stocks lose
value.”
During 2018, the equities market was on a downward trend with the
All-Share Index NASI down 18 per cent, the NSE 25 was down 17.1 per
cent, while the benchmark NSE 20 dropped by 23 per cent.
“We observe a decline in the financial performance of many companies
listed on the NSE such as the cement and manufacturing firms. Several
companies issued profit warnings and this has reduced the attractiveness
of the bourse,” explained D’souza.
In 2018, NBK Williamson Tea, Kapchuoria Tea, Kenya-Re, Unga Group, Crown
Paints, UAP, Britam, Sameer Africa, Kenya Power, Bamburi Cement, Mumias
Sugar and Sanlam all issued profit warnings. National Bank posted a 98
per cent decline in net profits from Sh410 million in 2017 to Sh7
million last year following 65 per cent defaults on their loan book with
Gross NPLs standing at Sh31 billion.
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