A National Bank branch. FILE PHOTO | NMG
The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has shrugged off concerns raised
by MPs and approved the 100 percent acquisition of National Bank (NBK)
by KCB Group.
The regulator announced Monday evening
that the approval has been granted in accordance with Section 13(1) (e)
of the Banking Act, effectively paving the way for the completion of the
deal within KCB timelines.
“The acquisition will
strengthen both institutions leveraging on their respective
well-established domestic and regional corporate, public sector and
retail franchises,” Central Bank said.
This effectively
throws the regulator’s weight behind KCB amidst concerns from
Parliament, which was asking for public participation in the
transaction.
CBK’s announcement comes days after KCB
disclosed that it had received acceptances in respect of 262.97 million
shares, equivalent to 77.62 percent of NBK’s total of 338.8 million
issued shares. This indicates that the government, which controls 70.6
percent of the lender through the Treasury’s 22.5 percent shareholding
and National Social Security Fund’s 48.1 percent stake, has officially
rubberstamped the sale.
At above 75 per cent, KCB has
already hit the minimum threshold required to declare the offer a
success, and trigger the conversion, which would in turn push the
acceptance level above the 90 percent mark.
This gives the bank legal powers to compulsorily buy out any
dissenting NBK shareholders. KCB expects to list the additional shares
through which it is executing a swap for NBK’s equity on September 30.
KCB
will announce the offer results on September 13, while the swapped
shares will be credited into the trading accounts of NBK shareholders on
September 27.
Once KCB acquires National Bank, it is
expected to conclude the deal it is pursuing acquiring Imperial Bank,
which has been under receivership.
Last Friday, CBK
announced it had received a revised offer from KCB to take over 7.5
percent of the outstanding deposit balance in Imperial.
KCB,
already with operations in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi and
South Sudan is also following up on deals in Ethiopia where it already
has a representative office.
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