The top-20 Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) firms by market value shrugged off a tough operating environment to pay
shareholders more than Sh135 billion in dividends last year, a 42
percent increase on the 2017 figure.
The record payout
was hugely supported by Safaricom and bank dividends, which helped to
soften the blow on shareholders who incurred Sh419 billion paper losses
from last year’s bearish performance of the stock market.
Most
listed firms have been under pressure from shareholders to draw fat
dividend cheques to compensate for depressed capital gains on the
stocks. Only insurance group Britam did not pay dividends of the 20
biggest-listed firms, while KenolKobil -- which is in the process of
delisting from the bourse -- has not publicly released its financials.
Safaricom’s
total payout rose 69 percent to Sh74.92 billion in the year ended
March. The telco declared a final dividend per share of Sh1.25 and an
additional special distribution of Sh0.62 per share for the year. In
banking, most of the listed lenders shrugged off the rate cap impact to
pay out record dividends as profitability increased.
KCB Group
, Equity Group , Co-operative Bank , NIC , Stanbic Bank , Diamond Trust Bank and I&M Bank
paid a cumulative Sh42.1 billion in dividends, up 12 percent from the Sh37 billion that they paid out the previous year.
During the period, the banking sector’s total pre-tax profits
grew 12.3 percent to a record high of Sh152.3 billion, surpassing the
previous earnings peak reported before the introduction of interest rate
controls.
The rise in profit came despite the Central
Bank of Kenya twice lowering the maximum interest chargeable on customer
loans in an environment of constrained flow of credit to the private
sector.
Seven listed banks increased their dividend
payout during the financial year ended December last year, lifting
investors’ fortunes. The largest lender, KCB, is set to pay Sh10.7
billion in dividend, up 17 percent from the Sh9.2 billion it paid the
previous year. This is after it posted a 21.8 percent jump in net
profit. Equity Group, the second bank in profitability, retained its
payout at Sh7.55 billion although its profit grew five percent to Sh19.8
billion.
Its closest rival, Co-operative Bank,
increased its dividend payout by 25 percent to Sh5.8 billion. The
lender’s shareholders have already approved the Sh1 per share payout,
the largest since joining NSE in 2008.
The top
shareholder in the bank, Co-op Holdings Co-operative Society, was
presented with a Sh3.78 billion dividend cheque last week, becoming the
largest payout from the bank in 11 years. “This year’s Sh1 dividend
matches the entire initial investment by the co-operative movement in
the bank, thereby enabling them to recoup their investment in full,” the
bank said last week.
Standard Chartered Bank’s
17 percent jump in net profit to Sh8.1 billion saw it raise total
dividend per share to Sh19, surpassing the Sh17 per share payout of the
previous year. The total value to be paid out amounts to Sh6.53 billion,
up from Sh5.84 billion paid in 2017.
A dividend rise
was also replicated by Barclays Bank of Kenya, which revised its
dividend policy from Sh1 to Sh1.10 per share last year.
“We
rewarded shareholders with a 10 percent increase in dividend pay-out,
totaling approximately Sh6 billion. This is our way of sharing our
financial successes with our shareholders,” the bank said on the
increment.
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